Everything depends on when you are planning to do the trip and how long you are planning to be out.
Some tandem couples do 100 miles a day and a direct crossing in a month. Doesn't sound like y'all.
If you average 60 miles per day with a day off per week ot 2 half-days then you can do about 360 miles per week.
A fairly direct crossing is 3600 miles or 10 weeks. The TransAm is 4200+, so about 12 weeks.
(That's using traditional multiplication and division.)
This is about the pacing we'd like to use. We can make 100 miles in a day, but we prefer to take it easy and average about 60. We rode BC, Canada to Los Angeles this past summer, 1750 miles in 35 days with 2 days off the bike.
I helped develop the Parks, Peaks & Prairie route. And have done routing for some time.
You may need to combine routes and/or develop sections on your own.
Not sure where you want to start and to end up.
A spring ride is more often diagonal southwest to northeast.
A fall ride diagonal northwest to southeast.
Staying in the Northern Plains and Great Lakes makes sense in summer.
We live in Los Angeles, so starting there would be the easiest, but we're pretty flexible and can really start anywhere along the West Coast. In terms of timing, we're retired and can begin the trip at any time of the year. We were roughly thinking about taking 3 months to complete the ride, but again, due to our being retired, this is pretty flexible.
Our destination is also pretty flexible. When we get to the East Coast we plan to visit family in both NYC and Maine but we'll be using a car for that.
A perfect day for us is about 50-60 miles with up to about 4K of climbing. If necessary, we can handle close to double that, though not every day.
Our main preferences for the ride though are:
1) As much as possible, we'd like to avoid busy, high speed, high traffic roads that lack good shoulders. Scenery is important, but we'd choose a day with safer feeling roads over better scenery almost every time.
2) As Southern Californians, we're pretty averse to cold and wet weather. We'd much prefer a 95 deg day to a 45 deg day.
3) Hotels/motels/AirBnB are a must. At the end of the day we want a hot shower and a decent bed to sleep in. Camping is not an option, except if an emergency or some disaster occurred. We do not plan to bring any sleeping equipment.
Northwest > Northern Plains > Great Lakes > East Coast
Should permit you to have motel access all the way.
I'll start looking at this route and see how it looks. Do you know which ACA routes I should get to string this route together?
Thanks so much for all the incredibly useful information. It is much appreciated.
Michael