Great geysers and grand canyons are just a few of the national wonders your family will love. But behind each American journey is a bigger purpose: Shaping who your kids become.
Within the first five minutes of my conversation with Jamie Goncharoff, he made sure I knew certain things. He was a prior Marine; he used to be a volunteer firefighter; he paid his own way through law school by working the overnight shift at UPS; and he’s not very impressed by people who say they’ve seen the Alps.
“So many people go to other countries without seeing the beauty and diversity of America,” he says, before adding begrudgingly that the Alps (which he has seen) are, “great by the way.” Sticking it to the Alps and the people who visit them is not really his point. It’s just that he’d rather know, “Have you hiked in the Rockies? Have you been to the five national parks in Utah?” You see, Jaime is a patriot, and he has the impression that his fellow countrymen and women are missing out on something truly special.
The numbers support that gut feeling. The average American has visited only 12 states, and, according to a YouGov poll in 2022, only three percent have visited 45 or more. Jamie Goncharoff, on the other hand, visited the entire Lower 48 before graduating college. That experience was so powerful, he did it again after getting married. Except this time, he brought his entire family with him.
“We had a goal to have our kids see the 48 states before they graduated high school. So every Fourth of July as our kids were growing up, we would celebrate freedom in a different part of the country. Because fireworks are fireworks, but when you see them behind the heads of Mount Rushmore, they take a different hue.” When asked what drove him to make that commitment, his response is crystal clear, “I wanted our kids to be able to love America, and appreciate the natural beauty, the diversity of our people and our culture.”
“It’s freedom. You can stop wherever you want. You meet people, and you stop at local stores, and you appreciate the beauty of America. Freedom is the hallmark of America. With RVing, it’s having the freedom to move, stop, live, sleep, and eat—on your timetable. You’re not checking into a motel at three in the afternoon and sleeping in somebody else’s bed, and kicked out at twelve o’clock. You have the freedom to come and go, to experience things, and to meet people.”
Not everyone may be ready to commit to seeing the Lower 48. To see some of our nation’s most glorious treasures, you can take it one trip at a time. Here, Jamie rides shotgun with us as we offer our take on the seven greatest American road trips. Take them, and you’ll have experienced some of the best of what the ole U.S. of A. has to offer. (Whether you’ve seen the Alps or not.)
Leg No. 1
Following the Founders’ Footsteps
Leg No. 2
Coca Cola, Disney, and the Florida Keys
Leg No. 3
Country Music, NASCAR, and the American Spirit
Leg No. 4
Unworldly Wonders and Giant Impressions
Purple Mountains and Red Rocks
Pacific Waves, Tall Trees, and Big Sur
Your Safe Bet for a Grand Finale
Between Vegas and the Grand Canyon, the Hoover Dam stretches from Nevada to Arizona in the Black Canyon of the Colorado River. When Jamie, his wife, then-10-year-old Sarah, and then-14-year-old son Jamie Jr. arrived there, they all knew that crossing it would check off the last of the Lower 48. The plan was to park and walk across the dam to check it off. But leading up to this big moment, Sarah had made a deal with her dad to trick her older, faster brother into getting out of the RV early. Then Jamie could drive ahead and give her a head start in the sibling race to the last state.
But when the time came for her final masterful maneuver, Sarah changed her mind and ultimately followed her brother as they crossed. Later, her father asked her why she let her brother win. “She said, ‘Daddy, that wouldn’t be right.’ ” Jamie remembers, “For her, it was about fairness, competition, not getting special treatment. She knew it wasn’t about winning or losing; it was how she played the game. And that’s living up to the ideals of being American.” Today, Jamie Jr. proudly shares that his daughter is a schoolteacher; his son is a Marine officer. Each continues to live up to those ideals— about what they learned from their parents and about who they are as Americans. All while traversing the greatest country in the world.