Gas prices hit historic highs this month. The average cost of a gallon of gas in the United States on March 11 was $4.33, the highest price ever recorded by AAA, the automobile owners group
With her 11-year-old cat, Prince, resting on the center console of her Honda CR-V, Michele Peters recently drove 13 hours south from her home in Chesapeake, Virginia, to Osprey, Florida, for some much-needed rest and relaxation.
It had been five years since Peters, 67, enjoyed a long vacation, and $4 for a gallon of gas wasn’t going to stand in her way. “Why I was coming down here — the peace and tranquillity — was worth 10 times that,” she said earlier this month, while overlooking Little Sarasota Bay.
Peters, a legal aid attorney, estimated that in recent years she would have paid around $60 on fuel each way of her roughly 950-mile drive, but with recent hike in gas prices, the cost of her trip almost doubled. She ended up paying around $115 on gas each way.
Gas prices hit historic highs this month. The average cost of a gallon of gas in the United States on March 11 was $4.33, the highest price ever recorded by AAA, the automobile owners group. The national average for a gallon of gas now hovers around $4.24. Compared to the average price last October, around $3.20, drivers in the United States are facing a nearly 33% hike to fill their tanks.
But as in years past, the rise in gas prices is not expected to dampen the allure of the open road. Especially with the arrival of spring break and the expectation of summer vacation, many road trippers plan to follow through with their original itineraries — or they will make adjustments by taking shorter routes, choosing destinations closer to home, and spending less on lodging, food and other purchases.
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