Charlotte is not near the mountains, and the only moutainous route would be I-40 to I-77. In that case, Western NC is covered by the Appalachians, which are crossed by I-40.
No, Cookeville itself is located in the mountains.
Denver is east of the Rockies, and you wouldn't actually drive through them unless you kept going west beyond Denver.
Denver is east of the Rockies, and you wouldn't actually drive through them unless you kept going west beyond Denver.
Going around the Rockies, whether through Salt Lake or Albuquerque, adds three hours to a 16-hour trip..
Not that I know of. Cookeville, TN is in the mountains. You could go to Birmingham, AL and then up Interstate 59 to Chattanooga, TN and the to Cookeville, but you would still get into some "mountains" near the end.
The Cascade mountain range.
She was going 'through a stage'. :P
yes it is, unless your in the mountains, going up a steep hill, or towing.
The Andes mountains stretch along the Pacific rim of South America, going through Columbia, Ecuador, Peru, and Chile.
Almost a rectangle on a map but it is quite different as you drive through it with low mountains and hardwood forests.
i don't know are you linenberger or halazon STEELE but syill i guess linney
Fuel economy will suck. Unless you drive in the mountains then it will help going up.