Here's my upcoming 14 days trip itinerary, appreciate some advise:
Day1 (LA): Land LA noon, visit Hollywood, rest
Day2 (LA): Santa Monica Beach, Desert Hill Outlet Mall
Day3 (LA): Disney (Full day)
Day4 (LV): Drive to Vegas. Enjoy evening performance
Day5 (LV): Day tour to GrandCanyon (By plane: US$299 each ??) and driving tour to Hoover Dam
Day6 (LV): Valley of Fire (any other area along the route?)
Day7 (DeathValley): DeathValley (3.5hr) and spend 2hr or so visiting DV. Drive to Mammoth Lake (another 3hr drive - too long for a day ? - Potentially dark and snowy?)
Day8 (Mammoth Lake-Tahoe): Snow fun for kids, after lunch drive to Tahoe
Day9 (Vacaville): After lunch, drive to Vacaville (~3hr) ... visit NAPA vicinity and outlet store
Day10 (SF): Drive to Miurwood (1hr drive), follow by Golden Gate Bridge (45min) - Vista Pt, Fort Point and Baker Beach. Drive to Fisherman Wharf (Any alternative beside driving and stuck in traffic?) Chinatown etc. Drive to Monterey (HW1)
Day11 (Monterey): Whalewatch, visit Big Spur
Day12 (Gilroy): Gilroy Outlet shopping
Day13 (SF): Visit Apple, Google, Stanford U, etc
Day14 (SF): Probably visit SF Downtown again before Returning
Personally I think Day 7-9 is too tight .... I can afford to expand a day in between. My concern is Day 7, reaching Mammoth Lake late in the evening and worst in snowy condition.
Appreciate feedback on from the experience traveler !
Wow, you should probably have a look at the map. If you draw everywhere you're planning to go on the map, it's going to look like a squashed spider.
Anyway. So you want to hit Disneyland, a truckload of outlet malls, Vegas, the Grand Canyon, Death Valley; spend two days in SF; Monterey; and pop in to the Apple HQ (skip Google, the only thing to see is the giant fiberglass Androids out the front; Apple HQ at least has the Company store).
Let's start from scratch.
Day 1: Land at LAX; drive to Anaheim. Santa Monica's nice, but skip it, you're short on time. If you're a real outlet mall obsessive, you can hit the Citadel Outlets, on I-5 between downtown LA and Anaheim.
Day 2: Disneyland
Day 3: Drive to Las Vegas via Desert Hills outlet mall. At this point you have honestly done all the outlet mall shopping you could ever possibly need, so stop looking for outlet malls and enjoy your holiday
Day 4: Vegas. Do a day trip to Hoover Dam during the day; see the Strip in the evening.
Day 5: Grand Canyon day trip.
Day 6: Get on the road and head to Death Valley.
Day 7: Head out of Death Valley to the north and aim for Reno / Truckee.
During the winter, the
only guaranteed way to get over the Sierras is on I-80, from Reno to Sacramento - it'll occasionally close at night, or during a heavy snowstorm - but it'll reopen quickly, and your worst case is you'll have to spend the night in Reno instead of Truckee. Making it to Truckee should be easy; you can try to get to North Lake Tahoe as well. Skip Mammoth - it's a long way from there to Tahoe and you can't guarantee that road's going to be open.
Day 7: head down the hill (slowly) to Napa. Spend a night in Napa.
Day 8: SF. Drive into SF (take a side trip to Muir Woods!); stay the night somewhere downtown
Day 9: Spend a day in SF
Day 10: Drive to Monterey and Big Sur; night in Monterey.
Day 11: Take a whale-watching trip if you like; drive back to SF in the afternoon via the Apple campus; drop the car off at SFO.
Day 12/13/14: Free days in SF.
...and you'll be doing this in the winter, so you're going to need a 4WD car, and plenty of patience if you run into a snowstorm (if there's snow, the Sierras will be closed everywhere between Bakersfield and Reno).
To be honest, I have yet to build the confident of left-hand drive, hence won't be renting a car. Furthermore considering is winter with short day-light, not sure if it's worth taking a day tour to see the sequoia trees? (my daughter would very much love to see it thou). But we have a 4 person, a tour would possibly cost us approx $180 per person ($720). Surely a one day car rental should not cost so much including insurance? Is it an easy drive from SFO city?
SF to Muir Woods is an hour drive, tops - even if you pick your car up from SFO airport instead of SF city it'll only be an hour-and-a-half. You can rent a frickin' Porsche Panamera for the day, for less than half of what you're looking at for that tour.
Do this during the week, though. Parking at Muir Woods on weekends and public holidays is an absolute nightmare.
Do we need to apply an international licence in advance from our home country?
No, your Singapore license is fine.