By Ron Dalby
Driving to Alaska means you have to first drive through a large part of Canada, a real treat. However, Canada is a separate country with differing customs, and, for about 30 years now, the kilometers of the metric system instead of the miles that Americans are so familiar with.
Generally when you enter Canada the basic thing to remember is that kilometers are shorter than miles so there are more of them. The ratio is approximately 100 kilometers equals 60 miles.
Decades ago my father taught me a fairly simple way to figure things out in my head. His words were, "Multiply the number of kilometers by six and drop the last digit." For example, if a sign indicates your destination is 350 kilometers away, multiplying by six yields 2,100. Drop the last digit and you have 210 miles, a figure that is correct within a kilometer or two. Or if a speed limit sign in a school zone says 30 KPH, this formula will yield 18 MPH.
Ron Dalby is the author of the popular travel book "Guide to the Alaska Highway."

Now you tell us.. actually, Thank You!! We rented an RV in Vancouver and drove the AlCan with..... 3 Brits! What a trip, but we made it with much discussion about Km and Miles... Now, when we head for the UK, I will at least be able to figure out how far... do you have any good ideas of how to get Brits to use North and South?
ReplyDeleteThis may replace my "cheat sheet" taped to the dash. Thanks.
ReplyDeletegreat tip Ron. will paste it inside the old brain for my next RV trip through Canada.
ReplyDelete