Holiday travel not so bad ... so far

Spread out holiday, decent weather may help cut back on delays

Mark Anthony Sepulveda, 6, of Hialeah, Fla., tells Santa his wishes for Christmas on Thursday at Miami International Airport. Holiday travelers were experiencing fairly easy trips, but wintry weather may make things more difficult this weekend.
Mark Anthony Sepulveda, 6, of Hialeah, Fla., tells Santa his wishes for Christmas on Thursday at Miami International Airport. Holiday travelers were experiencing fairly easy trips, but wintry weather may make things more difficult this weekend.

NEW YORK (AP) - Fair weather helped make the holiday sojourn a not-so-painful experience in much of the country Thursday, even with more people hitting the roads and skies than last year, but travelers' good luck might be running out.

A storm was expected to bring a snow and ice to parts of the heartland Friday, a rare white Christmas to Nashville on Saturday, and perhaps sock swaths of the Northeast on Sunday.

"People that are going to Grandma's house," said Bobby Boyd, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service in Nashville, "need to get going."

Eric and Tatiana Chodkowski, of Boston, were driving Thursday with their kids, ages 2 and 4, to see relatives in New York. They said forecasts for snow on Sunday made them wonder whether they'd make it back then, as planned.

They deemed the roads congested but manageable Thursday, and most people found the nation's airports to be the same way.

Planes took off into windy but accommodating skies at New York's LaGuardia Airport as Steve Kent prepared to fly to Denver for a family ski trip, scoffing at the puny lines.

"I don't find it that difficult," he said. "I think Thanksgiving is harder."

The spread-out nature of the year-end holidays means things won't be quite so cramped as holidays, like Thanksgiving, when practically everyone is on the move the same day.

"We have a lot of folks who already may have taken off of work," said Troy Green, a spokesman for AAA. "They may have arrived at their destination before today."

Mike Lukosavich, of Harrison Township, Mich., was surprised the first leg of his trip was moving so smoothly when he stopped at a rest area on the Ohio Turnpike in Elmore, Ohio, near Toledo.

He, his wife and their 8-month-old daughter were heading to see family in Parkersburg, W.Va. His only headache came when he saw the gas price of about $3 a gallon.

"It's something you have to do to see the family," said Lukosavich, 33.

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