About a week ago, I filled my car's gas tank and the price was $2.279 per gallon in Gallup, New Mexico (photo above).
Since then, the price of unleaded regular in the area fluctuated anywhere between $2.59 to $2.79 per gallon. Still, that is a lot better than paying Commiefornia's ridiculous prices.
According to an article in RV Travel, this is the time where gasoline prices start their seasonal climb.
They begin with:
Gas prices have started their annual spring climb—and, yes, we’re right on schedule.
According to AAA, the national average price for regular gasoline has edged higher as refineries begin switching to summer-blend fuel and spring travel demand builds. It happens most years. It rarely feels good when it does.
The increase so far looks modest. But it signals a shift RVers know well: Once March arrives, pump prices tend to drift north.
To read more, go here.
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