MPG's
12 miles is hardly a large enough sample to calculate mpg's. It will give you a good, optimal mpg, but it won't give you a good average. The more miles you use to calcalate your mpg's the more accurate you mpg average will be.
I calculate my mpg's every tank. I reset the trip odometer and the EVIC, and I also do a rough calculation in my head to make sure the EVIC is accurate (it's never been off by 0.1 mpg). This gives me quite a bit of useful information; if my mpg's suddenly drop, I've either got a tank of low quality gas, or some maintainence needs to be performed. I had an Explorer before my Jeep and notied my mpg's went WAY down one day. Mice had gotten into the airbox and built a nest overnight. I cleaned it out, replaced the filter, and problem solved.
My best mpg average happened in August 2007. I drove from Limon, CO to Topeka, KS (460 miles). It was I-70, all interstate, all down hill, and with a very strong tail wind 30+ mph). The wind was probably the biggest factor. I've noticed a cross wind hurts my mpg's more than a head wind. I used the cruise control set 5 mph above the posted speed limit and the A/C was on the entire way, and I did not engage in any crazy drifting behind big rigs. I ended up with 24.2 mpg average.
On my way to work last summer, I drove from Purgatory Ski Resort (in Colorado) down into Durango, CO (close to 3000 feet of elevation drop in 30 miles) and average 38 mpg...on the way down. The drive back up every night kept my mpg average a little below normal.