Trump's public rallies were the glue that held his unlikely coalition of voters together during the nearly 17 months of his campaign

Asked where else Trumpworld had been scouting locations, an aide said: 'Well, it won't be in California' - where the Republican had his biggest loss

One official said Trump would travel 'to the states that we won and the swing states we flipped over'

If you live in a swing state and you miss the controlled chaos of Donald Trump's campaign rallies, help is on the way.

An official with Trump's transition team said Thursday that 'victory tour' events are in the planning stages and could begin as soon as ten days from now.

Republican sources in Ohio and Florida told DailyMail.com this week that the Trump transition had already made booking inquiries with past campaign rally venues in those key states.

Rumors swirled Thursday that Pennsylvanians were also likely to have a chance to celebrate personally with the president-elect.

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Trump supporters looking to recapture the frenzied energy of the Republican's rallies might be in luck (pictured: a supporter in Ohio in July)

An official with Trump's transition team said Thursday that 'victory tour' events are in the planning stages (pictured: Trump with Alabama fans in August 2015)

The tour could begin as soon as ten days from now (pictured: Trump leaves an October rally in Florida in his helicopter)

Rumors swirled Thursday that Pennsylvanians were also likely to have a chance to celebrate personally with the president-elect (pictured: a Michigan rally in October)

'We're working on a victory tour now,' said George Gigicos, who served as the Trump campaign's advance team director (pictured: a Phoenix, Arizona meet in July)

George Gigicos, who served as the Trump campaign's advance team director, spoke to reporters in the lobby of Trump Tower.

'We're working on a victory tour now,' he said. 'It will happen in the next couple of weeks.'

When? 'After Thanksgiving,' he said.

Gigicos said 'obviously' Trump would travel 'to the states that we won and the swing states we flipped over.'

Trump won Electoral votes in 30 states, plus 1 vote in a Maine congressional district.

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Trump addresses thousands of fans at a Tampa, Florida gathering in February

Supporters cheer their candidate at a Pennsylvania gathering in October

More fans show their support in September at a Baltimore meet

A child tries to get Trump's attention at a New Hampshire rally in September

Trump speaks to supporters gathered in Davenport, Iowa in December 2015

The billionaire waves to the crowd at a Charleston, West Virginia rally in May

But most of the election battle was fought in a handful of battlegrounds that Democrats and many in the media thought were out of his reach.

In addition to Ohio, Florida and Pennsylvania, those states include North Carolina, Wisconsin and Iowa.

They also include Michigan, which the Associated Press still says is too close to call nine days after Americans went to the polls.

Trump leads former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton there by three-tenths of a percentage point.

Trump told an audience in Sioux city, Iowa just two days before his stunning win that he would return for a victory lap if Hawkeye State voters sided with him on Nov. 8.

They did, giving him a 9.6 per cent margin over Clinton.

The president-elect's public rallies were the glue that held his unlikely coalition of voters together during the nearly 17 months he was officially a presidential candidate.

His audiences ranged in size from 1,000 to 32,000 and turned into cheering, chanting seas of humanity as Election Day drew near.

Trump made nearly 30 stops in the final week, greeted by frenzied fans who could come back for a second helping of their political hero.

Asked Thursday where else Trumpworld had been scouting locations, an aide said: 'Well, it won't be in California.'