Showing posts with label packing light. Show all posts
Showing posts with label packing light. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Travel Tip Tuesdays: A Round-Up of Packing Tips


With California less than two weeks away, packing has been on my brain lately! Of course, packing for a backpacking trip is different than I’m used to, but I still think some basic rules apply. So I’ve included a round-up of some of my blogs about packing. 

The llama thinks you should pack light.

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Thursday, March 27, 2014

On Packing a Backpack


I’ve written about packing light before. But backpacking takes this art to a whole new level. Zachary and I are in the process of finalizing our list of everything we need to survive comfortably for the next five months— and then figuring out how to fit it into two 65-liter backpacks.

We’ll be sending ourselves frequent resupply boxes, filled with dehydrated food and candy bars and gatorade powder and shoes and toothpaste, and buying things along the way, like toilet paper and potato chips and pancakes the size of hubcaps. But everything else— shelter, bed, media, clothing— will be on our backs.

This means I will be at least five months (probably more) without makeup, accessories, any sort of dress, skirt, scarf, or dressy piece of clothing. No haircuts or shaving at all. Seven or eight showers tops. And I sit and ponder: do I need a t-shirt, a button-up shirt, a polyester jacket and a rain jacket? Is one of them superfluous? Do I need more than two pairs of underwear? Do I really need a piece of foam for a pillow, or could I just get by with a lumpy stuff sack? How many pairs of socks do I actually need? 

Once we figure out what packing actually looks like, I’ll probably post a full list of what we’re bringing. In the meantime, I will probably spend more time packing my backpack than I have in packing up my house.

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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Travel Tip Tuesdays: What Not to Pack


I’ve written blogs about packing light before— I swear by the one-bag policy when traveling solo and in most situations in general. No matter how heavy you’re packing, though, here are five things you can (almost) always do without:

1. A heavy coat. On my first solo trip, I brought a trench coat because I knew that the Northwest got cold. Although it did help keep me warm, it was a huge pain to lug around, and added about seven pounds to my pack weight (not to mention taking up almost a backpack’s worth of space!). Unless you’re headed somewhere severely cold, you can make do with a lighter jacket and some layers.

First solo trip, 2009: I was so proud of myself
for only bringing three bags!
2. A big toiletries bag. On my first away-from-family trip when I was 16, I packed an entire little suitcase full of my toiletries— everything from toothpaste and decongestant to a full bottle of shampoo and six different kinds of Band-Aids. I didn’t even have makeup and I managed to stuff a bag! I later learned that this was entirely unnecessary. Just bring the basics, and if you happen to need poison ivy cream or cough syrup, you can buy that as you go along.

3. Non-versatile clothing. While some clothes are single-use, most can serve double-duty. A blank t-shirt can be dressed up with a nice jacket; leggings make a nice extra layer in cold weather; a sarong can be turned into almost anything. Avoid loud t-shirts, an item that doesn’t match the rest of what you’re packing, anything expressly dressy, and so on.

4. Clothes that wrinkle easily. There’s nothing worse than ruining half your wardrobe just because it’s made of the wrong fabric! When your clothes can be wadded up, carried in a backpack for a week, and pulled out looking good as new, you’ve found the “keeper” clothes.
Third solo trip, 2010: I had cut my packing list in half.

5. Anything you justified taking along by saying “just in case.” This isn’t a tried-and-true rule, but if this was your excuse for packing it, chances are you won’t end up needing it. Since I have a bad back, I carried around instant heating pads for six trips, just in case. I never needed them. The same is true of countless little items that I carried less and less throughout the years.

With a light pack, your travel will be much more fun and relaxing. I have often packed too much for a trip, but I have never packed too little.

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Have a travel question? Leave a comment and I’ll answer!