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Budget Travel Tips : Packing Clothing to Travel Light
What clothing should
you pack when you must carry all of your luggage yourself and you want
to travel light ? Take a "bare" minimum of clothing with you. Dress
comfortably and casually. Choose your clothing for its practicality. In
warm climates loose lightweight cotton clothing will feel better against
your skin than sticky synthetic fabrics and tight-fitting clothing. If
you plan to visit tropical regions you can protect your skin from too
much exposure to strong sunlight and disease-carrying mosquitos if you
resist the urge to wear as little clothing as possible. You'll be far
safer with long-sleeved shirts, high necklined tops and long trousers.
Just keep to light colored, lightweight natural fabrics and
loose-fitting clothes to maximize the comfort of your clothing.
Casual comfortable clothing, especially if you veer towards the
sloppy, will also decrease your odds of being marked as a wealthy target
by local thieves who work the tourist spots. If you want to look a bit
more dressy for the evening, add a thin, weightless, colorful scarf to
your simple neutral-colored day clothes. Leave your jewelry at home.
It's heavy, bulky and could attract thieves. If you're a clothes horse,
try to resist the urge to pack one set of clothing for casual daywear, a
fancier set for restaurants at dinnertime and a third set for an
elegant evening out. You'll just wear yourself out trying to be
fashionable if you must drag all of these outfits around from locale to
locale. Don't worry about being seen in the same set of clothing two
days in a row. No one but your travel partner (or the hotel clerk) will
see you more than once anyway and, if your partner is practical, he or
she will also be wearing one set of clothing throughout the trip.
As to clothing choices, in general I wear one comfortable,
loose-fitting pair of casual trousers and assume that if I get caught in
the rain, it won't kill me. I'll dry out soon enough. I pack no spares.
Extra pairs of pants or skirts can add considerably to your luggage
load. Pick something in a neutral color that will go with anything else
you'll be wearing. Trousers with plenty of pocket space are a plus,
especially if you might be buying small odds and ends in souvenir shops,
or a little junk food, as you stroll around sightseeing each day.
To travel light, I just pack one or two spare tops that are
lightweight, comfortable and can easily be rolled up, as folding causes
more creases than careful rolling. I pack just two pairs of underwear
and socks for an entire trip. It's easy enough to wash out underwear,
socks and shirts in hotel rooms and hang them up to dry for later reuse
during the same trip. The choice is simple. For a two week trip you can
lug fourteen pairs of underwear everywhere you go, or you can lug just
two and regularly wash them out with soap and water in a hotel room
sink. I suggest packing two pairs, not one, so that there is still a
fresh change on hand for days when you may arrive in a place one evening
and plan to move on to another town the very next morning, allowing for
too little drying time. When you hit a larger city like Paris or London
or Rome, where you plan to stay put for at least a couple of days, you
can catch up on all your washing and know that clothing has plenty of
time to dry, even if the air is damp.
Pack thin, lightweight natural cotton underwear and socks that breath
and won't require as much drying time as heavier cottons or other
fabrics. In summer weather clothing can dry out very quickly. In cooler
damper months you might be running a radiator and that can double as a
heat source for drying. Just be careful not to put wet things directly
against radiators or electrical appliances and be careful, too, not to
let wet items of clothing drip onto hotel room carpets. Wring clothes
out well and keep them hanging in the shower until they no longer drip.
Don't use new brightly colored clothing items that might drip colored
dyes that can
stain bathroom floors,
floor mats or carpets in hotels.
Pack plenty of plastic bags. They take up little space, are
weightless, and will be useful in a hundred different ways, from storing
opened packaged foods to keeping your laundry well organized. For
example, I'll use one bag for clean clothing such as underwear and
socks, a separate bag for dirty ones (if I have to move on before
clothing can be washed and dried), plus a third for items of clothing
that have been washed, but are still damp when the time comes to vacate a
hotel room and tackle the next leg of a journey. At the next stop they
can be hung up to finish drying. By the way, washing clothes with
ordinary soap eliminates the need to transport any additional type of
cleaning agent.
If you'll need some sort of warmer clothing to wear on cooler days or
on cool evenings, carry one item only. It can be used whenever you need
it. Keep it lightweight, nonwrinkling and non-fussy. For example, a
single cozy sweater or sweatshirt in a color that does not show off dirt
is a very practical, soft and warm choice, far more practical that a
bulky jacket (unless you're doing some real cool weather or winter
traveling). When not in use, you can tie your sweater around your waist.
That way you can keep it with you while you sightsee on days when the
temperature is variable. If it remains tied around your waist you'll
feel it less than if you add it to the weight of your backpack and it
can even double as a pillow on long, drowsy train rides.
If you're traveling at a time or to a place where you'll need rain
gear, a thin fold-up plastic poncho or rain coat is the least onerous
thing to take with you. It can go right into your pocket and can easily
be whipped out in case of a sudden shower. For city travel it's very
easy to duck under
awnings or
into shops, making bulkier rain gear unnecessary. Sturdier rain gear or
umbrellas are only needed for places where you expect serious rain or a
lack of quick access to shelter.
Keep sleepwear light and minimal, as well, and if you absolutely must
have slippers to wear while in your hotel room buy a pair of cheap,
thin, weightless fabric slippers that can be slid into your pack without
adding extra bulk.
Do not pack an extra pair of shoes. Shoes are the ultimate in
unnecessary extra bulk and weight when considering travel clothing. In
the movies the leading man and leading lady who are off on a journey
appear in a different set of clothing and a new pair of shoes in every
scene. Clearly, they are not carrying their own luggage around with them
and, in fact, their bags never look quite large enough to even hold
everything they wear. So much for the difference between movies and
reality. I never pack extra shoes. I take my chances and figure that if
my shoes get wet, I'll find a way to dry them out. I simply wear one
pair of thoroughly broken in sneakers that offer good support in the
soles. Nothing could be less practical than tight shoes or high heels,
and the toll that they take on your feet may severely limit your
enjoyment of a trip. How long can you walk around picturesque towns or
stand around in museums when your feet hurt ? Wear low-heeled sturdy,
but presentable, shoes with solid arch support. Wear shoes that have
already been broken in and are comfortable enough for hours of daily
walking but - beware - even shoes that you are accustomed to walking in
daily can cause blisters when you're suddenly walking far more hours
each day than normal. Keep a few bandaids or callous pads handy. Be sure
that the shoes you choose for the trip are lightweight. Hold them in
your hand and compare the various pairs of shoes that you're considering
for the trip. When you expect to take thousands and thousands of steps
each day of a trip, plus carry a backpack around each time you travel
from one tourist destination to another, it's extremely counteractive to
do it in a pair of shoes that themselves are heavy and require
additional effort for every step that you take.
Try out some of these tips for traveling light by packing very little
clothing, and then see what you think. You may never want to pack all
sorts of stylish outfits again. You and your clothing can still look
nice, just focus on quality and not quantity. See your clothing more for
its function than for its fashion and you'll be free to enjoy the joys
of traveling light.
By
Barbara Freedman-De Vito
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