Anonymous wrote:I may be really dense here - but how do carts and a dolly help when you're dealing with flights of stairs? Is it that they help you get the stuff to the car once you've reached the ground level?
Asking because we will be moving a kid in this fall and it's a 13 hour drive (headed to WI - Madison). I had assumed we'd drive, but I'm now re-thinking whether we should actually drive or not.
I remember that some schools help kids move-in (I don't actually know if this is the case for Wisconsin) but it sounds like one should definitely not expect assistance moving out, is that right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm mid 50s and have been driving DC to Boston for years. I stop at least 3 times to stretch and get the blood flowing, refill the water, eat something healthy(ish). I avoid as much of 95 as I can. Personally, I think Connecticut traffic is the worst.
I usually drive up, take kids to dinner, stay in a hotel, help pack the car in the morning and then we do shifts driving home.
There really isn't anything my kid would be storing up at school. He brings home the computer equipment and clothes. It's really the computer equipment that makes the drive necessary.
Lots of students have fridges, A/C’s, fans, microwaves, bed risers, crates etc. that they don’t need at home; they’d store that sort of thing.A computer would take up pretty minimal space. The monitor can lie flat, and the rest can fit in a computer bag. A printer can be bulky, depending on what you have.
Anonymous wrote:I wasn't sure if I should put this in the mid-life concerns forum or here. I need a reality check, I'm in my late 40s.
A few days ago I drove 9 hours to my kid's school to help move him out of the dorm. It was hot and sunny outside the whole ride and the contrast of the hot beating sun and the cold A/C typically just makes me feel a little sick on long rides. A lot of the roads had construction where I had to drive miles right next to a Jersey wall which I find a bit nerve racking.
By the time I arrived at his school (around 4:30 pm) he had most his stuff packed in bags and bins but it's hard to get one of those huge laundry carts there (it's just "first come first serve" no way to sign up or reserve it.) So we had to make multiple trips from his 3rd floor room and across a small grassy area to my car in a parking lot, carrying these heavy bags and bins.
TBH, I was a mess. I was already hungry and dehydrated from the long drive and 2 hrs of manual labor was difficult.
After it was done we went to a hotel and had dinner and then drove home the next day.
If you've done this type of move out, did you wait a day after the long drive before doing the actual move out (like go straight to the hotel and go do the dorm move out the following morning?)
Am I just in terrible shape for someone in their late 40's and I should have been able to handle the long drive plus hours of move out lifting with no problem?
I probably should have focused more on drinking water and eating healthy (I stopped once for a fast food lunch) on the drive up, but really I just wanted to get there ASAP. But what else do you do to make sure you are in better condition for work once you arrive at the dorm for move out?
Anonymous wrote:Yes Boston, and yes $300 for 5 large boxes over the summer. You have to compare all the different companies making offers. Luckily our child did good!
Anonymous wrote:I'm mid 50s and have been driving DC to Boston for years. I stop at least 3 times to stretch and get the blood flowing, refill the water, eat something healthy(ish). I avoid as much of 95 as I can. Personally, I think Connecticut traffic is the worst.
I usually drive up, take kids to dinner, stay in a hotel, help pack the car in the morning and then we do shifts driving home.
There really isn't anything my kid would be storing up at school. He brings home the computer equipment and clothes. It's really the computer equipment that makes the drive necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I haven't read the entire thread, but for moving college kids in/out of the dorm, it is very helpful to invest in a basic dolly to wheel the stuff out.
You just stack the boxes on the dolly, lean it back, and off you go.
I am a super wuss, and even I can clear a room in a few trips, hardly breaking a sweat, if I use a dolly.
Also, connect with your military or former military neighbors. The spouses, not the actual military members.
Any military spouse will have the best advice and tricks for packing and moving under any circumstance, especially if you have to single parent it.