Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:4 outfits for 14 days? No one wants to wash every few day on a trip.
I don't mind at all.
AirBnb in a rando European city with a washer/dryer combo unit (not stacked, single drum that is both washer and dryer) that runs a 4-5 hour wash/dry cycle. If it's quiet, you start load in at night and enjoy the clean clothes first thing in the morning. If it's loud, you start a load before you leave in the morning for the day and enjoy the clean clothes when you get back.
Your answer is not relevant as the vast majority or people are not staying in Airbnb’s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
Packing cubes are additional things to add to luggage. Dumb to use.
DCUM always brings its A game. Its not DUMB if it works for your packing style. DCUM is all about what I do is the only RIGHT way to do things. You do you.
How is it right to add to one’s luggage when this thread is about reducing the luggage? Pack cubes, ice packs, curlers, shampoo, etc all you want but don’t recommend things that add more items to someone who is trying to reduce items.
The packing cubes help limit what you can bring. Eg I travel with a 28 L backpack and know that it can fit 2 pairs of shoes, two medium sized packing cubes and a small packing cube. So all the clothes need to fit into these packing cubes.
BTW, I also bring another 25 L daypack that folds into a pocket for overflow, souvenirs, to use as a daypack that can be considered my personal item.
The packing cubes do not add much weight. I have Sea to Summit packing cubes that weigh a few ounces but even the ones on Amazon don’t weigh much.
Exactly. You fit what you need in the space that you have available. It works well for those of us that want it to work. I don't find the packing cubes are a weight issue and even if they do add a bit - the organizational and spacial aspect of their use is a much bigger benefit. Its a mindset that not everyone wants to have. That's fine if you are a checked-bag only person. I like walking off a plane and getting about my trip without the hassle of heavy luggage.
Organization and special aspect? They’re added items.
The great thing about traveling and packing for traveling is everyone can do their own thing. I prefer packing cubes and carry-on luggage. You prefer no packing cubes. Neither one of us needs to change how we pack. You won't convince me to change how I pack and I won't convince you to try something new.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
Packing cubes are additional things to add to luggage. Dumb to use.
DCUM always brings its A game. Its not DUMB if it works for your packing style. DCUM is all about what I do is the only RIGHT way to do things. You do you.
How is it right to add to one’s luggage when this thread is about reducing the luggage? Pack cubes, ice packs, curlers, shampoo, etc all you want but don’t recommend things that add more items to someone who is trying to reduce items.
The packing cubes help limit what you can bring. Eg I travel with a 28 L backpack and know that it can fit 2 pairs of shoes, two medium sized packing cubes and a small packing cube. So all the clothes need to fit into these packing cubes.
BTW, I also bring another 25 L daypack that folds into a pocket for overflow, souvenirs, to use as a daypack that can be considered my personal item.
The packing cubes do not add much weight. I have Sea to Summit packing cubes that weigh a few ounces but even the ones on Amazon don’t weigh much.
Exactly. You fit what you need in the space that you have available. It works well for those of us that want it to work. I don't find the packing cubes are a weight issue and even if they do add a bit - the organizational and spacial aspect of their use is a much bigger benefit. Its a mindset that not everyone wants to have. That's fine if you are a checked-bag only person. I like walking off a plane and getting about my trip without the hassle of heavy luggage.
Organization and special aspect? They’re added items.
Anonymous wrote:I never check a bag if I can avoid it, but I’m totally fine doing sink laundry and I’m a pretty simple dresser.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
Packing cubes are additional things to add to luggage. Dumb to use.
DCUM always brings its A game. Its not DUMB if it works for your packing style. DCUM is all about what I do is the only RIGHT way to do things. You do you.
How is it right to add to one’s luggage when this thread is about reducing the luggage? Pack cubes, ice packs, curlers, shampoo, etc all you want but don’t recommend things that add more items to someone who is trying to reduce items.
The packing cubes help limit what you can bring. Eg I travel with a 28 L backpack and know that it can fit 2 pairs of shoes, two medium sized packing cubes and a small packing cube. So all the clothes need to fit into these packing cubes.
BTW, I also bring another 25 L daypack that folds into a pocket for overflow, souvenirs, to use as a daypack that can be considered my personal item.
The packing cubes do not add much weight. I have Sea to Summit packing cubes that weigh a few ounces but even the ones on Amazon don’t weigh much.
Exactly. You fit what you need in the space that you have available. It works well for those of us that want it to work. I don't find the packing cubes are a weight issue and even if they do add a bit - the organizational and spacial aspect of their use is a much bigger benefit. Its a mindset that not everyone wants to have. That's fine if you are a checked-bag only person. I like walking off a plane and getting about my trip without the hassle of heavy luggage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
OP, here. I will have a backpack as my personal item. I've done all of the above, except packing cubes. How do they help? I have a couple of packing cubes, but I'm not sure how to utilize them in the best way. Thank you, everyone, for your responses!
Packing cubes - with clothes rolled inside the cubes - helps me keep things organized. It doesn't always make more space - sometimes if I'm really struggling to fit things - everything rolled and not in a packing cube I can fit things in weird spaces. However, as I learned recently on a trip - when security wanted to look in my bag - I had to take each and every piece of clothing out and re-pack it. With the cubes - I keep my shirts together, my underwear in another. Then wherever I am its easy to just grab a cube to get dressed.
DP, but this is my issue with packing cubes... You end up having to take out every single cube out, open them all and then repack everything just to get dressed. Otherwise I'd just open my suitcase, select a shirt/pant/socks/underwear and.. its fine.
Or, if you're going for a week, you can just unpack.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
Packing cubes are additional things to add to luggage. Dumb to use.
DCUM always brings its A game. Its not DUMB if it works for your packing style. DCUM is all about what I do is the only RIGHT way to do things. You do you.
How is it right to add to one’s luggage when this thread is about reducing the luggage? Pack cubes, ice packs, curlers, shampoo, etc all you want but don’t recommend things that add more items to someone who is trying to reduce items.
The packing cubes help limit what you can bring. Eg I travel with a 28 L backpack and know that it can fit 2 pairs of shoes, two medium sized packing cubes and a small packing cube. So all the clothes need to fit into these packing cubes.
BTW, I also bring another 25 L daypack that folds into a pocket for overflow, souvenirs, to use as a daypack that can be considered my personal item.
The packing cubes do not add much weight. I have Sea to Summit packing cubes that weigh a few ounces but even the ones on Amazon don’t weigh much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why not do a carry-on and a backpack?
+1 we did this to Europe a few months ago. We were there for a week.
Packing cubes
rolled up socks, panties into extra pair of shoes
smaller toiletry bottles - I used contact lense cases
layer on the plane with a sweater and coat or whatever outwear you have
OP, here. I will have a backpack as my personal item. I've done all of the above, except packing cubes. How do they help? I have a couple of packing cubes, but I'm not sure how to utilize them in the best way. Thank you, everyone, for your responses!
Packing cubes - with clothes rolled inside the cubes - helps me keep things organized. It doesn't always make more space - sometimes if I'm really struggling to fit things - everything rolled and not in a packing cube I can fit things in weird spaces. However, as I learned recently on a trip - when security wanted to look in my bag - I had to take each and every piece of clothing out and re-pack it. With the cubes - I keep my shirts together, my underwear in another. Then wherever I am its easy to just grab a cube to get dressed.
DP, but this is my issue with packing cubes... You end up having to take out every single cube out, open them all and then repack everything just to get dressed. Otherwise I'd just open my suitcase, select a shirt/pant/socks/underwear and.. its fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a very efficient packer, and always only bring a carry on. How many outfits do you really wear? I went to Europe for two weeks this last winter and brought four outfits and two changes of PJs.
It was totally fine.
4 outfits for 14 days? No one wants to wash every few day on a trip.