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Topic: What do you bring with you?
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21/5/2010 at 4:15pm
Location: North West Outfit: Outwell Colorado 5
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Joined: 21/5/2010 Standard Member
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I still feel pretty new to this camping malarky - well as a camping "grown up" anyway. We keep ending up with a car fit to burst that is so disorganised and stressful and I can never find anything. I blame OH for rushing me... and insisting on "packing" the car.
We have a vauxhall vectra hatchback and there are 3 of us (me, OH and DD who is 2) with a baby on the way. We have:
our clothes and toiletries (not excessive) in 2 hiking backpacks which compress a bit
the tent (takes up quite a bit of space)
sleeping bags
air beds
camping chairs
folding table
waterproofs, wellies etc.
camping stove, 4 plastic plates and 4 bowls and 4 cups (we're not hot drink people)
I'm guessing all that is pretty normal but I'm not really sure what's the best way to store water - do you take lots of little bottles or a big bottle, or have a large container? How do you keep it cool/cold? Last time OH just bought a big mulitpack of mineral water which I thought seemed a bit silly but didn't really have any better ideas
And also food - I've read the food thread so I know the quantities vary but what do you take it in? We do have a hard cool box but it's rather bulky.
Also do people take normal washing up bowls from home and large washing up liquid or are there space saving ideas there?
I might just have to really annoy OH for our next trip by standing over him as he packs the car (I'd do it myself but I'll be heavily pregnant so not allowed!) because I think he has the tendency to just shove stuff in wherever.
I'm sure there are more things that I'm confsued about but I have fuzz brain at the moment so I'll leave it at that!
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21/5/2010 at 4:57pm
Location: Seaforth Liverpool Outfit: Marechal Vintage Tent & Static Caravan
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we get all of out stuff in a 1 litre polo, however we have the luxury of being able to take out the back seat.
Its packed well and weve put a lot of effort into getting the right size of things AND i do the packing
for example
i have two of those clear little bottle sets, the ones made to take liquids on planes, (99p)
one set is for sauces, herbs, slat/pepper, olive oil
the other is for shampoo, hand wash, antibac spray and one for wash up liquid etc
we take 2 washing up bowls one inside each other, one cloth, 2 teatowels and 4 pegs, we pack t-bags, coffee, sugar into snap lid boxes and it all sits in the washing up bowl, compact and secure with the teatowels.and it all fits in a plastic lidded box, there's a matching one which has the pots pans and kettle in
we normally get water on site but we like to have some of our hard water for the fussy tea drinker, so we fill up an empty 3 litre bottle and put it behind my seat
we take milk and juice, frozen in the cool box and tend to shop locally if possible, sometimes we will take frozen casseroles, depending on what the access to shops will be like. cold and wet tea towel over the cool box, kept in the shade will keep it all cold for days.
hope this helps
sharon
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21/5/2010 at 5:00pm
Location: Sunny south coast Outfit: Columbia 600 Bude 4
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I've collected sample size bottles of all sorts of things including washing up liquid(dates back about 10 years or so - just keep refilling it). Superdrug do loads for shampoos, deadorants etc... I have found tiny graters and wisks (supposedly for cappuchinos) and use a baby bottle with liquid measures on the side etc as a measuring jug. Its a challenge to find compact versions of most things - and its not something you can do instantly. You just spot things over time. We use nesting saucepans and pack all our cooking, crockery, etc in a couple of 10litre tupperware boxes. We use a tupperware box with lid as a washing bowl and carry plastic bags, tea-towels, sponges, liquid etc in it and then put these into the pockets in the tent to release the box for washing up.
We have two hard cool boxes - one for cold stuff and one for package stuff, bread, veg, etc that animals would otherwise sniff out. These have a set place in the car when packing (footwells) and were chosen to fit. If we need more, we use fabric cool bags for food rather than boxes. My OH won't let me pack above the parcel shelf in the boot, so its compact packing throughout. We have two pull-along crates that have to house all the smaller stuff including the tupperware boxes- so we have a folding toilet (that doubles as a waste bin during the day), a folding bucket, a small camping dustpan and brush, use UFO LED lights rather than lanterns... If I need to add to the camping gear, I have to be creative and find things with a double purpose and collapsable or small that will fit within these crates. These crates are just transfered from the storage hatch, to car, to tent and items are only taken out when used.
Bigger items are kept to a minimum - we have the Campingaz Kitchen Extra stove with its integral stand to avoid a kitchen unit, a roll-up alu table, umbrella style chairs and airbeds (and that is it). Bedding goes into dry bag/compression bags.
Packing the car is a case of putting what you need first most accessible, using every inch of space, keeping things to a minimum and planning your items relative to the space. There is a temptation to take more than you need or to add a roof box or trailer... With a modern large tent, plus carpet and canopy and all the extras its hard to manage without. We have been camping with a small tent for a week in a mini and could do it again, but we'd have to be selective what we took. We've also avoided the temptation to buy a canopy for our tents, using the tiny Vango Adventure tarp instead.
Helen
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22/5/2010 at 2:57pm
Location: Lancashire Outfit: Leisuredrive VW T6 campervan
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Lots of good tips here. We have an estate car, and everything has a place, and is acessible separately, so we don't have to empty the car to get at something in the bottom. Things you might not need are under the front seat, first aid kit, rolled up waterproofs, spare book. In the door pockets are torch, sun cream.
Something I don't use are teatowels. I buy what are sometimes 'Minky soak ups', an e style cloth. Use it to wash the pots, rinse well, and wipe them dry, by the time you get back to the tent they'll be dry, and no soggy teatowels to deal with, the cloth will dry quickly pegged to the tent. I tend to wear flip flops on site, wet or dry they're fine. And your lightweight fleece will throw over you at night if necessary.
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