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Quote: Originally posted by suns on 19/7/2010
Dont forget as cold air lowers you will need your freeze packs on the top.
This would only be true if your coolbox were empty, i.e. full of air. As it is full of food (essentially solid) the cool packs need to be in as much contact with the food as possible. You could argue that putting them around the edges puts a cold barrier around the food to the outside, but I'm not sure this would make a huge difference.
For a totally 'budget' solution, freeze everything, including milk in whatever size container you would normally use in a day with your group e.g. 1 pint for a couple, 2 pints for a family. Freeze other food in 'meal packs' e.g. the amount of sausage/bacon you would use for one breakfast. Line a carboard box with bubble-wrap, polystyrene or anything insulating, and keep all your frozen stuff in there. For your 'chilled' stuff just use a soft picnic cooler bag - we got ours free from Sainsburys because we bought a lot of sausage rolls! - Each day remove what you will need the next day from the 'freezer' box to act as a cool pack for your 'chilled' bag. This means that the freezer box is only opened once a day, and you end up with wonderfully chilled milk! When you get to the end of your holiday you can just recycle the cardboard box, and everything else collapses to nothing.
If you can stretch to even a cheap coolbox instead of the cardboard box, then this has the benefit of being waterproof. Keep the coolbox in the shade, certainly outside of the tent during the day, and ideally in some sort of breeze. Soak a chunky bath towel in water and drape over the coolbox. Soak the towel whenever you think about it during the day. (Think about how chilled you feel if you are in damp clothes in a breeze!). I have had to wait for bacon and sausages to defrost after 5 days using this method.
Hope this helps.
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