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Topic: AAAAGGHH!!!! NEED to get organised!
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20/7/2010 at 8:58pm
Location: Cambridgeshire Outfit: Vermont L
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PLEEEEEEEEAAAAASE help!
I think I need some help and tips on getting sorted please. I'm struggling with how best to organise packing stuff (into boxes/crates/bags etc.) so that it makes the whole setting up / packing down / storage at home issue easier. It took us 2 hours to set up this time and the same to pack up again which feels too long. (We are 2+2 (kids are 5 and 2) in a Vermont L tent.) It just feels like a battle and I want it to be easier. I've experimented with packing clothes in bags, a holdall, crates etc. and with kitchen stuff in the same. When packing the car we have to put the tent and poles in first so everything else has to sit out on the grass - fine if it's dry - until we're ready. There's only so much we can fit on the front seats if it rains and then there's nowhere for us! We've toyed with the idea of getting a trailer but that's not in the budget for this year..
Oh, I don't know - just need some inspiration!!! So, please share your tips and ideas for what to pack, where and how!
THANK YOU!!!
Trace
------------- Very green at camping but full of enthusiasm!!!! :OP
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20/7/2010 at 9:16pm
Location: devon Outfit: fc plus 2 many tents
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only thing i can suggest is as the kids are little could you not put the tent on the floor in the back?
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20/7/2010 at 9:28pm
Location: Zummerzet Outfit: Outwell Utah 6
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I agree maybe you need to rethink where the tent goes. Even if you seperate the tent from the poles, shoving them somewhere else like in the footwells under the kids (there is TONS of space there - use every inch!!).
When I packed the car up recently I had to really plan carefully, and had to leave a "tent sized space" so I could get everything in. It was blooming hard work, but I got there. Plus it was sweltering heat.
If I had absolutely no choice and needed to put the tent in then I'd consider a cheap tarp or something, so if it were raining there was somewhere to dump the stuff till the car was ready to get the stuff in.
I'm a single mum of 4 and really struggle with working out how to pack. But it's improving.
I now keep most of my kit ready to go, saves a lot of time and effort.
I pack clothes in 2 suitcases, the bigger one has 2 compartments, I fit 3 people's stuff in the bigger one and 2 in the smaller one. Shoes go seperate as 5 x wellies, 5 x trainers, 5 x sandals is a heck of a lot of shoes!! I try to persuade people to wear their bulkiest shoe to travel in. I use plastic squishy trugs for shoes, then they live there by the tent door. Also rain coats and sun hats all go together in one trug.
I have a container with "first aid" which also contains useful holiday items, like the travel washing line, clothes pegs etc.
I have a big container with kitchen stuff ready to go. All the stuff like corkscrews, chopping board, pots and pans etc fit in there.
I pack collapsable crates for food but put the food into the car in carriers (as carrier bags are handy for rubbish bins and it's easier to carry a bag rather than a wobbly crate of tins).
Pillows travel with the children on their laps. Sleeping bags fit whereever there's room. Roll mats and SI mat roll together and find a space somewhere. Sheets, towels, spare blankets, they all travel somewhere on top of other stuff.
Umm I think that's about it, most of the rest of my kit is pretty standalone so can be packed away easily. A bag for toys/entertainment. Oh yeah a washbag for everyone's stuff, and a seperate small bag for my own stuff (my own medicines, and sometimes even makeup!!).
I must admit to have been rather pleased when someone described me as a "wonderpacker" the other day, you have to plan how to fill the car quite meticulously!

------------- Single mum of 4 crazy children!!
2011 So far...
April - 2 nights in Easter Hols in Haven, Burnham (down the road).
Taking my sister and family for a trial camp locally 20th May
GLASTONBURY!! And *no* kids this year!! (Working: secure camping too!)
Chy Carne July/Aug 2011...
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21/7/2010 at 7:50am
Location: UK Outfit: Abbey GT212 Caravan & Kyham Tent
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I find plastic boxes and folding crates the best way to pack. You can leave them out at home to pop things in before you go, they stack well in the car and keep everything together and once all your gear is removed the folding ones fold so take up less storage space whilst on site.
I am amazed when I watch my neighbours taking nearly a week to pack the car & caravan when they go away. Taking small handfulls of clothes, food, plates etc. to back and forth from the house. The box & crate system means fewer trips and everything can be packed in a matter of minutes rather than days.
------------- Sarah
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21/7/2010 at 8:44am
Location: None Entered Outfit: None Entered
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Cooking and lighting stuff goes in a rectangular plastic lidded box.
SI mats stay rolled in their own bags, sleeping bags are stuffed into cylindrical drybags, same with travel pillows. Clothes are folded and placed into compression bags (no need for vacuum), rolled and put into drybags in a holdall.
Table/s and chairs are of the folding variety that come in their own cylindrical bags too.
Tent goes in last, along with the bag of pegs, hammer, etc.
Practice in your driveway before you go away, it helps to reduce the stress on the morning of your first day of your holiday.
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21/7/2010 at 10:15am
Location: King's Lynn Outfit: Karrimor Ultralite Icarus 600
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Kettle easily accessible, "Like it", let me guess the Gin is in front passengers footwell?
------------- Steve
Look into my eyes, not around my eyes but into my eyes
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21/7/2010 at 1:03pm
Location: Outfit:
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I always make sure that just before we leave home i take the chilled bottle of wine out of home fridge and have that in my door pocket ready to open when set up!!!. and the photo above of the car very closely resembles our car I have to say. We pack stuff everywhere.
Have tried to condense but do use everything that we hav purchased.
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21/7/2010 at 2:15pm
Location: Cambridgeshire Outfit: Vermont L
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Thanks all for your replies. It would seem that we're not doing too badly after all as we're pretty much doing what you suggest. Our car looks very similar to that photo too Jessica, including the kettle! And trugs are just amazing!
As for the tent going elsewhere - it won't fit! It's a very large bag (Vermont L - takes up 1/5 of boot) and that's not including the poles. We could try putting the poles in the foot wells but not sure how much that would help.
I guess it's not so much packing the car as getting it from the house to car to tent all set up then again in reverse.
Do most of you keep your camping boxes permanently packed? I've been using some kitchen bits from home but I can see it'd be easier to keep a camp bag all together and not touch it when home. What about soap bags, non-perishable food, kids toys, etc - do you keep all those permanently packed?
And, how long does the setting up/packing away take? Perhaps I'm just being unrealistic in my expectations?!?!
Thanks again folks, trace
------------- Very green at camping but full of enthusiasm!!!! :OP
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21/7/2010 at 4:14pm
Location: Sunny south coast Outfit: Columbia 600 Bude 4
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I wouldn't put heavy stuff that could fly in the event on an accident in the foot wells. We only put soft stuff in the saloon area. OK - with the large Vango Columbia with carpet and week stays we use the trailer, but we can get everything in the boot when we take the Kampa Bude 4. Its been a case over the years of getting smaller and collapsable versions of things and finding multi-purpose items and deciding what you really need or want. We are a family of 3.
We now have our kitchen/eating/cooking bits in a Mothercare baby changing box (with reinforced hinges) and a 10 litre tupperware that holds a folding colander, splatter guard and Trangia nested saucepan and kettle set, pegs, etc. We have a folding sink that holds the water container and a collapsable crate with wheels that accommodates all other small items (UFO lights, pump for beds, mini dustpan & brush, backpacker table, BBQ stand, picnic blanket, folding loo cum bin....). These crates/boxes sit one on top of the other in the boot below the parcel shelf with table and chairs trapped behind, leaving the Campingaz stove with integral stand, gas cannister in fire bucket, main tent, overnight tent, groundsheets and tarp to stack in front. The airbeds in a dry bag and bedding compressed in another drybag sit on top along with the clothes holdall(s) or on the backseat where available. The cool box/ food box is wedged solid in the footwell along with the shoes.
Using the wheeled crate and the mothercare box means that we just lift everything simply from the loft hatch to car to the tent with minimum handling. It keeps you focused on space saving. You only unpack as you need stuff and return it after (keeping the tent tidy). Similarly the dry bags (while bulky unless you compress the air out) cut down on handling while keeping things clean. The crate also doubles as a trolley for filling up the water container...
We've worked this out to maximise the amount of rear view mirror available - my OH insists on seeing out the rear window even when everything is in the boot and prefers everything below the parcel shelf. Not possible though when we had to include the buggy ... we still have a Thomas train set with us.
You sound well on the way to getting it right for you...
Helen
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21/7/2010 at 9:13pm
Location: North West Outfit: just got a Vango Illusion 800XL TC
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We also have a Vermont L and two small children (8 and 5 this year). We have just about got all the stuff together in the front room apart from the clothes. When I look at it I think impossible but we have a big estate car and a roof box. As others have said good packing is key. I don't like anything hard in the cabin with the boys. We have a load retention net that goes from the top of the back seats to the roof enabling us to safely stuff things in up to the roof without fear of things sliding under heavy braking onto the boys.
As th OP says the Vermont L comes in two very large heavy bags which take up extraordinary room. Having said that as a family tent we would not do without it for the longer trips.
Cheers
------------- Bodmin August 2017
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