
Advice for Women Travelers:
Packing
disclaimer
General Advice About Packing
Every person packs differently, both in what they bring and how they pack it, and you will discover what's best for you through trial and error.
You are going to forget something you need -- that's just how it is. Remember that, in the vast majority of places you go, you can buy what you need.
Some general packing tips:
- Buy good, solid, tough, boring luggage. Go for durability, toughness, and ease-to-carry/roll around/carry, not fashion, because your luggage is going to take a beating, and needs to be able to withstand such. Also, the more expensive it looks, the more likely it, or its contents, will get stolen.
- I tie some multi-colored yarn around my luggage handles, so they are easier to sport on a luggage conveyer belt.
- Your luggage needs to have a name tag on the outside, and identification inside -- it's best if the inside i.d. is in more than one pocket of your luggage. Include your name, email address, phone number and physical address, both where you are coming from and where you are going to. If you will be traveling to more than one location, leave a copy of your trip itinerary inside your luggage so you can be located more easily.
- You may not lock your bags for going through an airport or flying. Airport security will no longer allow locked bags of any kind, whether its checked bags or carry-ons. If you do lock your bags, your locks WILL be broken. That said, do pack some little locks, and use them to lock your bags AFTER you leave the airport. I have a lock for my daypack that I use when I'm out and about, which, I hope, discourages pickpockets.
- Don't take electronics, jewelry or other valuables while traveling that you would be heartbroken to lose, or that are easily broken. If you are traveling by plane, then keep any of these items, along with documents, medicine (with copies of prescriptions) or any essentials, in your carry-on bag.
- Speaking of medicine, keep in mind when you pack that some things are easy to get in most other countries, like aspirin or antacids, but other things aren't, like treatments for a yeast infection or any asthma medications/inhalers.
- If you are going on a plane or train where your bags may not be under your control the entire time, and you are traveling with someone, divide your clothes between each other's bags. Then, if one bag is lost, you'll still have things to wear.
- I limit myself to two pair of shoes, including the pair I'm wearing. One pair is usually my Teva sandles, and I'm usually wearing those through the airport, because they are easy to take off for security and on the plane.
- You know how in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy how the most important thing you are supposed to have when traveling around space is a towel? That's actually not fiction. Always take a towel. Not a big beach towel, but not a little hand towel, and one that you wouldn't freak out over losing or leaving behind. You will be stunned at how often you need to use such on a trip -- because the hotel's towels are unusable, because you don't have a pillow, because you need to clean up something...
- Take a sink stopper if there is even the remote chance you will need to rinse something out or even wash something outright. Or maybe take a bath. The best sink stopper is the kind that's just a flat piece of thick plastic, because it fits any kind of drain.
- Take a "wax." A wax is a large piece of colorful but durable cloth that is often worn by women in developing countries as a wrap-around skirt or shawl. You can do the same, or use it for a top sheet when your sleeping bag or the European-style comforter is too much on a warm night, as a head dress (often needed to tour a mosque), extra covering in conservative countries, a picnic blanket... You can buy them at any hippy/dippy store, any import store, and the like.
- As for clothes, go for durability and practicality. If you are going for a clubbing weekend in Madrid, fine, take all your silly skimpy outfits and painful shoes. But if you are interested in sight-seeing, walking, and covering large areas in one day, go for comfort. I think loose-fitting clothes are awesome. And in countries outside the West, go for shirts or jackets that provide plenty of butt-cover. That last sentence really can't be emphasized enough. Plus, modest dress (your legs, arms and chest up to your collarbone covered -- added bonus if you can cover your head) gets you into religious sites (and I don't just mean mosques -- I have watched girls in shorts turned away from churches in Europe).
- If you are going to be traveling by plane or train and will want to nap or seriously sleep, I think three things are absolutely essential: a neck pillow, an eye mask, and ear plugs. And those last two come in handy if you find yourself trying to sleep in a noisy city, or if a light is shining into your room (happens frequently when I travel). I have an inflatable neck pillow, so that it doesn't take up so much space when not in use. But remember -- some situations, for safety's sake, may require you to stay awake (I never sleep alone on a train).
- If it's going to be a long trip and your luggage is going to go through more than just one airport or you are going to have to schlep it around a lot, consider taking duct tape in your carry on, as you may need it for quickie luggage repair until you can buy a replacement bag. A way to save room is to take just some duct tape, wrapped around a pencil.
- I believe in guidebooks, especially Lonely Planet. I almost always have one with me while traveling, even within the USA. It's not dogma, but it will, at the very least, tell me where I am, what I'm near, what might not worth be seeing and what I really shouldn't miss. I also, or otherwise, have a very detailed map of the major city/ies I'm visiting, and if I'm in a non-English-speaking country, I sometimes have a pocket phrase book with me (sometimes, I just point to the phrase in the book for what I want, showing it to the waitress or train worker or whomever).
- I always take a bottle of water and a snack bar (whole oat, ofcourse) in my carry on, and with me as I tour somewhere. And I've always, at some point, been grateful to have such. (ofcourse, unless the UK relaxes its airline security, this option will no longer be possible)
- If you intend to buy things to bring back, either leave room in your bags before you leave, or, pack an extra bag. I have two options: a duffle bag that reduces down to half the size of a notebook computer, and that, full of stuff, I can check as my second bag on my flight home; and an entirely-cloth backpack that, empty, I can pack in my fanny pack with everything else and, full, I use as my second carry on.
- Absolutely do NOT bring more bags than you can carry up and down 15 steps and across two city blocks entirely by yourself. I really can't stress this enough. You may have to get on a train by yourself -- or, worse, transfer from one train or bus to another by yourself -- and you cannot do it if you have too much luggage, or if your bags are crazy heavy. In Europe, no one will help you as you struggle with your bags -- trust me on this. And if you get on a train in Europe and have more bags than you can handle, other passengers will NOT be nice to you.
- Airline Security: Security practices can change suddenly, even from the time you leave your front door to the time you arrive at the airport. When a sudden clamp down occurs, an airport can decide that NO hand luggage/carry ons (I mean it -- none, and that includes a woman's purse, an unopened bottle of water, an iPod, a cell phone, a laptop, even a book). So make sure your hand luggage could survive if it had to be checked, because there's always a slight possibility that it might have to be. As these sudden security changes happen primarily in the UK, my advice: if flying through the UK means saving just a few hundred dollars, forget it: fly to somewhere on the European mainland. And if you find out about such a sudden clamp down well before your flight, consider paying the penalty fee and moving your flight to a later day when the sudden, stricter restrictions will be eased back (usually).
Disclaimer
Any activity incurs risk. The author assumes no responsibility for the use of information contained within this document.
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The art work on this page was created and is copyrighted
by Jayne Cravens, 2006-2008, all rights reserved

The personal opinions expressed on this page are solely those of Ms. Cravens, unless otherwise noted.