So I started investigating ways I could reduce the number of liquid products I needed to bring along with me.
I started with my hair products. I bought a few bars of J.R. Ligget's Old Fashioned Shampoo as well as their Natural Traveler set. This worked great! I love the container that came with the NT set. However, J.R. Ligget's is all the way on the East Coast, and thus has a large carbon footprint, so I started looking for something more local. Dr. Bronner to the rescue! Their bar soap works just as well as the Ligget's shampoo bars, and their factory warehouse is only a few miles from my house. Dr B's has the added bonus of being Certified Fair Trade and Organic.
JR Ligget's Shampoo bar & Natural Traveler, plus a bar of Dr. Bronner's soap. |
Hair Putty, plus a folding brush from Japan |
travel toothbrush plus compostable silk floss |
Also in my travel kit are some items that are not daily use, but I have found if I *don't* have them with me, I wish I had brought them!
Towels. The one on the left is a travel towel in a little pocket holder like you can get from REI or any other camping store, while the one on the right is a compressed towel that opens to 10"x10". To use it, I just have to take it out of the wrapper and pull it open.
towelage |
Tide To-Go Pen and Dr Bronner's lip balm. Tide To-Go, or a similar product, is a MUST HAVE for traveling, especially if you don't know where/when your next laundry stop is. My lips get very dry, so I often have 3 or 4 tubes of lip balm stashed about my person.
Speaking of laundry, on longer trips when I know I'll have access to laundry machines (not just a sink) I take along some of these Purex 3-in-1 laundry sheets -- detergent, softener, and dryer sheet all in one. My friend Barbara turned me on to these - all 3 of her boys were Boy Scouts, so she understands about packing! Unfortunately, I see now that Purex has discontinued these things. Mutter. Hopefully, they'll either bring them back or someone else will start selling something similar. For trips in which I'll be washing in the sink, I have some powdered detergent that I put into a bag and take along. TSA is ok with laundry detergent powder. Also pictured is a stretchy laundry rope thingy to hang wet clothes on.
Tide To Go and Dr B's organic lip balm |
3-in-1 sheets and Flexo-Line clothesline |
When one travels, one doesn't always know what state of cleanliness the toilet facilities will be in, so I also carry a set of Whizzies with me. There are a lot of products along these lines to help women out in this kind of situation, but I like the Whizzy because it's just manilla paper and can be composted. Reusable products are great, but if water is in short supply, how do you clean them? or keep their case/bag clean? These are great when camping, hiking, or just stopping at a highway rest stop!
Whizzy!! |
And of course, what travel kit would be complete without tweezers, a combo nail clipper/bottle opener, and a wine opener? I keep these in my 311 bag because TSA likes to have a look at my corkscrew. It does NOT have a knife on it, so they let me keep it, but they always have to pick it up and look at it, so I make it easy for them to do that.
The essentials! |
So, the only things pictured above that go in my 311 bag are the opener, clipper, and tweezers. Everything else here can be packed into whatever nook & cranny can be found in my carry on bag - though I do usually keep them all together in one clear rectangular zippered bag for ease of use.
Someday I'll write a post showing how I pack a carryon suitcase for a 5 week trip. It's easier than you might think!
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