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8 Things You Need To Take on Your Backpacking Trips

Posted by leastofthesepromotions team on Feb-3-2010

So, you’re planning on going travelling – seeing the world the way it’s meant to be seen, up close and personal. You’ve booked your flights, found the best travel insurance, cleared your visas and you know exactly where you’re going. Now the only question is what do you take with you?

For backpackers, the important thing is to travel light. But it also pays to be prepared. So, assuming you know to bring some clothiers with you (unless you’re going far off the beaten track, nudity still won’t be acceptable), then these first few suggestions are essentials that any backpacker should make sure they have with them wherever they go.

1. First aid kit; this is perhaps the best travel insurance you can take, as it’s the only one that doesn’t depend on being near a hospital if you fall sick. Whilst anti-bacterial cream/spray, clean bandages, plasters and disinfectant are obvious choices, you may also consider taking syringes if you’re travelling through areas of extreme poverty or disease. Local first aiders may not have clean supplies, and at the very least having your own will guarantee your safety.

2. A lightweight, waterproof sleeping bag: You may not be planning on sleeping rough, but its best to be prepared. Carrying a decent, modern sleeping bag may seem like sacrificing a lot of premium space when hostels are supposedly available, but it’s a must for any backpacker. It’s the best travel insurance against unclean bedsheets, and it’s also a good money saver – many hostels will charge for sheets and blankets. Even if they are dirty.

3. Waterproofs; obviously, these may be less than useful if you’re backpacking across the Sahara. But if you’re travelling through anywhere during the rainy season, you’ll need them – more importantly, so will your delicate paper documents. Even outside of monsoons and seasonal rains, less developed nations can also have less developed roads – a waterproof will protect you from mud as well as water.

4. Insect repellent; actually, this is probably the best form of travel insurance – it’s a certainty you’ll be plagued by insects in nearly all of the popular destinations. Not only will you probably taste like an exotic dish to the local mosquitos, you’ll also be unprepared for the amount and variety of bugs that you see in warmer climates.

5. Plastic cutlery and bowl; obviously, one shouldn’t get carried away with this. But if you don’t take a knife and fork, you may regret it – many countries have different traditions at the dinner table, and you may get caught out if you can’t use the chopsticks. Or not want to eat with your hands. Either way, taking a plastic bowl as well will have the added advantage of being able to take advantage of some of the fare available in more rural areas, where customers bring their own dishes – and you’ll be able to ensure that what you’re eating off is clean.

6. A hat; well, not necessarily a hat. But some form of head covering is essential, be it a bandanna or a baseball cap. This will keep the sun off your head and out of your eyes, as well as preventing sweat and bugs from getting in your hair.

7. A compass (and preferably, a relevant map); it might seem a little daft, but one of these can save you hours of time and tons of stress. In an unfamiliar place where people may not be able to communicate with you, a compass is a reliable way of establishing your direction if not necessarily your location. It’ll prevent you from going in circles and in a worst case scenario, help you find your way back to civilisation if you take an ill-advised detour off the beaten path.

8. Washing line; the difference between a backpacker and your average tourist is the nature of your luggage. Your average holidaymaker over packs for a weeklong trip in a leisure resort, wearing each item once or twice before packing it away and putting a fresh set on. A backpacker spends weeks in the comparative wilderness, carrying all of their clothes with them on each journey – and not through the pristine environment of a resort either. With a washing line, you’ll be able to clean your few items of clothing wherever you go.

Backpack For Your Travelling

Posted by leastofthesepromotions team on Jan-4-2009

Traveling with the backpack makes you feel like an adventurer of old, someone who gathers his few belongings in a bundle and comes out to see the world. Well, that being so, all our things are in the backpack should have some care to keep her on the road.

Backpack

We’ve all been with some concern, standing in an airport, waiting to see our dear friend to appear in the tape room, counting the seconds and fearing the worst is more than one he has had to mourn the loss, is not it? So whether you’ve had the fear or regret the loss , what can we do to not to lose the backpack?

While you have common sense with him and basically avoid many dangerous situations, the truth is that hundreds of backpackers are stolen every year. The primary key is not presented as an easy target and that here are some tips:

* If you sleep in an airport, you can connect the backpacks and bags for all with a thread; if you travel only bind the pack to your wrist.

* If you travel by bus is sitting on the same side of the trunk load your backpack where it travels at each stop he made a glance out the window.

. Before affixing a sticker with your country’s flag on his backpack, found that bilateral relations are not bad for never missing the “nationalist” that can complicate the journey.

. Put small padlocks on the outside pockets so that nobody crowds you open the zip without realizing it.

. The most valuable packed well into the backpack.

. Avoid carrying bags to reveal its contents as kits or kits guitars laptops, for example.