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#31
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How to pack light, some tips
James Silverton wrote:
Another thing to consider is the weight of your suitcase. I discovered this when one airline started rigorously applying a 50lb weight limit and I had to take things out and carry them on. I weighed the suitcase when I got home and it was 20lb: *empty*! I now have one the same size that weighs 10lb. James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not good god! 20lb empty!!! my backpack alone weighs 500g [a little over 1lb]. with all my stuff it's a little more than 5kg, at most 7.5kg but that's when i have some things to give away. battery chargers and toiletries [and *some* common meds such as immodium, paracetamol etc] are the stuff that weighs me down. however, on the way back it's bursting at the seam....full of edibles, coffee beans, and teas [duration of each trip is from 3 to 7 weeks] also, i always mail edibles home at some point instead of lugging them around for weeks. it seems every year my bag gets lighter. |
#32
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How to pack light, some tips
On Aug 20, 3:11 pm, "William Black"
wrote: "me" wrote in message [snip] Yup. Had to give up my beloved hard side. Thing weighed 17 lbs empty. Switched to one of those "crushable" sided cases. It was about half as heavy. My toothpaste however ruptured under the crushing weight of something though. Try Europe and Asia. Weight limit is now about 44lb (20Kg) on most flights. Carry-on limit is about 14lb, and they're starting weighing them... Last trip to England on VA, my bag was over their limit of about 24kg (actually 22 but they'd stop quibbling at 24). They watched me as I took heavy books out of the suitcase, and into my carry on and into my wifes suitcase (which was below their limit) . It satisfied them, but I wanted to point out that the plane was still just as heavy. |
#33
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How to pack light, some tips
"me" wrote in message ups.com... On Aug 20, 3:11 pm, "William Black" wrote: "me" wrote in message [snip] Yup. Had to give up my beloved hard side. Thing weighed 17 lbs empty. Switched to one of those "crushable" sided cases. It was about half as heavy. My toothpaste however ruptured under the crushing weight of something though. Try Europe and Asia. Weight limit is now about 44lb (20Kg) on most flights. Carry-on limit is about 14lb, and they're starting weighing them... Last trip to England on VA, my bag was over their limit of about 24kg (actually 22 but they'd stop quibbling at 24). They watched me as I took heavy books out of the suitcase, and into my carry on and into my wifes suitcase (which was below their limit) . It satisfied them, but I wanted to point out that the plane was still just as heavy. Things are bad in the UK air passenger industry at the moment. The low cost people are pinching loads of the short haul passengers. The insane security at Heathrow is making transit passengers stay away in droves. People like me are actually seriously considering going to Holland on the ferry rather than catch a shuttle down to Heathrow for an onwards flight (I won't be, Emirates are now flying from Newcastle) In a desperate attempt to raise some money a number of airlines have cut luggage allowances from 23 Kg to 20 Kg on non USA flights and are making lots of people pay for excess baggage. It's not going to work, it's going to **** off an awful lot of people and when the low cost airlines start doing long haul flights people will flock to them. -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. |
#34
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How to pack light, some tips
On Aug 20, 2:32 pm, "William Black"
wrote: "Spehro Pefhany" wrote in message ... He also recommends you buying batteries when you need them, which does rather seem to indicate that he doesn't get off the beaten track much... Depends what kind of batteries you need... AA cells and 9V batteries are available just about anywhere. Not outside tourist areas in the Third World. Packing for travel to remote regions of the Third World requires real thought. Packing for travel to European cities doesn't. |
#35
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How to pack light, some tips
wrote in message ups.com... On Aug 20, 2:32 pm, "William Black" wrote: "Spehro Pefhany" wrote in message ... He also recommends you buying batteries when you need them, which does rather seem to indicate that he doesn't get off the beaten track much... Depends what kind of batteries you need... AA cells and 9V batteries are available just about anywhere. Not outside tourist areas in the Third World. Packing for travel to remote regions of the Third World requires real thought. Packing for travel to European cities doesn't. There's very little you can't buy in most European cities. You can just leave everything at home and take a shed load of cash and a bundle of gold credit cards. -- William Black I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Barbeques on fire by the chalets past the castle headland I watched the gift shops glitter in the darkness off the Newborough gate All these moments will be lost in time, like icecream on the beach Time for tea. |
#36
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How to pack light, some tips
In article ,
"William Black" wrote: He's also never been to the tropics. You're 20oz Levies are way too warm... re jeans: ever try to hand wash them ans get them dry? takes about 3 days. . . -- Mary, biblioholic bib-li-o-hol-ism : the habitual longing to purchase, read, store, admire, and consume books in excess. http://www.airstreamcomm.net/~erilarlo |
#37
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How to pack light, some tips
In article ,
Markku Grönroos wrote: "Spehro Pefhany" kirjoitti om... I carry a small bottle of shampoo, because I don't like the free stuff. Maybe 200ml, which could last for several weeks. Not having a mobile phone seems silly. Why? When travelling on holiday, you need a phone. I don't need one. Mine's no good outside the US anyway 8-) -- Mary, biblioholic bib-li-o-hol-ism : the habitual longing to purchase, read, store, admire, and consume books in excess. http://www.airstreamcomm.net/~erilarlo |
#38
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How to pack light, some tips
In article ,
"Ian Burton" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... http://home.comcast.net/~plutarch/packlight.html There are tips here that I couldn't follow in a million years, but to each his own. One paragraph that turned my stomach is below. I find no pleasure in tearing up books. Next kommt the burning! That's silly: I scan pages from travel books and take copies. If I REALLY need local info, many hotels have some and there's usually a tourist office around if you're planning on being wherever for a couple days. For less, you don't need it. -- Mary, biblioholic bib-li-o-hol-ism : the habitual longing to purchase, read, store, admire, and consume books in excess. http://www.airstreamcomm.net/~erilarlo |
#39
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How to pack light, some tips
In article ,
"J. Clarke" wrote: wrote: I find no pleasure in tearing up books. I feel the same way, but it's a lot easier to carry only the pages you need. And guide books are kind of disposable items anyway, since the info becomes dated. A better idea is to copy just the pages that one wants That's a good alternative, especially if you only need a few pages. But be careful with that--copy paper is generally a heavier grade than what travel books are printed on and it's easy for the copies to build up to as much weight as the book. Copies aren't free either. Might turn out to be cheaper to just get two copies of the book, one to cut up and one to keep. Not if you copy only the parts you want and do it at home. Doesn't BEGIN to weigh what any book does. -- Mary, biblioholic bib-li-o-hol-ism : the habitual longing to purchase, read, store, admire, and consume books in excess. http://www.airstreamcomm.net/~erilarlo |
#40
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How to pack light, some tips
On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 15:58:18 +0300, the renowned Markku Grönroos
wrote: "Spehro Pefhany" kirjoitti viestissä:nl3jc3pki22123egcss1f7vrbitem9vb0v@4ax. com... I carry a small bottle of shampoo, because I don't like the free stuff. Maybe 200ml, which could last for several weeks. Not having a mobile phone seems silly. Why? When travelling on holiday, you need a phone. I don't need one. You never visit anyone when you're on holiday? You don't have anyone depending on you back home? You don't need to make reservations at a restaurant when you're travelling? You don't ever trip a credit card security flag and have to call? Any single one of those makes carrying a modern GSM phone well worth it, assuming you're mostly travelling where they will work. Of course if your holiday consists of travelling to a set location or two and staying in a fixed hotel, a cell phone may be a needless luxury, particularly if you don't have a demanding job, but in that case, the extra weight is of little consequence. Best regards, Spehro Pefhany -- "it's the network..." "The Journey is the reward" Info for manufacturers: http://www.trexon.com Embedded software/hardware/analog Info for designers: http://www.speff.com |
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