Thursday, June 4, 2020

1 Bag Packing During a Pandemic

Quick post here about my first air travel expereince since the COVID-19 outbreak. I took a JetBlue direct flight from Boston to Savannah last weekend. Some family matters needed to be handled in person, and the lucky coincidence of my parents' 60th wedding anniversary. (Check out the well-preserved cake topper from their actual wedding cake.)



First impression: I have never gotten to the airport so quickly. This is my first drive into Boston since mid-March. There was traffic, but not crazy traffic.

Next thing, super weird: No trouble finding a spot in the central parking garage. Literally, I parked near about four other cars right at the entrance to terminal C.

It gets weirder: The airport was largely empty (like the Worcester airport maybe?) and seemed cavernous. If you have visited tourist destinations which require you to pass through a metal detector, you have some sense of what it was like going through security at this point. Breezy, quick, low stress. I didn't waltz through, but I could have.

After security:  Passengers waiting to board the flight were well-behaved, and were all wearing a facemask.

The boarding: JetBlue has made the decision to board passengers from the back of the plane first, then progressively move towards the rows at the front of the plane, so as to minimize direct contact among passengers. Deplaning was different as well, with passengers encouraged to stay seated until those in front of them had made their way towards the exit. Hopefully this is something that will stick after the pandemic is over (it will be over, right?), because it just seem to make sense.

Your in-flight experience: At least at this point, with reduced numbers passengers on these flights, they are evidently making efforts to allow social distancing on the flight. In my case, both outbound and inbound, the seats around me were empty. Not sure how long that will continue, as we move back towards normalcy (It will get normal right?)

Snacks with germs: You know the thing where they roll a 2-ton metal cart up and down the aisle and totally on purpose whack you on the knee and elbow? That features is also on hold, at least temporarily. On JetBlue, anyway, each passenger has the option to take a bag with a couple of snacks (like seed sticks or a fun-size bag of pretzel dust) and a small bottle of water. Again, it wouldn't kill me if - at least on short domestic flights - we decide to forgo the option of 10 different beverage options, with or without ice, and just free up the middle aisle for people who are trying to get to the john.

Stress much?: I was nervous on the outbound flight, somewhat less so on the return flight, not sure why. I've been fortunate enough to be able to maintain social distancing during the pandemic for the most part, and the feeling of being so close to the people for the boarding, the flight, and the deplaning, just makes one a bit tense. At least this one.

1 bag packing: The whole focus of my blog, and my book on the topic, is 1 bag packing. Gotta tell you, there was no trouble finding room in the overhead bin on these flights last weekend. I stuck with all my usual practices around minimal travel and packing, because these have served me well during the "normal" pre-pandemic travel days (remember the pushing? the shoving? the touching of tray tables and then scratching your nose?)

My plan is to stick with these well-honed strategies for any travel which is necessary during these weird times, and pick up right where we left off, after the pandemic is over.

It will end, right?

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

Just returned from 10 days in Washington/California/Oregon. One bag. With hiking poles strapped to bag. Didn't need them, could have rented them when I rented snowshoes.

A reminder to myself to keep it minimal. And also this great post.




Saturday, May 28, 2016

4 weeks, 2 continents, 1 bag. again.

Just returned from 4 weeks in Australia. This time I didn't leave from Boston, though. Had a wedding in New Orleans just prior to leaving, so I flew out from there.

Just one bag - for the NOLA weekend and the tour of Australia - and did not check luggage for any of these flights.

Still using the bag I mention in the book, and it's holding up great even though I sort of beat the crap out of it.

For longer trips, I'm definitely feeling powdered laundry detergent rather than shampoo. Works better, actually smells like you did laundry.

I packed only two dress shirts for the 10 workshops in Australia, so made use of hotel laundry service for crisp ironing.

Discovered what I think is my favorite part of Australia - the southwest. It's got everything, forest hikes, spelunking, boring vineyard tours, great beaches (google "Denmark elephant rock" and be awed).



Friday, February 26, 2016

Best tiny Bluetooth speaker yet

I've tried several Bluetooth speakers and I'm always looking for the perfect combination of great sound and tiny size. When you are packing just one bag, can't afford the heft and weight of a really big high-quality speaker.

This little guy is consistently blowing me away. I sync it to my phone for better quality music in the room, and clear and loud news or podcasts while I shower and shave.

Here's a pic with hotel room key for size comparison. 

https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00OEPCHL2/ref=oh_aui_search_detailpage?ie=UTF8&psc=1

Wednesday, October 21, 2015

1 Ticket, 1 Backpack, Zero Pre-Planning: Adventure Roulette

Joel Runyon at ImpossibleHQ offers this: 


  1. Put away $500.
  2. Go to the airport.
  3. Find an awesome agent. You can tell that some are stressed, and that some are friendly. Talk to the friendly ones if you can – they’re much more fun.
  4. Give them your $500, and tell them, “I’d like you to book me a trip somewhere – anywhere -, preferably a cool place, but it can be anywhere you like for under $500. Can you do that for me?”
He calls it "Adventure Roulette" and here are the criteria:
  • Any ticket under $500
  • Any destination at least 500 miles away
  • One backpack
  • No input at all from me on the final destination
  • No looking at the ticket until I’m through security (and, ideally, as long as possible)
  • Departure: any time during the day that I show up
  • Return: any time before midnight the following night

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

GoBag

Here's a good-looking bag. Showed up in my Facebook feed today.  It's the GoBag, can't tell whether it's a crowdfunding project or if it's on sale yet....anyway check it out...it looks a lot like the eBags Weekender that I talk about in my minimal travel book. A cool feature (see the gif below) is the vacuum compression system. Might not be practical for my current travel style, which involves packing/repacking every day, different hotel every day.

Shares a lot of features with the Weekender -- backstraps, heavy duty zipper, looks more like luggage than a student backpack.

Anybody have one of these?



Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Baubax travel jacket


I just jumped on this Kickstarter campaign for the Baubax jacket....advertised as "the world's best travel jacket." I'm inclined to believe it...there are actually 4 different jackets, all with multiple functional features for air travel.

In my book I describe the Columbia Silver Ridge vest - essentially a cheaper version of the popular Scottevest travel vest.

I still travel with the Columbia vest from Autumn through Spring - lots of pockets and zippered hideaways for everything I want (or might want) on the plane.  But this Baubax jacket looks incredible. Check it out.