What’s in your pack, Dave Lee?

Dave Lee of GoBackpacking.com recently saved $30,000, quit his full-time job, and hopped on a plane to travel the world for a year or more. “While I’m not going to be the lightest guy on the road, weighing in at a total of just 20lbs fully packed, minus the clothes on my back,” he wrote in an email late last month, just 48 hours before departure. “It’s hard to avoid carrying technology now that it’s so small, light, and inexpensive, though I know I could drop a few pounds if I ditched a bit of it.” So, Dave, what’s in your pack?

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Clothes and Packs

  • Gregory Chaos backpack (2,800 cubic inches, from Summer ’98 Europe)
  • Patagonia daypack (new, not pictured, replaces green Jansport canvas bag)
  • Merrell hiking boots (I might regret taking these, from Spring ’05 Costa Rica)
  • Saucony running sneakers w/custom molded orthotics
  • Brazilian flip flops (from Spring ’05 Costa Rica)
  • North Face windbreaker (from Spring ’05 Costa Rica)
  • North Face khaki cargo pants (from Summer ’98 Europe)
  • North Face khaki cargo shorts (from Summer ’98 Europe)
  • Bathing suit
  • 2 T-shirts
  • 3 pairs of socks (2 new crew Smart Wool, and 1 Ingenius liner hybrid)
  • 3 boxers
  • 2 bandannas (from Spring ’05 Costa Rica and ’06 Belize)
  • Baseball cap – DC Nationals camo (new, not a fan of the team – just like the design)
  • Eagle Creek money belt (from Summer ’98 Europe)
  • Oakley sunglasses
  • Prescription glasses w/case (new, though I have 20/20 vision)

Toiletries and First Aid

  • Small paktowel (from Spring ’05 Costa Rica)
  • First Aid Kit – homemade w/Tupperware. Includes assorted band aids, gauze, Q-tips, digital thermometer, Sudafed, Imodium, Gas-x, Benadryl, moleskin, healthy travel and first aid booklets.
  • Toiletry bag – toothbrush, dental floss, nail clippers, Motrin, Aleve, Gold Bond powder, Centrum vitamins, 2 safety razors, 1 roll toilet paper.
  • 1 quart Ziploc bag with <3oz/bottle – Campsuds, suntan lotion, Neosporin, Cortizone, shaving cream, toothpaste, eye drops, bug spray, skin lotion, Prep-H

Electronic Gear (I think I crossed into official flashpacker territory)

  • Canon PowerShot Digital Elph SD700IS camera w/soft case (new)
  • 2 camera batteries and 2 memory cards (new, 2gb each)
  • Canon battery charger (new)
  • Petzl Zipka LED headlamp w/2 AAA batteries (new)
  • Casio Pathfinder digital watch (new, love it!)
  • Creative Zen V Plus 8gb MP3 player w/headphones, cloth pouch (new)
  • Universal Adapter/Power Converter (new)
  • Universal Charger by Creative (new, specific to mp3 player)
  • Card reader (new)
  • E*Trade digital security token (new)
  • SanDisk Cruzer Micro 1gb Flash Stick (new, loaded w/Skype and Firefox + my personal bookmarks)
  • Cheap headset/mic for Skype (new)

Documents and Money (all items to be scanned and e-mailed to self, copies left at home too)

  • Passport w/Chinese Visa
  • Photocopy of passport info page
  • Printout of Australian electronic Visa
  • 9 extra photos (for Visas)
  • Driver’s License
  • Anthem health insurance card
  • WHO Immunization card
  • 4 flight e-ticket receipts, NYC bus reservation
  • Lonely Planet Tahiti, Rough Guides New Zealand
  • E*Trade Visa debit card
  • Suntrust Visa debit card (back-up, expires 9/08)
  • Capital One Visa credit card
  • 3 paper E*Trade checks
  • $150 in travelers checks
  • $300 cash (USD)

Miscellaneous

  • Notebook and pen
  • Camera and watch manuals
  • ~ 70 Moo/Flickr mini cards w/blog and e-mail address
  • Sewing kit (from Summer ’98 Europe – yet to be used!)
  • Gum

Thanks, Dave! If you’d like to be featured in our What’s in your pack? series, send me an email: justinglow (at) gmail.com.

What’s in your pack, Kynt and Vyxsin?

For all of those who have been following the Amazing Race recaps, here’s something interesting. I was recently reading In Touch Magazine (shut up! I only read it on the treadmill … swear.) and they had a little article on Kynt and Vyxsin, the goth team in the race. More specifically, they took a look into their packs to see what they brought. Here’s what they found:

  • A flat iron (“My best friend in life”, say Kynt)
  • A hairdryer
  • Fake eyelashes
  • Two hot pink cowboy hats
  • Cotton candy body spray (because nothing says Gothic like cotton candy body spray … !? )
  • Over 25 CoverGirl pressed-powder compacts
  • Four pairs of his-and-her fishnet stockings (really? only four ?)
  • Silver and pink glitter
  • SPF 50 sunscreen so they can remain ghastly pale
  • A compass

Well, we may mock but their collection of belongings are obviously suiting them quite well since they’re still in the game. And doing quite well, I might add.

What’s in your pack, David Farley?

David Farley‘s writing appears in the travel sections of The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, Chicago Tribune, and The South Florida Sun Sentinel, as well as the magazines Conde Nast Traveler, Arthur Frommer’s Budget Travel, Playboy, GQ, New York magazine, and Time Out New York, among other publications. In 2009, Gotham Books/Penguin will publish a new book about his “bizarre, intriguing, and often humorous search for one of Christianity’s most curious relics: the foreskin of Jesus.”

I’m a bit afraid to ask, but what’s in your pack, David?

“On average I’m on the road about a week or a week and a half every month, and because I’m always on assignment, I try to pack as lightly as possible. I bring one carry on-sized backpack that I bought in Chinatown for $20 about four years ago. It has a few broken zippers, but it’s been with me on every trip since. When the person at the airline check-in counter sees that I’m going to be in Europe for ten days and then asks how many bags I’m checking, it’s always fun to see the look on their face when I say none. I’m in Rome at the moment and for this trip I allowed myself to bring an extra bag, but that was only because I’d be relatively stationary and here for three months.

“So what do I usually stuff in my bread-box-sized backpack? I bring my Dell Inspiron laptop and my BlackBerry, which I use as a modem to get internet access on my laptop. A digital camera. My iPod, which I always insist on bringing, but have never used while on the road (the sounds of a foreign place are always much more intriguing to my ears).

“I also bring a notebook, a couple pens, a guidebook (NOT Lonely Planet), a whole packet of stuff I’ve printed off the internet (usually as many travel pieces I can find about the place), a couple copies of The New Yorker I haven’t read yet, and a travelogue or history book or novel that’s set in the place I’m going.

“For clothes, I’ve always felt like it’s hard to take anyone seriously when they’re wearing khaki shorts and Tiva sandals. For that reason, I don’t dress like a tourist when I’m traveling. Instead, I bring the same clothes I wear at home in New York City: a couple nice button-up shirts, a v-necked sweater, two pairs of pants (one pair of jeans and another non-jeans pair), a few pairs of boxer shorts, and a couple pairs of socks. I bring only one pair of shoes, almost always Camper because they look nice enough to not raise eyebrows in an upscale restaurant, but are comfortable enough for me to walk several miles in one day. On top of that, I make sure all the various parts of my travel wardrobe will match, so that I can wear whatever is clean (or dry) at any time.

“The flip side of only taking about three changes of clothes (including the clothes I’ll be wearing on the flight) is that I’m obligated to wash my clothes in the hotel sink just about every night, which isn’t easy when you’re moving from place to place almost every day, as I sometimes have to do. I’ve lived abroad several times without a washing machine, so I’m pretty used to hand washing, anyway.

“I’d much rather hand-wash my clothes than lug around a big bag. It’s also nice to get off the plane and just go,without having to wait around for my bag, which is inevitably the last one that comes around on the carousel. Sometimes when I see the way people over-pack-lugging around bags that a pachyderm could fit into-I almost laugh out loud in shock. One time, while waiting in the check-in line, I noticed the couple next to me each had two massive bags and two large carry-ons. I jokingly suggested that they must be moving out of the country with so much baggage, but they said they were just going to London for four days. In a way, it’s emblematic of how inefficient and solipsistic we are as a society; we stuff our bags with so many just-in-case items, forgetting that the outside world also uses shampoo, tampons, and soap, and that there are shops in the outside world that sell those things just in case you need them. In fact, being forced to go into a shop to buy something you need (but didn’t bring), may in some way heighten your travel experience. We like to wax on about how travel changes us, it opens our minds and expands our world view. But I’m not so sure this is always true. Those people in line next to me with the huge bags are probably going to over-pack on their next trip too. Travel changes you only because you’re susceptible to change and when I look around the airport seeing see people lugging bags big enough to stuff a small family or when I constantly see Italian tourists eating at Italian restaurants in New York, or when I see Americans eating at McDonald’s while traveling abroad, I realize that travel is only a catalyst for change if you really want it to be.”

Thanks, David!

Want to show Gadling readers how you pack for the road? Send me an email (justinglow at gmail dot com) with a full description and pictures and we’ll feature it on the site!

Talking Travel with the Today show’s Peter Greenberg

When I was offered the chance to interview Peter Greenberg, author of The Travel Detective series, I took it without knowing what a large personality he is. Then I did some Googling, and was promptly in a nervous frenzy over having to talk to my first celebrity. His resume is more than impressive; it’s downright intimidating. Here’s what Greater Talent has to say about him:

“No one knows international culture and business like Peter Greenberg. With more than 11 million miles of direct experience under his belt, his perspective on globalization, trade and cross-cultural marketing–as well as travel, tourism, and all industries that feed off of them–is unprecedented.
Greenberg has covered literally thousands of stories in hundreds of countries across the globe in his many roles, including: travel editor for NBC, MSNBC and CNBC; best-selling author; radio host of a program syndicated nationally and broadcast on XM Satellite; contributing editor for America Online and Men`s Health; and regular contributor to Forbes and The New Yorker.” Yikes!

Thankfully, he was amiable and chatty. Here’s what he had to say:

Enter to win a copy of Peter Greenberg’s New book, “The Complete Travel Detective Bible.” Details at the end of the interview!

You’ve been traveling since you were an infant. Is there a particular trip from your childhood that influenced what you do now?

I was very blessed as a child because my parents wanted not only to introduce me to the world, but to the world’s processes. I was fascinated with how things work: how does a plane fly? How does a ship sail, or float? So that became a preoccupation at a very early age. When I was flying I was always asking questions. And I’ve always been crazy about boats. I’ve actually operated boats since in I was seven years old. I got my first boat at 14, and still have that exact same boat.

So you were always interested in the mechanics of it all, how to get from Point A to Point B? The actual physical journey?

Exactly, because if you can’t understand and appreciate the physical process, how are you ever going to understand the product? And that applies to just about everything you do. Every spa wants to tell you that they get their mud from Madagascar, and I say “Great. But how do you get the mud from Madagascar? Is it dug up, is it trucked thousands of miles?” And they say, “Oh, we’ve got a beautiful photo of a model wrapped in it.” But I don’t want to see that. I want to know how it got here, because then I can really appreciate what you do.

How has your travel style evolved over the years?

Well, remember I was a reporter for Newsweek for many years, so my travel style is really very much my journalism style. I’m always asking questions and always wanting to know about interior workings. We did a 2-hour special for CNBC that I hosted and co-produced on a week in the life of a the world’s largest airline. We had total access to the process. And it got rave reviews, because for the first time people actually saw how something worked! It wasn’t just somebody sitting in the plane putting their seatbelt on.

You’ve taken some pretty high-profile tours, with heads of state. I’m wondering how the insider’s view changes between a political figure and, say, a street vendor.

Well, I’ll tell you how that works: I have a certain M.O. when it comes to [The Royal Tour]. My goal is not to do Robin Leach work; my goal in life is to make sure everything I do is accessible to my audience. I will go to a head of state and get that head of state to give me five days of his or her schedule unencumbered, then we’ll send just about everyone else from the government home, because I don’t want them messing around in the kitchen, and for the next five days it’s really the two of us, on this wild magical mystery ride, as they give me a tour of their country through their eyes — with one important mandate, and that mandate which is nonnegotiable is that everything you see me doing with that head of state is has to be accessible to the audience. They get to do it to. They may not get to do with a head of state but they get to do it. It has to be accessible, or I’m not really helping anybody out.

What languages do you speak?

I speak Spanish, a little bit of French, and a little bit of Thai.

How important do you think it is to know the language of the country you’re visiting?

I think it’s even more important to know the culture. I’m not going to assume that somebody visiting the U.S. from another country is going to know English. Of course, the chances are much higher of them knowing English than me knowing their language. When you can appreciate, and do your best to assimilate, or at least insert yourself into the culture, that’s the greatest sign of respect you can give another culture — that you’ve done enough homework ahead of time, that you understand what’s important and valuable to them, and that you want to learn more. Do this, and you’ll get 10 times that amount of respect back.

When did you start writing about travel?

I started writing about travel when I was 17, as a student journalist at the University of Wisconsin, and Newsweek right after that. Every story involved travel, whether it was about travel or not. I was the guy with the suitcase in the trunk of my car jumping to be the first at the scene of something, and that’s when it dawned on me at a very early age that no one was covering travel as news. Nobody was covering it as a process. Travel was very much a reflection of the happy couple walking along the beach, the senior couple in their bathrobes on a balcony. It was basically a sales and marketing transaction. And I thought the public needed more, because more people started traveling after deregulation (in the 1970s), but they’re all getting abused. And they love to travel but they hate the abuse. There’s got to be someone out there telling them how to finesse the process. And that’s really where I got started.

How did you get the idea for the Travel Detective series?

It goes back to the process versus product idea — the audience doesn’t need me to tell them that the sun sets nicely in the Bahamas. That one they can figure out themselves. What they need me to tell them is that while the sun is setting in the Bahamas, and the airline lost their bag, and the hotel has no record of their reservation, and the cab driver took them on a 40-mile drive instead of two, how can I get them all that information ahead of time so they know what questions to ask, and to whom, so that never happens to them again.

You can tell you’re a bit frustrated with the travel industry, as we all are, but that being said is there any destination that you don’t ever want to return to?

Oh, the answer is none! I get very angry when I tell people where I’ve just returned from and they say, “that’s not on my list.” And I ask them, “who publishes that list? Are you nuts?” There are 314 distinct destinations around the world, and I’ve been lucky enough to go to 146 of them. That’s not even half! But it is 145 more than most Americans, because only 25% of Americans have passports. How embarrassing is that? So the answer is everything that’s on my list is every place I’ve never been to that I want to check out at least once.

I thought it was great that you included visiting Iraq in The Travel Detective’s Bible.

Absolutely. Because most people get propagandized into thinking you can’t go. Of course you can go, to Northern Iraq to a place like Arbil. There are places in Newark where I wouldn’t go, but that doesn’t mean I’m not going to visit New Jersey.

Anywhere you wish you could’ve stayed longer?

This is corny, but the answer is everywhere. Because the longer you stay the more you get surprised; your best travel experiences happen when your plans didn’t work — when your car broke down and you met somebody. You open yourself to being spontaneous and more adaptable.

So tell us, what’s in your pack?

I haven’t checked a bag domestically in 8 years; I FedEx them, but I’ll tell you what’s in my briefcase. I alway carry two additional phone lines, two additional extension cords, electrical adapter, two of every kind of battery, two small high-density mag lites, post its, extra rubber bands, an iBook, cigarette lighter plug-ins for my cell phone and Blackberry, extra glasses, three cell phones — my Blackberry is international, then I’ve got my regular cell phone and a backup, so I have three separate systems. You might not get a signal on one system, but you’ve got a one in three chance of getting a signal. I’ve got Sprint and Verizon. Also I have an Altoid tin with one of every kind of medicine I might need — Vicodin in case I’m in pain, a malaria pill.

You’ve got all those labeled, I hope?!

Each one is labeled, but I’ve never had to use any of them!

We’re giving away 10 copies of Peter’s new book, “The Complete Travel Detective Bible.” Enter to win by clicking here. You can catch Peter Greenberg on NBC’s Today show, or visit his website to get more information.

What’s in Your Pack, Tim Leffel?

Tim Leffel is author of The World’s Cheapest Destinations and Make Your Travel Dollars Worth a Fortune. He is also editor of the narrative webzine PerceptiveTravel.com. So Tim, what’s in your pack?

“As a travel writer, I’m packing differently for different trips, sometimes for work, sometimes for pleasure, alone or with my family. Plus I’m constantly reviewing different items for the Practical Travel Gear blog. I tend to rotate through a bunch of different bags depending on the situation. I’ve got an Eagle Creek Continental Journey carry-on travel backpack, a generic rolling duffel bag, two regular wheelie suitcases in different sizes, a large backpack, and a leather duffel bag.”

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“This last one has become my favorite for trips two weeks or less where I won’t be walking around much between hotels or buzzing through five different hub airport connections. I bought it in a Mexican leather shop for $35 and have used it on eight trips so far. It’s comfortable to hold, has a shoulder strap, and is dead easy to spot on the luggage carousel. If I don’t stuff it to capacity, it works fine as a carry-on too. I usually carry it to my destination, then check it coming home (when it’s invariably fuller).

Here are pics before my recent two-week trip to Hungary and the Czech Republic, with the contents laid out and the bag after it was packed. This was a trip where I had to dress nicely for dinner and meetings fairly often, but I was also biking through the countryside of Moravia and shuffling through wine cellars. So I couldn’t be a total travel bum and it was a bit of a challenge to do it carry-on style, but I couldn’t risk losing my luggage going there so I had to make it work

Here are a few notes on some items that help me pack light. My Fujitsu laptop weighs less than three pounds and has a built-in wireless card. It slips into my eBags laptop backpack, which looks just like a regular daypack. My camera case also holds a small notebook, pen, lip balm, and extra memory card, so it’s all I need for the day when doing research. I carry some lightweight, quick-dry clothes from REI and Ex-Officio, including two pairs of boxer shorts, so I can do some sink laundry on occasion. My toiletries are all travel size items that can be carried on. Everything electronic is rechargeable. Only two pairs of shoes: dressy loafers with rubber soles (worn on the plane) and a pair of lightweight, water-resistant sneakers from Technica. If I were going somewhere hot I would also take Teva-style sandals.

You’ll notice that the contents are not very colorful. That’s intentional. Any pair of pants can go with pretty much any of the shirts.

As I write this I’m finishing up my trip and it went swimmingly. There was one long-sleeve t-shirt I didn’t wear and I could have done without the stretchy clothesline since I was in decent hotels. The Skype phone didn’t get used much because high-speed Internet access was often iffy in both Hungary and the Czech Republic. Everything else got a workout and there wasn’t anything I wish I had brought. I stupidly left my travel alarm clock in the room in one hotel though, so time to get another one…

Wearing in transit

  • Slacks
  • Semi-dressy loafers
  • Wrinkle-free sportcoat
  • Wrinkle-free dress shirt
  • Belt, underwear, socks
  • In my bag
  • Two pairs of pants (one dress, one light khakis)
  • Two shirts with collars
  • Two long-sleeve t-shirts
  • Three short-sleeve t-shirts
  • Biking shorts
  • Long underwear(for biking)
  • Baseball hat
  • Sneakers
  • North Face windbreaker fleece
  • Waterproof jacket (balls up into small pouch)
  • Belt that holds money
  • Six pairs of underwear”