Pack travel candles – Hotel tip

Travel candles solve a few of the typical hotel room woes, particularly for budget travelers:

1.) They mask the scent of overpowering cleaners (or worse, but let’s not go there).
2.) They provide a soothing, romantic ambiance.
3.) Some scents, like lavender, help you fall asleep easier in unfamiliar surroundings.

Several companies, including The Travel Tin Company, make portable travel candles that are clean burning (no wall smudges or waxy drips) and safer than regular candles since they’re contained in a tin.

For under $10, travel candles go a long way in creating a comfortable atmosphere in your hotel home away from home.

Have a road trip scavenger hunt – Road trip tip

Planning a family road trip? To avoid hours of boredom, plan a “scenic scavenger hunt.”

It’s easy. Just write down a list of 100 things you might see along the way, like landmarks, buses or bridges. The first person to complete the list wins.

For preschool kids, substitute magazine photos and trim the list to twenty familiar objects. For older kids, include a challenge: require them to provide one additional fact about each item they find.

Have fun. And by the time you reach the end of the road, you won’t be at the end of your rope.

Bring clothespins and sleep in – Hotel tip

Why is it always impossible to close hotel curtains all the way? It’s always that little sliver of light that shines through the crack in the hotel curtains that’ll wake you up on a vacation morning when you very much want to sleep in.

Remember to pack a few clothespins in your bag whenever you travel, and wake up on your own terms by pinning the curtains together.

Closing that little gap will keep your room a lot darker by blocking the morning sun. You’ll also block the street and other outdoor lights at night.

Pack toilet paper – Road trip tip

Campers know this rule, but road trippers should follow it, too: always bring a roll of toilet paper.

It’s good to have if you need to make an “emergency stop” if the next exit is too far away. It saves you problems at poorly stocked rest stops. Finally, it’s great for cleaning up those spills of giant sodas and coffees from a little road turbulence or heavy-duty laughter.

How to pack perfume – Packing tip

Want to smell great while traveling without risking your expensive — and probably large — bottle of fragrance? There are several options to try.
1.) Many fragrances are available in solid form, a great alternative.
2.) Ask for multiple samples of your favorite fragrance and pack those in a medicine (or similar) bottle with a tight seal.
3.) Spritz cotton balls and place in an airtight container. Rub on, or stick in a pocket, as you travel.
4.) Pour some of your usual fragrance into a plastic “spritz” bottle from the travel-size section of a grocery or drug store. It’s cheaper than a travel atomizer.

Smell ya later!