Sunday I head out for almost a week of fun fun fun with my greater family unit, many of whom I don't know well enough to know what they enjoy doing.
They've rented three houses in Duck, NC (I've decided it's not a noun, but an imperative: there's Devil's Kills nearby...), which is on the outer banks (in August. Hurricanes can happen in August. Luckily I haven't heard of anything brewing...).
And I have to decide what to pack. I want to keep it to luggage I can handle myself, so the suitcase that is an internal-frame pack (seen recently at potluck on the Common), a carry-on, and possibly another bag, if I need it.
The current list of stuff that has to fit in is:
a bunch of T-shirts, including ones to sleep in
the men's pj bottoms I use as pants
a couple of skirts (if I can find some new, light ones, that would be great)
underwear
a light dress, just in case of something vaguely more formal
a heavier top to go over things, in case it gets cool at night
toiletries
SUNBLOCK, a hat, sunglasses
books to read
crocheting or other project to make
games (so far, Set, Xactica, Aquarius, and regular cards; they're portable and relatively accessible to all)
paper and pens
a vegetable peeler
paring knife
TJ's brand flat flexible cutting board equivalent
can opener
cheddar cheese
breakfast bars, or some other just-in-case food.
I'm assuming that I'll be able to get fruits and veggies, and stuff like canned tuna and boring packaged bread, so I'm not bringing anything like that. I debated bringing a pot, but with all the extra stuff, I'm just not going to bother to cook. I'll be sick of raw food by the end of the week, but it won't be the end of me, either.
I have no bathing suit, and am unlikely to find time to shop for one before I leave. I can always go in the ocean in a T-shirt and shorts, I suppose.
Anything else glaring I'm missing?
i
They've rented three houses in Duck, NC (I've decided it's not a noun, but an imperative: there's Devil's Kills nearby...), which is on the outer banks (in August. Hurricanes can happen in August. Luckily I haven't heard of anything brewing...).
And I have to decide what to pack. I want to keep it to luggage I can handle myself, so the suitcase that is an internal-frame pack (seen recently at potluck on the Common), a carry-on, and possibly another bag, if I need it.
The current list of stuff that has to fit in is:
a bunch of T-shirts, including ones to sleep in
the men's pj bottoms I use as pants
a couple of skirts (if I can find some new, light ones, that would be great)
underwear
a light dress, just in case of something vaguely more formal
a heavier top to go over things, in case it gets cool at night
toiletries
SUNBLOCK, a hat, sunglasses
books to read
crocheting or other project to make
games (so far, Set, Xactica, Aquarius, and regular cards; they're portable and relatively accessible to all)
paper and pens
a vegetable peeler
paring knife
TJ's brand flat flexible cutting board equivalent
can opener
cheddar cheese
breakfast bars, or some other just-in-case food.
I'm assuming that I'll be able to get fruits and veggies, and stuff like canned tuna and boring packaged bread, so I'm not bringing anything like that. I debated bringing a pot, but with all the extra stuff, I'm just not going to bother to cook. I'll be sick of raw food by the end of the week, but it won't be the end of me, either.
I have no bathing suit, and am unlikely to find time to shop for one before I leave. I can always go in the ocean in a T-shirt and shorts, I suppose.
Anything else glaring I'm missing?
i
Microwaves
Date: 2002-07-31 12:02 pm (UTC)Styrofoam is pretty unpleasant stuff. I'd be more likely to bring a paper hot cup or two (plus some paper plates, for whatever I'm cooking/reheating).
Re: Microwaves
Date: 2002-07-31 12:53 pm (UTC)Yeah, that would be bad. But if you decide mid-week that you need cooked food, you might be willing to do it once or twice.
(shelf-stable vegetarian Indian food that's hechshered. rather amazing.)
Ooh! I've never heard of this. Thanks for the tip.
I'd be more likely to bring a paper hot cup or two (plus some paper plates, for whatever I'm cooking/reheating).
I was assuming you'd buy your paper products (whatever they turn out to be) locally, since you were already talking about buying fresh veggies and stuff. Why carry what you don't need to? (I only mentioned it in case you were going to need something more sturdy for the kashering.)