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Travel

Packing for Italy

Our trip to Italy is a mere thirty days away and my wife is fit to burst! This weekend it really got to her and every once in a while she would reach over to poke me and squeal. She is SO excited!

Yeah, she is still a giddy schoolgirl at times and I appreciate it.

Our big task this weekend was to pre-pack our suitcases to finalize our wardrobe and accessory plans. Two pairs of pants, two shorts, swimsuit, three pairs of shoes, etc. along with all the expert travel accessories we’ve accumulated: vacuum pack bags for pillows, foldable spare suitcase for souvenirs, ponchos, adapters, etc.

We’ve done this a few times and we end up packing less and less each time.

We will check-in our large bag (only ¾ full) and our scuba gear bag. My carry-on will be a backpack with camera gear, guidebooks, and one change of clothes. Sheri will carry her backpack with travel details, laptop, all wires and adapters, and one change of clothes.  

As I said, it is a month out from our trip. We do this so that we have time to order things we will need or, as in my case, time to break in the new shoes I just bought.

The basic fact is that I can buy almost anything I need on my trip at my destination. Why pack it all there only to pack it all back? Because, as Americans, we are trained to do it that way. We see our parents pack three suitcases for a week in the Ozarks. Movies display this kind of packing all the time, where the wife needs an entire bellhop cart for her luggage. It is ingrained in our images of VACATION! That is training is really hard to get over. But experience is starting win out.

In reality, I could go through the entirety of Europe with two pairs of shorts and a couple shirts. And as I get older and more experienced, I get closer to that ideal. Even now, as I write this, I feel the need to trim my packing a bit. I mean, how many pairs of underwear does a guy really need? Honestly?

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Travel Uncategorized

Egypt – Finally

In our travels, my wife and I avoid tourist traps. We like foreigners and travel to meet them on their home turf, not to hang with other tourists. We seek to experience foreign parts with the locals. However, our vacation to Paris and Egypt was absolutely focused on tourist traps: the Eifel Tower, the Louvre, Notre Dame, Luxor temples, Valley of the Kings, Giza Pyramids, and the Egyptian Museum. There was no avoiding tourists.

Yet, we were helped by the fact that our visit was at the end of summer before the busy season, so most sites were at less than medium capacity allowing us to enjoy them in relative peace. We also had a private tour guide for most of the trip. We shared a guide with another couple for our cruise down the Nile, which included the Luxor temples, Edfu (my favorite), the Valley of the Kings, and the Temple of Isis at Aswan.

Ready for Adventure

Our days began at 7 or 8am to avoid the heat and crowds, allowing us to really experience the temples intimately without the crowds.

As the day progressed we had to contend with larger and larger groups of tourists. Busloads of people would be following a single guide around the temples. It turned into a cacophony of different languages. I can’t imagine they received much information from their guide. It didn’t look like a good time. We were usually done and back on the boat by early afternoon.

Our guides from Memphis Tours (https://www.memphistours.com) did a knock-up job, they were more than knowledgeable; actual Egyptologists. Not some random guy with a notebook.

The heat of Egypt was brutal and this Minnesota boy did some serious melting. My best suggestion to survive Egypt is to purchase a good quality Egyptian cotton scarf (not the $10 scarves sold by random vendors) and learn to make a turban. Once I was properly equipped, the trip was much more enjoyable. I sport a bald head and my dome was thoroughly baked after the first day. The turban was a life-saver.

We found the Egyptian people to be super friendly and helpful – for a tip. Tourism is really the only economy in Egypt and much of the local market is driven by tips. Don’t be stingy, but don’t be taken too easily. There is a fine line between being generous and being a sucker. I was caught as a sucker a few times, I know.

This trip was in the planning stages for almost four years; meant to be  Sheri’s fiftieth birthday trip. She wanted to scuba dive in the Red Sea. I learned to swim and then got my scuba certification for this adventure. We were set to go in the fall of 2020, but then disaster, pandemic, and general idiocy ensued ruining our plans.

As the date of our trip approached – again – I kept expecting something to happen; another outbreak of stupid, or an asteroid, or pilot strike… something. But nothing happened and we finally found ourselves on a plane to Paris and then Cairo! Crazy!

Three years of anticipation were finally coming to fruition and man was it worth it. I have 3000 pictures to sort through and memories to last a lifetime. Which is exactly why we travel.

The world is a really big place and we can never truly understand that if we never explore it. I love home and my boring middle-class American life, but I can never truly appreciate it until I experience other places. Only then can I recognize how fortunate I am to live where I do and how completely spoiled we are here. Never take where or how you live for granted, we are all only a stroke of luck away from living in a hovel or sleeping on the ground.

Enjoy life and see the world!!

More to come…