What
Traveling With a Backpack is Really Like.
Choosing the Right
Backpack... or Luggage
If you
are thinking about going traveling and being on the road a lot
(ie: not just staying at the same hotel the whole time) it’s
probably worth it for you to read below what happened to me when I
backpacked through
Europe before you decide to buy a backpack or suitcase. There is a lot
of advice on choosing the right backpack before going to Europe, but
this leads the prospective traveler to believe that a backpack, carried
on your back is the only way to travel for a long time. If you are
deciding which backpack to buy read this first and learn from what I
experienced. Or if you are already overseas and are having a hard time
carrying such a heavy bag, read about what I did to make my travel much
more comfortable without throwing away my backpack.
It was a few weeks
before my big trip. 75 days traveling through
Europe. I was going to live every young traveler’s dream. I
would be living in a different city every few days, staying in hostels
and surviving with only my backpack full of essentials and by keeping
my wits about me. It would be a challenge but I would get around London
by navigating all 17 lines of the underground tube, I would out-wit the
pick-pockets around the Milano train station and I would find my way to
my hostel, even when all the street signs are in German, everyone
speaks only German and everything is in German, German, German
All this with my great backpack. Because that’s what
backpackers do, it is part of the image and the budget travel concept.
So that’s why it caught me a little off guard when I went
into a travel shop, told them my plans and asked them for the best
backpack for my trip.
“Well, you
know, people
tend to like this one, they like the flaps, or this one is pretty
nice... but
you know you can just get luggage.”
What? Backpackers can’t take luggage. I didn’t want
to look like a semi-retired traveler who is shuttled to her hotel in a
taxi and lives in a tourist bubble. It was more than just the bag, it
was the concept. I was traveling because I wanted to live a little, to
get my hands dirty, experience the culture and I had to be mobile with
my backpack to do it.
Even though I packed ultra-light, by the time I had taken my flight and
arrived at my hotel in London, carrying that bag was enough to give me
major pain and tightness in my shoulders and upper back. I was feeling
it after just the first day and I had another 74 days to go. I was
getting pretty envious of the people whose luggage had wheels and they
could just roll it around.
Something had to be done. So, instead of throwing away my $100
backpack, or shipping it back to Canada for almost the same price, I
bought a little cart with wheels and a retractable handle and strapped
my backpack to it. I now had faux luggage.
It’s pretty comical looking back at it, but I was the envy of
many of the backpackers I ran into at the hostels. They’d ask
me where I got the “wheeley-bag” and tell me how
much they wished they had one. It worked pretty well other than being a
little less stable than a suitcase would have been because the wheels
were a little too close, and taking a little more time when I had to
pack up because I had to redo the straps that attached the cart to the
bag every time. However, since I was already overseas with my backpack,
it allowed me to keep the bag without having to carry
it.
Well, now that
I’ve done it,
I don’t think luggage would have been such a bad idea but
this is only because I pack light and can fit everything into one of
the smaller suitcases. First, luggage is a lot easier to get into
because of the way the front unzips and comes right off, instead of having to dig around in a backpack. Secondly, I only carried my backpack to wherever
I was staying and would just drop it off when I got there. A small
suitcase is just as easy to take between the train station and my
accommodation. During the day I would walk around with my lighter day
pack. When I go again, I’ll probably just take a small
suitcase because it’s a little easier to roll around.
Keep Planning Your Backpacking Trip