OK. I have 8 weeks left to make these all-important decisions and I am starting to get nervous. Our itinerary is set (thank you, wonderful Michele!), the accommodations are booked, the car is rented, and now I am concentrating on the little things. If I had 2 sons, this probably would not be much of a dilemma, but, alas, I have two daughters, ages 19 and 24...and I need your help! What size suitcases should we take?
After reading advice about not leaving anything in sight in the car, I am worried that the suitcases won't fit in the trunk! Michele has advised me on this, but after I checked out luggage situation, the big ones look too big and the small ones look too small, and I am frankly concerned about all-out war in my household.
Marie, a lot depends on how long you will be there (well, duh!) but what I mean is, if you will be gone for longer than about a week, about halfway through you can drop your clothes at an attended launderette and pick them up later, washed, dried and folded. Consider too, leaving your big bag in the car and carrying your HBAs, jammies and next day's clothes into the accommodation in a tote bag. Many B&Bs have upstairs rooms and this is much easier on your back.
I travel with a 21" and a suitbag. I usually advise packing for 8 days, if you will be longer than 10 days. On the eighth day, drop your laundry at the launder and head off on a day trip. On your return, you will have clothes, fresh laundered, pressed and folded, ready to pick up. From experience, duffles, they have large ones with wheels, are best for packing numerous people into the confines of a vehicle. I travel with between 4-6 people when we do performance tours in Ireland. The duffles are a godsend. Last year, I held everyone to the luggage size restrictions for Aer Lingus and was certainly glad that I did, as it made load restrictions in the rental van much easier. Of course, some balked at the restrictions, as they didn't want to leave their entire closet behind. Check with the airlines you are traveling on, they may have luggage dimension restrictions. Also, heed the luggage indicators on the site from which you rent your vehicle. If they say 2 large and one small, you can pack more in but it will block your view as you drive.
Our first performance tour in 2005, we learned the hard way that a Hyundai Santa Fe might look like room enough for 4 people, luggage and musical instruments but clowns in a circus car had an easier time getting in and out.
8 weeks! The time will both fly by and seem to never get here. Have a grand adventure!
Unlike Bit you won't have the problem of traveling with musical instruments...only young daughters who probably think they need 20 pairs of shoes for each outfit!
For Ireland you must think differently. Since you won't be staying in the same place for more than a couple of days no one but you will know that you only brought three outfits (or whatever). Choose a basic color (black is mine since it doesn't show stains). Jazz up the mix-and-match theme with splashes of color like a scarf, blouse, etc. Make sure everything coordinates so you can turn those three outfits into more combinations.
Ireland is casual. Leave the glitzy gold sandles and strapless gowns home. You need sturdy walking shoes (wear some on the plane). Jeans take up a lot of room so you might limit yourselves on how many pairs. Take a look at the packing list in my book for essentials. Don't bring much more than that.
Look at your itinerary and plan on doing laundry on a weekday when you are in a place for two days. That will determine how many days' worth of undies, etc. that you need. You can always wash out a few small items in the sink but B&Bs frown on doing your whole wardrobe like that.
Before the stricter carry-on rules went into place recently, I traveled only with carry-on luggage. I can go to Ireland for months with one roll-on suitcase that fits the airline approved dimensions and one tote that I put on top of the suitcase as I am rolling through airports. And I carry many of my books with me going and lots of brochures and literature coming back.
It sounds like you need a trip to the store to look at new medium-size suitcases.
OK. I am going to measure the small suitcases we have and check the car rental site for the low-down on how many will fit....We will be sure to take only a week's worth of clothes and drop off for laundry service.
We have a compact (Toyota Corolla 4 door - or similar). Went for the smallest that seemed like it would fit 3 and luggage comfortably. 4 doors seemed important, as we will be getting in and out of the car a lot!
Marie, Like Michele said take less and just find a laundromat. When i went to Costa Rica I took enough clothes to wear for 5 days and just sent then sent them out to be washed. I was probably a little gamy coming home, but i got to bring back more rum and coffee this way. My rule of thumb on what I take is just take enough for one week and just send them out to be washed. I will be Ireland for 14 days and I am just taking clothes for 5 days.
I don't mean to hijack this thread, but on the subject of laundry, we will only be doing multiple stays at the beginning of the trip and then over a weekend in Limavady. Limavady would be ideal if we could get the laundry done in town on Saturday. Any thoughts on this? I'll contact the B&B hostess and see what's available. She has a washer and drier available to guests so I guess we could do a couple of loads of undies etc in the evenings (we'll be there 3 nights). Or maybe we could pay her to run a few loads for us? Would that insult her?
Since Ballycarton House has laundry facilities for guest's use, I suggest you ask what way she prefers the laundry to be done. Either your doing it yourself or her doing it for you. Either way you should offer to pay a bit extra for the service. When I was there she was awfully nice and accommodating. I'm sure she won't be offended by any questions.
Thanks, Michele. Since we'll be there three nights we could do a load each evening and call it done. Appreciate the advice about paying for the use of the machines, also.
If you do the laundry yourself they may well comp it. However, it never hurts to ask if you can pay for the service. Even if B&Bs just make a phone call for me I always ask if I can pay. Mostly the answer is no since the hosts are very accommodating.
I assume that when you say one small-med suitcase (each) and one tote each will fit, you mean in the trunk (boot). We have talked about it and thought perhaps two of us could share one large suitcase, the other could take a small-med one and that would take up even less space. I certainly do not like to think of Ireland as overrun with thieves hiding in the bushes near all the wonderful sites, waiting to steal my clothes! Honestly, I am ususally optismistic about things like this, but just noticed a few postings about not having ANYTHING in sight in the car.
Thanks so much to all, and we are now 8 weeks and a day away from our journey!!
The problem with hauling around any large suitcase is stairs at B&Bs. I would rather see you take 3 small to medium size suitcases and three totes. They will be easier to handle and arrange in the boot like puzzle pieces. You can get small ones in where a large one cannot fit. One of my husband's favorite passtimes in the morning is watching the tourists load up their cars. I'm sure they never even open some of those suitcases!
Don't be too paranoid about the whole thing. I have never had anything stolen in over 30 years of travel to Ireland. It is really the big cities where extra caution is due. Most of the parking lots at sightseeing attractions are so busy with people coming and going it would not be a good place for thieves to sneak around. Just use common sense and don't leave valulables visable.