Packing for international travel is difficult enough and then I add my photography equipment to the mix and BOOM I become instantly overwhelmed. I have made it my personal goal over the years to achieve the "PERFECT" travel packing list for my 23 or 24-day trips to Africa for two main reasons. First and foremost, less luggage = less travel stress! Secondly, at least 60% of the items in my luggage were always "just in case" items and since my New Years' resolution was to forge outside my comfort zone I decided that leaving at home over 1/2 of my usual luggage definitely qualified! That said, I believe I came as close as I've ever come to packing bliss this past September for my trip to Tanzania. Mind you, this is a personal article packing list --- I will get to the camera gear list in a separate post! Drum roll, please...
My Safari Clothes:
And that's it for Safari clothes since we do have laundry service daily! On occasion, there might be a day we overnight at a camp for only one night and logistics won't allow for laundry that day just in case I pack 3 of each instead of 2 of each.
My Travel Clothes:
Another of my "must-haves" are my packing cubes! A fellow traveler introduced me to these a few years back and I immediately went to Amazon.com and never looked back. I roll my clothes (for both space and wrinkle reasons) and zip them into the packing cubes and voila' I have filled less than half of a regular-sized airline checked suitcase (including my toiletries) and I am WELL under the luggage weight limit. And BONUS, I have the other half of my suitcase free "if" I want to purchase travel gifts/souvenirs for friends and family along with no worries about how I am going to transport them home.
One of the big questions I get about safari clothing is "Are the drab colors really necessary?" and my answer is yes for the following reasons. The best safari color is khaki followed by olive, tans, and browns. These are good at handling dirt. Bright colored safari clothing draws attention to you the tourist, rather the wildlife you intend to see, and may sometimes scare away the animals. So look for neutral-colored clothing. Avoid black and dark blue clothing (both colors attract tsetse flies), and leave bright-white items at home; safari parks are often dusty, and white clothes may get dingy. Animals are scared by red most likely because it is the clothing color of the local Maasai tribes who hunt in the area. And BONUS, how great is it that you can go 20 days without having to decide what to wear?!
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