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Student
Travel – Backpacking In
Europe
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by: Rick
Chapo
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For
the fortunate few, life
isn’t complete without a
backpacking trip through
Europe. This right of passage
is believed to further the
maturation process of college
students, according to
sociologists. Of course,
others have opined that
copious amounts of alcohol,
sun and Amsterdam have
something to do with it.
Regardless of your purpose,
you still have to figure out
what to take.
Backpack – Getting In Touch
With Your Inner Mule
Obviously, the first critical
item is your backpack. While
one doesn’t need to buy the
$10,000 Himalaya Turbo Pack,
you should also avoid the $12
blue light special. So, how do
you pick a happy middle
ground?
The best method for picking a
backpack involves three phone
books. Select/swipe/borrow
three yellow page books from
neighbors/friends/enemies and
hit your local sporting goods
store. With the books, head to
the backpackapalozza section
of the store and pick out a
few sturdy/cool/outrageous
rigs. Stuff the phone books
in, adjust the straps and go
for a walk. Now break out into
a run to simulate future
dashes for trains/ ferries/
toilets and make the sales
people nervous. These steps
should quickly reveal the
perfect pack.
Now, you may have read other
publications suggesting highly
technical ways to select a
backpack. Trust me, until you
have run for the last ferry
from Italy to Greece, you have
no idea how to pick a pack.
The three phone book test
solves this nicely.
What To Take
There are a few mantras that
every person should chant
before packing for Europe.
These chants were developed
originally by the little
known, Oh-My-Back Monks of
Southeast Asia. The “OMB”
Monks were known for traveling
half way to far off cities,
turning around, returning home
and then traveling the full
way to said cities. Religious
experts opined as to the deep
metaphysical meaning of such
trips. They were later
embarrassed when the monks
revealed the back and forth
nature of the trips was due to
forgetting something, often
whether they had turned off
the iron. Nonetheless, such
chants have become the guiding
light of experienced
backpackers.
Let us slowly and clearly
chant together,
“I will pack only that which
will not result in me being
hunched over like a Sherpa.”
“Remember, I can pick it
[(lower voice) toothpaste,
book, soap] up over there.”
“I will not stuff thy pack
to the point of bursting, for
thy damn zippers always
break/get snagged/refuse to
work.”
“I will learn humility
through wearing incredibly
wrinkled clothes and shall not
bring an iron.”
“I shall bring only one
guide book, not one for each
country that I MIGHT see.”
“I accept that I will come
home wearing something I
didn’t take and will have
lost/traded/burned much of
what I did take.”
For female travelers and,
okay, the occasional male,
“I will not bring high heels
or a gaggle of make-up.”
Admittedly, chanting these
mantras will not bringing you
immediate enlightenment. Fret,
not. You can always throw
items away or send them home
in a box to your
parents/friends/parole
officer. For the resourceful
backpacker, it is not unheard
of to send particularly
smelly/discolored/toxic
clothing to an
ex-girlfriend/ex-boyfriend/little
brother. Follow these
practical guidelines and you
will soon happily be speaking
in a loud voice to make
foreigners understand you.
The Evidence
This is the hard part for most
travelers to wrap their minds
around. You will forget those
special moments of your trip
when you met the hunk Sven or
babe Svenetta from Sweden and
had a romantic evening/danced
the night away/got arrested in
Ios/Ibiza/the airport. Maybe
not immediately, but you will
eventually forget.
You will also forget or lose
the contact information of
people you meet, despite
meticulously writing it down
on the back of a
coaster/napkin/your hand in a
bar/poetry reading/jail at
three in the morning.
Surprisingly, said
coaster/napkin/hand often
survive the night/day/weekend
and get deposited in your
already trashed backpack. Of
course, their presence is
often forgotten when you later
put a Oktoberfest mug/wet
towel/toothbrush in. The extra
padding at the bottom of your
pack is specifically designed
to deal with the decomposing
result. Still, the information
is gone and so is your future
with Sven/Svenetta.
To properly record the magical
moments of your trip, you must
take a diary or journal.
Don’t worry, you can burn it
later before you get
married/your parents get
nosey/you have kids. You want
a journal in a
water/beer/sweat resistant
case. Of course, I prefer a
Nomad Travel Journal, but just
make sure you take something.
When you have some extra time
in the bus/train/jail cell,
you can record how you got
there and the people you met.
Trust me, when you, Sven/Svenetta
and your nine children are
sitting on the porch 10 years
later, you will greatly enjoy
reading your journal. Of
course, that assumes you
didn’t burn it.
About the Author
Rick Chapo is with Nomad
Journals -
Preserve the experience with
writing journals for
traveling, hiking, rock
climbing, fly fishing, bird
watching and more
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