To be fair, that was my short list
I gave them my short list because it sounded like they wouldn't want to be bogged down with too much to get back home on the airplane with (or to ship).
To be honest, my camping list varies depending on the trip. A roadtrip where I'm only camping as a place to spend the night requires far different supplies than a regular camping trip. I'd pack a lot more if I was doing several days in a campground. But here's what I usually pack for road trip car camping:
* tent, sleeping pad, sleeping bag, pillow, extra blanket (I tend to get cold at night)
* telescoping camping chair
* small battery-operated lantern (I rarely take propane ones on roadtrips and this one is always in my car anyway as part of my regular emergency supplies) and extra batteries. I like to read before going to sleep and you shouldn't use propane lanterns in a tent...that's a huge fire hazard
* If I think I might take the time to cook: small 1-burner propane cookstove, backpacker-style cooking set, a few of those cheap "Gladware" type of plastic containers in various sizes, a scrubber, small bottle of Camp-Suds for cleaning the pots/pans and other cleaning uses, a small backpacker's style salt/paper/other spices container, can opener, rubber scraper, spatula, large cooking spoon, small plastic cutting board, lots of those little individual portion sizes of mayo, ketchup, and mustard like you get at fastfood places so I don't have to worry about refrigeration or spilling, plastic utensils, paper plates and bowls, and a few paper cups (NOT styrofoam, I feel wasteful enough using paper and styrofoam is very unfriendly to the environment, imho). All this fits in a small duffle bag.
* If I know I won't be bothering to cook but just want to prepare a variety of foods out of my cooler: a couple cheap "Gladware" style containers, knife, a few paper plates/bowls/cups, plastic utensils, the mayo/ketchup/mustard packets, the salt/pepper/spice container, can opener, and a small plastic cutting board
* cooler (both 12-volt and small, collapsible ice chest)
* 1st aid kit (always in car)
* flashlight with extra batteries (always in car)
Gosh, I think that's it. If I think of something else, I'll come back and edit.
ETA: I thought of something. I can't stand buying new batteries for everything all the time (camera, pda, flashlights). I bought an inexpensive 12-volt battery charger that can charge up batteries on the road. This has saved me tons of money. I love it. It only does the smaller AA and AAA batteries but that is what I use most of anyway. If you do this, don't forget to turn it off/unplug it when you're stopped for a significant amount of time, especially overnight, as it is a battery drain when the car is turned off.
When fast food stops are not an option.
Hi all,
I am actually leaving in a few minutes on yet another camping adventure with our kids. I just never gets old. I read some great posts here and some fantastic check lists, and wanted to add something we use while driving to our camping destination with our kids. I found it on a trucker website. It's called the burton stove and it's a 12v lunchbox 'crockpot'. Our situation is a little more complicated as two of our three kids have severe food allergies, so we can't stop off at a restaurant along the way or even let them eat any of the freezedried camping food, else we end up in an ER unit. Yup, I have to prepare it all. I found a few websites that cater to moms like me who enjoy taking on the challenge of camping with little kids too but I look forward to learning more on this site. Thanks for your help!