Here's my list, if it's helpful..
Here's what we took on our 2-week 5000 mile summer trip. We only stayed at full-service campgrounds and the occasional hotel. This was just the right amount of stuff for the trunk of our little Ford Focus. Our only problem was that the souvenirs that accumulated and began to fill the backseat!
We Each Need:
- sleeping bag, pillow
- clothes, pj's
- swimsuits, camping towel
- reusable water bottle
- sneakers, flips
- wallets
- small backpack
- sunglasses
- camera, phone, ipod, chargers
- chapstick
Bathroom Stuff:
- toothpaste/toothbrush
- soap
- moisturizer
- shampoo/conditioner/hairbrush
- sunscreen, bug spray
- travel first aid kit
- swiss army knife
- nail clippers
- medicines
Camping Stuff
- tent
- mallet (for stakes)
- flashlights/lantern/lighter/fire starters
- cooler
- frying pan, flipper, campfire pie maker
- paper plates
- can opener
Other Stuff
- car kit (tire pressure gauge, flares, emerg. blanket, etc..)
- TomTom GPS
- books
- sketchpads, pencils, pens, markers
Here are 2 of my favorite things that I couldn't travel with out:
Ebags Packing Cubes -great for keeping clothing and electronics organized
LLBean Toiletries Organizer- fits everything and has a hook so you can hang it up in a public shower, or on a bathroom mirror- and have easy access to everything- this thing is awesome!
Haven't seen block ice in a decade or two
Ice is packaged in large cubes and in bags, but I rarely use ice at all any more. I use the re-freezable packing supplies for my coolers.
Mark
Ice blocks and bags and plug ins.
Mine is a fairly large plug-in, which is a fridge, and if I turn it down far enough, a freezer. A few hours, while having a chinwag over a cuppa, has never worried the battery. It also has a battery alert which turns down the fridge if it senses the battery getting low. When camping overnight, I turn it down to the lowest setting, and leave it outside the car, in the cool/cold night air.
When I get my camper it must have a three way fridge... the only way to go.
As for ice, and all that wet mess? Not for me. But it is logical why they sell ice in bags. Each piece is hollow, freezes quicikly and melts quickly. Quick turnover, more profitable than blocks.
When we camped with the family, we would freeze cartons of milk and bottles of water to keep the rest cold. Even with our big cooler, there was never enough room to add anything which was not going to be consumed. And on a couple of ocassions we used dry ice. Now that does keep things cool!!
Lifey