
With the exception of my laptop and the clothes on my back, this is what I took on my month-long trip to Asia. Do I regret not taking more? Absolutely not.
Relying on public transportation as I did, each ounce and cubic inch mattered. Going from planes, to trains, to subways, to buses, to taxis ... lighter is better. Travel expert Rick Steves says there are two kinds of tourists, those who pack light and those who wish they had.
In addition to what I was wearing, I took the following in a wheeled carry-on suitcase: a Victorinox Mobilizer 22 Ultra-Light (14 x 22 x 8.5 = 44.5 linear inches).
- 4 sets of light cotton slacks, dress shirts, socks, and undergarments
- A pair of shoes
- A sweater and tie
- 2 casual shorts and short-sleeve shirts
- A cap
- Travel umbrella (which I lost)
- Rain poncho
- Extra nylon bag that folds into a self-contained pouch
- Extra plastic bags and ziplock bags
- Extra pair of eyeglasses
- Hanger and laundry line for drying clothes
- Bottle soap (within a ziplock bag for safety) for washing clothes
- Toiletries kit
- Cell phone and charger, with earphones and extra battery
- Canon Elf SD 110 camera with 256 MB memory card, charger, and extra battery
- USB cable for uploading photos to my laptop
- Manuals for cell phone and camera
- Plug adapters for A/C (for charging phone, camera, laptop)
- Mandarin and Japanese phrase books
- Ear plugs
- Sewing kit
- Compass, tiny LED keychain flashlight, and a key to my house
- Documents and photocopies of documents: passport, visa, airline tickets, and driver's license. Also, credit card numbers written down with phone numbers for reporting loss from outside the US.
- Money: 2 credit cards, 1 debit card, $1000 in traveler's checks, and cash: $300 + $200 in Hong Kong dollars + $200 in Chinese Yuan
- Suitcase: photocopies of documents (passport, driver's license, airline tickets) and traveler's checks.
- Money belt: passport, airline tickets, extra credit card and debit card, receipt for traveler's checks, extra cash
- Wallet: one credit card, driver's license, some local currency
- Small camera bag: camera and accessories, cell phone and accessories, rain poncho, lens cleaning cloth, tissue, chap stick, ink pen, scraps of paper, business cards, pill box.
General comments:
I was told I didn't need a money belt, particularly in Japan, but I felt more comfortable knowing that the really important things in it wouldn't accidently fall out of my pocket or get lost: I could survive with its contents even if everything else was gone.
I had enough cash that I wound up not making any ATM withdrawals. I used only half ($500) of my traveler's checks, which I converted to Japanese Yen when I arrived in Tokyo. I paid for hotels with credit cards and mostly used cash for eating and miscellaneous other purchases.
Washing: I made sure before I left that what I brought, particularly the styles of socks and undergarments, could be easily washed by hand and were quick drying, e.g., REI polyester MTS undershirts. This worked well, though for slacks and shirts I mostly made use of the hotel laundry services, which were inexpensive except in Tokyo. In Shanghai I paid 17 RMB total for a shirt and a pair of slacks: that's just over $2. For the same in Kyoto I paid 1365 Yen, a little less than $12.
Should I have packed differently?
I didn't use everything I brought, and there was at least one thing I needed I didn't have (remember the handkerchief?), but things worked out about as well as they could have. I almost needed my sweater in the Japanese mountains, but I didn't. I had no need or occasion to wear shorts or my tie. I would have been delighted to have had a smaller laptop instead of my 15" IBM ThinkPad.
I considered bringing a sport coat / blazer and am so glad I didn't.
I should have brought some blank CD-Rs for backing up photos ... bought some in Tokyo.
I most wished that I had brought a small English-Japanese dictionary instead of a phrase book, which turned out to be almost useless.