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subject: Keeping a Vacation Log by:James F. Green [print this page]


Keeping a Vacation Log by:James F. Green

Keeping a Vacation Log

I've been privileged to be able to take numerous vacations over the years that amaze even myself, and one of the things I'm most happy about is the habit I made long ago of keeping a log. I'm a bachelor, so this is one of the key ways, along with the photos, of sharing that vacation when I return, as opposed to having a wife and children to share it with during the trip. At first, it was a struggle to do it, but now I'm able to do it in great detail, and will usually end up with at least 2 pages for each day of the trip, and maybe more, depending on what was done on that day.

I've kept track of where I spent the night, what I had for supper, then where I went for breakfast, maybe even what I ate. I remember one night back in 1984 during my solo drive to Alaska--my first night on the Alaska Hwy. in a campground in British Columbia. I was invited over to the campfire of several couples from the Midwest who were traveling together. They shared their coffee with me before I went off to my tent. I found up there that, unlike in the Lower 48, there are no fast route and scenic route between point A and point B, but just one route. So, the next morning I drove a few hours up the road to a hot springs, where I found them. The next day I was at another spot, and they came in just after me. The third day, I stopped at a pulloff area to make lunch, and they honked as they drove by again. If I'd not kept a log, I'd have probably forgotten many of the details of that experience by now.

Another reason for keeping a log is to record details that you won't necessarily key into your computer when you get home for printing off and putting into the finished product--the booklet-type log, possibly--but which could help you differentiate between the 3 waterfalls you saw in one day. That sort of thing can be recorded at the back of the notebook, well beyond the actual log portion.
Keeping a Vacation Log by:James F. Green


As already alluded to above, people you accidentally meet along the way can quite often be a big part of the trip. Say you were at a campground, in the hotel restaurant, or at poolside on your cruise ship, and you meet Hiroshi and Suki Yakamoto from Japan, and start talking with them. You even ask the waitress to take a picture of all of you. But, you neglect to record their names and where they're from. Then you get home several weeks later and come across the picture, wrack your brain for their names, but finally have to settle for merely "a Japanese couple we met" because the details weren't recorded right then and there.
Keeping a Vacation Log by:James F. Green


Also, as opposed to keeping little trinkets like attraction receipts, youth hostel passes, fancy restaurant napkins, etc. in your photo album, they can be kept in your log book. I can't stress enough how much this can mean to you years later. An alternative to keeping them loose would be to get them laminated, in case they're the type of thing that could be easily damaged over the years.

In conclusion, you'll never kick yourself for writing too much down, but you certainly can do so for not recording enough. Don't let it happen to you.

About the author

James F. Green is the owner of http://forestcityphotoalbums.com, which is your best source for eco-friendly photo albums on the web, since they are beautifully handmade from jungle renewable materials such as bamboo,leaves, seeds, and flowers on the Indonesian island of Bali. They come in 92 different designs and in 3 sizes. Come check us out.




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