How To Do Laundry on a Road Trip Like John Steinbeck
by Jeff More
The
Art of Manliness
Youre
packing for a road trip and youre down to deciding how much
clothing to bring. You could have a fresh change of clothes every
day, but that adds up to a lot of space quickly, especially if you
have multiple companions. You really would prefer to travel light,
but that means either finding a laundromat and spending a stack
of quarters and a few hours in town, or hand washing your clothes
at camp when you could be kicking back and enjoying
a foil meal instead.
Or you could
just suck it up, not change, and reek a little. But really, youre
car camping, not backpacking, so why do that? Whats a man
to do?
Heres
a tip I got from Travels
with Charley (sadly missing from the Art of Manliness
100
best reads, but no ones perfect), John Steinbecks
1962 travelogue documenting his road trip circumnavigating the Lower
48 with his French poodle, Charley, and how the American landscape
had changed over his lifetime. The book is known for its series
of poignant tales, but buried inside is a handy nugget on how to
effortlessly have a fresh change of clothes on hand daily while
on the road.
What Youll
Need:
- 5-gallon
bucket with lid (I use an orange Home Depot bucket)
- Jug of clean
water (Get a jug with a screw-on top, not a snap top. Trader Joes
has a good one.)
Laundry detergent
- Some utility
cord or other improvised clothesline
- Clothespins
or binder clips (the duct tape of office supplies)
Heres
how it works.
In the Morning
[I]
put in two shirts, underwear, and socks, added hot water and detergent,
and hung it by its rubber rope to the clothes pole, where it jigged
and danced crazily all day. ~ John Steinbeck, Travels with Charley
When youre
breaking camp, throw your dirty clothes into your five gallon bucket.
Fill up your bucket with enough water to cover your dirty laundry
and put some detergent in there. I usually use a half load or less
of powdered detergent pre-measured at home and stored individually
in baggies (alternatively, you could get a squeeze bottle at REI
for a dollar for liquid detergent) so it doesnt get overly
soapy, as youre only doing a small load relative to what you
regularly would do at home.
Secure the
lid and place the bucket somewhere in your vehicle where it wont
tip over. Steinbeck hung his bucket from the clothes pole in his
trailer. I have a wagon with a seating capacity of five and place
the bucket behind the passenger seat.
As you drive
along, every curve and bump in the road agitates the load, acting
as the wash cycle as the contents slosh around. As you can imagine,
the technique outlined in this article works better on winding roads
than cruising on the high speed straightaways of the interstate.
Read
the rest of the article
October
22, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 The Art of Manliness
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