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10 Packing Tips
Packing for the Big Lap can be intimidating. Here Scott Heiman offers his top tips on what to include.
Words and Images by: SCOTT HEIMAN

If you were to define ‘The Big Lap’ in the dictionary, you could easily say: “Australian for a long drive best undertaken over 12 months or more”. Why? Well, you’ll cover over 15,000km if you travel National Highway 1 — throw in a ferry trip and you can circumnavigate Tassie for another 800km or so.

This distance could be covered in around 25 days with fuel stops, but that assumes you’d drive an average of 80km/h, eight hours a day — you’d be mad as a cut snake to try. Firstly, you wouldn’t see much more than the roadside and your campsite. Secondly, and most importantly, you’d be operating in the Red Zone for driver fatigue management, putting us all at risk. Besides, who sticks to the highways all the time?

Give yourself three months and you’ll experience the climatic differences from north to south and have time to poke around a bit. Take six months and you’ll be able to stop, stare and stay when you find a hidden gem. Take 12 months and you’ll start to live and breathe the magnitude of this great continent — plus, you’ll see enough places to realise you’ll need to do the Lap again to find other bits of the country you know you missed.

If you accept this, you may be facing a significant packing dilemma, because you’ll probably want to pack for every season and occasion. That will be your first mistake.

Find time to shop local

PACKING MINDSET

Whether you’re packing for a quick weekend away or for an extended trip, the fundamentals remain the same. But we simply can’t pack for four seasons and for every eventuality as our RV doesn’t get bigger just because our horizons expand.

So, how to decide what to take? Well, at our place we have a memo we lovingly call ‘the magic list’. It’s a simple checklist we use every trip to make sure we haven’t forgotten the essentials. Whether we’re headed out hunting, fishing, surfing or bushwalking, our core requirements remain the same: must-have spare parts, recovery gear, fuel, water and day-to-day necessities. Then there are the ‘nice to haves’ and this is where the prioritising happens,  because, at the end of the day, we need our rig to remain within its GVM/GCM/ATM.

Packing requires pragmatism. If we don’t take something, we may acquire it along the road — gifted by fellow travellers or found in an op shop or tip shop where someone else’s travel excess can become an essential outdoor ingredient. Alternatively, a mate could send us gear when we need it and we could return it when it’s no longer required or donate it to charity. We could help local communities by buying what we need as we go, because every dollar we spend in regional communities helps the local economy and keeps someone employed.

TOP TIPS

While packing requirements will inevitably differ, some things are more important than others. So, consider these ‘top ten tips’ as a guide for your personal packing pixie.

ONE — TIME

There’s a saying in the Army that “time spent on reconnaissance is seldom wasted”, so have a broad plan before you start shoving goodies in the RV. For example, will you end up somewhere suffering seasonal inclement weather like cyclones? Will you spend time with family on the way round? Will they be home?

Stay realistic. Don’t plan to do in three months what should realistically take six, and don’t completely fill your travel schedule. Spare time will be your greatest commodity, so leave gaps to fill in with hidden locations you currently don’t know exist.

Always carry some cash

TWO — PLB

By the time you’ve decided to do the Big Lap, you should have an appreciation of just how big Australia is, so you may start to realise how far away help may be if you get into difficulty. Mobile phone coverage covers 90 per cent of the population, not 90 per cent of the country, and when this 90 per cent of the population lives within 100km of the eastern seaboard, there’s a lot of area for your throat to go dry screaming for help.

Carrying a PLB ensures someone will hear when you need them. Unlike S.E.N.D. devices, a PLB won’t help maintain social connectivity with your family, but it doesn’t require a contract to be effectively activated, doesn’t need its batteries changed or recharged, and is the only satellite communication device guaranteed to work — someone in the Australian Maritime Safety Authority is always listening.

THREE — CHANGE

We’re not talking about loose change here. Your need for cash will become evident the moment you find a coin-operated washing machine or shower. Also, many campsites still have cash drop-boxes and donation tins, and farmgate produce and roadside stalls will be out of bounds unless you have some cold hard cash. Further, for whatever reason some businesses may not have the capacity to deal with electronic transactions, so you’ll be sorry your wallet’s empty when it’s 40 degrees and you’re begging for an ice-cream.

A PLB is a good safety investment

FOUR — GRAB BAG

Some call it a ‘bug out bag’ or a ‘get out of Dodge’ bag. It’s a piece of insurance for when Murphy’s Law trumps all. You fill it with things to get you out of trouble when, for example, your engine bay catches fire or when spinifex gets wound around your driveshaft and muffler and catches light. When there’s not a moment to lose, your grab bag needs to be accessible and ready to sustain you with 72 hours’ worth of emergency rations, shelter and survival gear. Channel your inner Bear Grylls, add a dash of Lord Baden-Powell and do some research to understand how to effectively pack your grab bag. We also recommend generating an ‘every day carry’ (EDC) bag of essential items to consistently carry day to day. There’s heaps of ‘how to’ advice online and via professional training.

FIVE — FIRST-AID KIT

Yes, we can hear you. You already have a first-aid kit and it’s as big as a whale. But when was the last time you refurbished it? Have the bandaids been depleted from previous trips? What happened to the tweezers and scissors? Are your prescription medications still relevant and in-date? Do you need to carry spare asthma puffers or Epipens? Have you considered carrying a defibrillator? If in doubt, talk to your local GP or St John’s Ambulance rep (who can help refurbish your kit) and consider taking a first-aid course so you know how to use it.

Now, where to store this gigantic first-aid kit? During your Big Lap you’ll periodically leave your RV behind at camp or when you go for a walk along a pristine bushtrack, so you’ll need a smaller personal first-aid kit in your backpack for stings, bites, sprains or burns.

Prepare a grab bag just in case

SIX — HANDHELD CB RADIOS

If you’ve only ever camped in large commercial caravan parks, you may not appreciate the value of CBs for reversing into tight spots. They’re also handy if a member of your group goes off by themselves — after all, everyone separates from the group now and again, whether to deal with calls of nature, collect kindling, for some time-out or to pursue an independent interest. Whatever the reason, it’s important to carry a handheld CB so others can be notified in the event of injury.

If you plan to use a CB, learn how to use it properly. Radio-chatter is an art form and you need to understand what channels to use and why.

Scooters and bikes are a must

SEVEN — TWO WHEELS

Too many times we’ve seen kids lounging around camp complaining of boredom. A mountain bike or scooter, with tyres suitable for rugged terrain, will help expend pent-up energy generated while sitting in the car — the same goes for adults. If you’re tight for space, there are compact, collapsible scooters available with pneumatic tyres that will carry up to 100kg. Either way, be prepared to deal with punctures.

EIGHT — BENCHTOP CONVECTION OVEN

Let’s face it, sometimes you don’t want to cook inside, don’t want a mixed grill, or simply run out of LPG gas. A small benchtop convection oven provides masses of versatility around mealtime. They operate at around 1400W so any inverter above 1500W should be able to handle the power draw. Set up the oven outdoors to keep the smell and cooking heat out of your RV. While travelling with a portable oven may be a little indulgent, as Napoleon said “an army marches on its stomach” — you’re going to be on the road for a while and good food is a morale booster.

Consider a car fridge

NINE — CAR FRIDGE

A car fridge comes in handy when you leave camp to go exploring, for beachside BBQs, cold drinks or simply for food resupplies from centres far enough away for your milk to go rancid on the drive back. While you may use the car fridge predominantly as a drinks cabinet, when you head into remote Australia, use it as an overflow freezer. Alternatively, it’s a great place to store your day’s catch.

TEN — TOOLBOX

Everyone has a toolbox, but some are better than others. When you’re considering a Big Lap, think about day-to-day mechanical issues you may need to deal with. This includes simple vehicle maintenance to keep your RV in tip-top shape. If you’re travelling remotely, you’ll also need the knowledge, capacity and tenacity to fix things on the go or risk a costly recovery. While some issues will require on-site professional mechanical attention, in other cases, if you’re carrying the right spares, you may be able to limp to the next population centre for assistance.

Your choice of spares will depend on your level of knowledge and experience, so consider some maintenance training to extend your abilities. At the very least, ensure you carry simple items like a windscreen repair kit, silicone rescue tape, hose clamps, tyre inflator cans and tyre repair kits, and talk to people around camp as you travel. What mishaps have they dealt with on the road and what did they do? You may be surprised how much you learn leaning over a bonnet, with a cold drink in hand, at a bush campsite 200km from nowhere.

A toolbox needs more than tools

Category: Features
Written: Sat 01 Aug 2020
Printed: August, 2020
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SCOTT HEIMAN