We got home yesterday from camp. Two sons were gone for two weeks, and one son and I were gone for one week. For the month leading up to camp we plan and dream and get excited, and we have a really great time while we’re there. So we’re sad when it is over, and that sadness is compounded by the realities of ending a vacation; by 9 am on check-out day, I need to pack up a week’s worth of stuff and clean my little cabin in the woods, then drive 10 minutes up the road and pick up the tired, slightly smelly Boy Scouts with all their gear. Then we drive 3 hours for home.
I’ve read blogs and tips recently for planning your vacation, but no one seems to talk about organizing the end of your trip. So let me be the first!
Before you leave:
- Tidy up the house and finish all the laundry. Check out these two blogs on the topic: “Did You Remember to Pack the …..” and “Going Away Checklist” .
- Leave yourself frozen meals, or restaurant gift certificates to use upon your arrival (better yet, carry the number to the pizza place and gift certificates with you and pick up dinner on your way home!).
While still on vacation:
- Use a laundry bag while on vacation, to keep the clean and dirty separated.
- Pack your stuff and luggage (and car, if you’re driving) with unpacking in mind. Put similar items together. Put your toiletries in one large bag, and that bag goes straight to the bathroom to be unloaded. Our dirty laundry was in two large bags placed right inside the door of my van, to schlep to the laundry room ASAP.
Upon Arrival Home:
- Unload the car all the way. Yes, all the way. Dirty laundry, apple cores and fast food wrappers really stink after a day. And it’s easier to get back into the swing of things when stuff is where it belongs.
- Start the first of many loads of laundry. My hubby is the coolest, and has been doing laundry for the last 24 hours.
Within a day:
- Unpack all your bags and put your stuff way. Living in chaos makes the end-of-vacation blues even worse. Yes, put it all away.
- Clean out your luggage, vacuum it (I think we brought a pound of sand home from camp!) and let it air for a day or two. Then store other luggage inside, and put it all away. Yes, away.
- Keep your travel toiletry bag in your bathroom or linen closet, to collect samples and items for next time.
A day or two after:
- If you are gone for more than a week, give yourself an extra day at the end of your trip for catching up, doing laundry and generally easing back into real life. If there is a time difference between home and your vacation destination, expect a day or two to re-adjust for sleeping and bedtimes, too.
- Lower your standards for a couple of days, too, sticking with survival mode and the essentials, and slowly easing back into your normal pace.
Finally, make a point to print up those photos, remember your good vacation times and chat about it with loved ones. Don’t let the end-of-vacation blues taint your good memories!