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I’m currently dreaming about campfires, sleeping under the stars, and getting out in the beautiful Pacific Northwest outdoors. It is camping season!  Camping for me is really a great way to reset and get away from it all.  Some years we get on more camping trips than other years, but each time we make the whole process more streamlined so that next time we camp it is even easier and more relaxing. We have spent a lot of time and effort making camping easy, affordable, and fun each and every time. Last September I had the opportunity to share some tips on making your next camping trip a breeze!

In my nearly 20 years of working, I’ve worked in several restaurants. I’ve worked in many of the different positions from prep cook to bartender. My time in restaurants has taught me so many lessons that I use every day. I especially utilize these skills when camping.

Camping Hacks Learned from Restaurants:

  1. Use a double bin system to wash dishes. This hack is actually one that I’ve gotten from a brilliant friend of mine and it is so simple that I can’t believe EVERYONE doesn’t do this! Working at a restaurant you learn to have a double sink (triple sink for many restaurants… but, for camping, two suffices). Go to your local dollar store and pick up two medium sized plastic containers with lids. Prep one of these as your soap basin with soap and water. The other as your rinse basin. You may have to change out the water a couple of times, but this way you’re not being wasteful and you get your dishes done in one go!
  2. Make a menu. Restaurants work off of menus so that they know what to buy and prep. When camping you usually don’t have the opportunity to just run to the store when you want an ingredient. Planning a menu for each meal and sticking to it is the best way to make sure you have bought, prepped, and packed enough… but not TOO much food items. Don’t forget to plan for snacking!
  3. Prep, prep, prep. Anyone who has worked in the back of the house of a restaurant knows that much of the day is spent prepping ingredients to actually use during the meal times. One of my first jobs including coming in early in the morning before we opened so that I could prep our freshly prepared onion rings. If we ran out of the prepped ones in the middle of dinner rush… well, we were out! When prepping for a camping trip I take my menu and think about how I am going to cook each item. If something needs to be sliced or chopped, and it won’t compromise the item to be cut early, then I’ll go ahead and slice those items and put them in a labeled container. If I only need a couple of cups of an item, but it comes in a large bag, I’ll go ahead and measure that out early and put in a labeled container.
  4. Label well. It is super important to label your prepped items well so that you can find what you need while cooking a meal. Restaurants label EVERYTHING with what is in the container, the date, and usually the use by date. I similarily prep my camping ingredients with labels of what is in there and sometimes what date that I need to use those items (using my menu as a reference). That way if someone else is helping me cook, they know which items to grab! Similarly, make sure you have aluminum foil, plastic bags, and masking tape to properly wrap and label any unused or leftover food items.
  5. Plan for leftovers. I try my best to make sure that we have just enough food for our party, and not too much… but, I also don’t want anyone to go hungry so I often will have leftovers. Many restaurants will use unused prepped produce/meat in a staff meal. I typically plan for a breakfast hash on one of the last camping days. I bring enough eggs for the meal, but then use any unused prepped produce/meat (hotdogs/brats are fantastic additions to a breakfast!) to accompany those eggs.

 

Read other posts on camping:

 

We’ve been doing a lot of camping this Summer to get away from the Portland heat. Our camping supplies have grown over the years from fairly basic sleep on the ground in sleeping bags to quite the array of convenience camping items. (Pregnant camping needs to have some conveniences!) Someday I’ll share a list of all the camping items we’ve found indispensable, however today I sort of have an ode to three items that have become camping essentials for our family and are not found in the camping section!

Three camping essentials—not in the camping section of the store!

 

I have not ventured to check out all of the camping stores out there, and likely there are some version of all three of these items that you CAN find in the camping section of the store. However, they’d probably cost a lot more and be a little more fancy than you really need. Here are the three items I’ll never leave at home while camping. (Some of the below links are affiliate links. Purchases from affiliate links help support this blog with no extra cost to you my awesome reader!)

 

Baby wipes are now a camping essential for me and my family.

I will never camp again without baby wipes.

 

These little work horses do wonders when camping. Every time we go camping we purchase (or refill, because, let’s be honest, I buy these puppies in bulk) baby wipes for our trip. The wipes sit out on the picnic table for any and all to use for cleaning up hands and messes with ease. I especially like these for when the guys go tinkle out in the forest (my son’s favorite new pastime) because they wouldn’t be likely to wash their hands afterwards if it weren’t made this easy. I’m usually cooking when we go camping and having the wipes there for quick clean up of my hands in between touching different meats/veggies/sauces helps keep things from cross contaminating or just being gross. They are great for wiping hands up after applying bug spray or sunscreen as well! Yep, never going camping without baby wipes again.

Face wipes, specifically cucumber face wipes, have become a camping essential for me!

I will never camp again without face wipes.

 

Seems silly to have both baby wipes and face wipes. And, before recently, I just went camping with baby wipes. However, on a recent trip a friend brought along her cucumber facial wipes and using them at night and in the morning was so refreshing that I quickly added it to my ‘must have’ list for camping. Often we camp at campsites that do not have great restrooms with showers or even sinks. We like the rustic camp sites the most for how secluded and off the beaten path they are, but can feel gross quickly without those hygiene conveniences.

While baby wipes will do the trick, the face wipes are much better for taking off the grime and leaving you feeling clean and refreshed. Last time we went camping I used as a little sponge bath to boot. I never felt gross the whole trip! (Though, better believe that shower when I got home was just as amazing as ever!)

You'll never guess how a red solo cup made camping much more enjoyable for this lady...

I will never camp again without a red solo cup.

 

I‘m about to get much more personal on this blog than I ever imagined. However, I am doing it for the good of womankind…

I cannot squat and pee outdoors. It is impossible for me. I’ve tried every trick out there and somehow always end up peeing all over my pants. I’m not about to go get naked in the middle of the woods just to relieve myself, but I also hate making the trek to the restrooms in the middle of a dark, cold evening of camping.

Story Break: I’ve loved camping for a very long time. So much so that we registered for a ton of camp gear when getting married and camped while honeymooning. It was wonderful and oh-so-romantic camping with my brand new husband. That is, until the first evening, when it was FREEZING at night in the mountains of Colorado in the early Summer months, and I had to pee in the middle of the night. We were at a very rustic campsite and the restrooms were way too far away for me to get there in time. I tried squatting down in the bushes and ended up wetting my PJs so throughly that I had to wake my brand new husband to help me find new pants and find somewhere I could put my freshly wet PJs so they wouldn’t stink up everything we brought. SO embarrassing.

We’ve been camping together for nine years now and I haven’t really been able to perfect the art of peeing outdoors. About four camping trips ago I decided to try peeing in a cup instead of trying to squat. We had thrown a pack of red solo cups into our camping items because we were going with a group of people and we didn’t know if they’d be prepared with water bottles or cups of some sort. I grabbed a cup and went off into the woods. I was able to easily relieve myself with little to no effort. The cup lasted the evening and then was easily disposed of the next day. Not the most eco-friendly option, I know, but it was an easy and clean way to deal with the one aspect of camping that had really been difficult!

If you are anything like me and cannot squat and pee outdoors while camping, I recommend a red solo cup. (Doesn’t really need to be red.) 😉

 

What are your camping essentials?