2015-05-28



Ski holidays can be expensive. So why not save yourself cash and hassle by travelling with just hand luggage on your next trip?

Forget dragging your bag through a packed airport or up to your chalet when you arrive. Yes, there’s plenty of stuff that might make your ski trip packing list. But let’s face it, in the mountains you end up skiing, partying and sleeping in your ski gear anyway. Let that dream of checking the ski forecast on Thursday, booking a last-minute trip on Friday and being on the slopes on Saturday become a reality.

So follow these nifty tips below to make packing for next season’s ski trip quicker, simpler and cheaper.

1. Hire Skis in The Resort



Hiring skis is great because you don’t have to lug them on the tube, through the airport or squeeze them into your hire car. You can also try out the latest models and switch them up depending on the conditions.

You can normally change your skis as many times as you want when you’re hiring. Fancy trying to ski backwards? Get some twin tips. Want to try some slalom skis? Go for it.

There’s a foot of fresh stuff coming tomorrow? Swap your piste skis for some fatter ones. It just makes sense. Have a look online before you go to snap up a good deal.

Photo: © Snowberry Val d’Isere

2. Use Your Boots As a Packing Device



If you have your own ski boots, pack them. They’re going to take up most of your limited space but it’s well worth it. There is nothing worst than having an ill-fitting pair of ski boots to wreck your week on the mountains. However, if you don’t have any boots then packing just hand luggage is a cinch.

Now this is a tip you won’t get anywhere else (and it is actually possible to fit ski boots into the largest sized hand luggage): first unclip your boots and then stuff them with your gloves, ski socks and thermals. Then use your boot clips to pack them as tightly as possible.

Maybe give your boots an airing a week before you head off though, otherwise you might end up with interesting smelling thermals!

Photo: © Vadim Ponomarenko/Shutterstock

3. Wear Your Ski Jacket

Ski jackets are pretty bulky so don’t fill your hand luggage allowance with something that you can wear. This same principle can we applied to hats, and any mid-layers you want to take.

Make use of all the pockets on your jacket by stowing away all the things that you will need on the flight, like your iPod/iPhone, headphones, passport etc. Also, if you have a nice pair of ski goggles put them in one of your jacket pockets. Then there is less chance of your ski boot cracking your lens.

A novel idea is to buy (and wear for the flight) a Stuffa One gilet, which has 12 pockets inside the jacket, each of them able to carry various necessary personal items and even clothing when travelling. The men’s version comes in black and the women’s in red.

Photo: © Shutterstock

4. Pack Smart

How much stuff do you actually need for a skiing holiday? Ski gear: check. Pack one set of thermals and ski socks then wash them midweek if you need to (see below).

The trousers you wore at the airport will be fine for the week, a few different tops and flip­flops are great post-ski-boot wear in the chalet.

Photo: © Ski Blanc

5. Wash Your Stuff During The Week

There is always an abundance of launderettes in ski resorts, or if you’re lucky you might have a machine in your place.

Save yourself from bringing two sets of thermals and socks and just wash yours during the week. Also handy when your one going­-out shirt gets vin chaud spilled on it.

Photo: © Alpsaccommodation.com

6. Travel In Your Outdoor Shoes

A pair of decent boots is essential for walking around the resort but are heavy and cumbersome to carry.

Wear them on the flight, so you’re ready to head out for après-ski as soon as you arrive.

You don’t really need any other shoes, unless you want to take something to wander in around your chalet like flip­flops as suggested above.

Photo: © Ellis Brigham

7. Save On Toiletries

We’re big fans of just buying toothpaste and deodorant on arrival at a resort. When you think about it, it’s pretty stupid for a group to each pack and carry a tube of toothpaste and a can of deodorant when you can just buy and share when you get there.

If you’re staying in a chalet, shampoo and soap are provided and otherwise Travel Minis (35-100ml) of everything from shampoo to deodorant are also available at Superdrug. Companies like Clarins, Dermalogica and Nivea make pocket-sized suncreams, too.

8. Invest in Packing Cubes

These are smaller bags that pack inside your hand luggage and are great for organizing and compressing your kit. If you haven’t got any you can pick up the Upptäcka set of four for next to nothing at Ikea.

With these you will be a packing pro and if you need to unpack your gear at security then repacking will only take a minute.

Photo: © Ikea

9. Clip Your Helmet to The Outside of Your Bag

Self­-explanatory and a last resort for space in my opinion. If you’re not sold on this either, then make sure that your helmet is jam­-packed with soft stuff when you pack it in you bag.

Roll up your pants and stuff them in there with your gloves, or something similar.

Photo: © Lowe Alpine

10. Get The Right Bag

There are lots of bags out there designed to maximize your hand luggage allowance. Look for something that is big enough to fit in all your stuff but is designed so it can be easily carried; a ski resort is no place for a dainty wheelie bag. Invest in a decent one because it’s going to pay for itself within two trips.

There are some different options out there, but for a long time I’ve felt there hasn’t been a solution that really gets it. Which is why my friends and I recently developed our own. Affectionately dubbed the GOBAG, it’s a new carry­-on sized duffel bag designed so you can travel compact with all the gear you need. Its killer feature is the Max Pack Bag, which allows you to vacuum-compress your soft items, enabling you to carry enough for a long trip in a 35-litre bag.

It’s currently being funded on Kickstarter right here, where you can pick one up from £90. That’s enough of a plug from me, but I hope you’ll check it out and help us realise this amazing bit of kit that’s been designed with avoiding those crazy airport luggage fees in mind.

If All Else Fails…

As a last resort, you could always try wearing your goggles and ski pants. Might get some odd looks at airport security though. <img src="http://s.w.org/images/core/emoji/72x72/1f609.png" alt="

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