November 24, 2010
Grooming Gifts for Holiday Travelers
Robert Doyle READ TIME: 4 MIN.
NEW YORK (AP) - Like a lot of travelers, Simon Duvall would love nothing better than for Santa to bring him an iPad this Christmas.
It's portable, perfect for "watching a movie on a plane," said Duvall, global marketing coordinator for OnlineVacationCenter.com. "And it's great for quick work or Web browsing on the go, with a bigger screen than my iPhone."
Barbara Messing, general manager of Travel-Ticker.com, would like to find Bose's noise-canceling headphones in her stocking. "I have knockoff headphones now, but I admit I do covet the real thing."
But with a $499 start price for the iPad and $299 for the headphones, this may not be the year that all our travel gift dreams come true.
Fortunately, there are less expensive ways to say merry Christmas or happy Hanukkah to the traveler in your life.
For the travel pillow junkie - the ones who keep inflatable doughnuts in the glove compartment and a blowup body-hugging cylinder in their carry-on - there's a new goodie on the market this year. Called Total Pillow, it looks like a blue daisy with a hole in the middle. Fold it in half for a neck rest, twist it for lumbar support, sit on it to cushion a hard seat, and carry it by dropping the hole over the handle of wheeled luggage. Best of all, at a price of $15 or $20 (depending on where you buy it), it won't break Santa's bank - available from http://www.totalpillow.com or at CVS, Rite Aid, Target, and other retailers.
And what traveler wouldn't like a little kit filled with personal care products in sizes that won't lead to your getting in trouble with the Transportation Security Administration? (Surely you don't want to provoke a pat-down for breaking the rules!) The website http://www.3Floz.com - launched earlier this year - offers more than a dozen travel kits priced from $17 to $85. There's one for everyone on your list, including a baby bath kit, a men's kit with shaving cream and lip balm, and many other choices filled with skin and hair-care products.
Diapers probably don't make the most festive gift, but for parents juggling lots of space-hogging baby-related items, here's something that might make trips with infants a tad easier: DiaperBuds, individually wrapped, vacuum-packed disposable baby diapers. The designer says they are 70 percent smaller than regular diapers and can even fit in a pocket, but they open into a full-size diaper; at http://www.diaperbuds.com, eight for $6, 24 for $18.
Another innovative concept - this one for travelers who never go anywhere without their laptops - is a two-in-one bag. The Double Time has wheels and splits into two pieces: a bag for clothes and other items that you can stow overhead on planes, plus a backpack laptop-carrier that zips off the main bag and fits under your seat. It's $120, available at http://www.ful.com and other retailers.
Ful.com also sells online and in Apple stores an item called the Joint Venture, $70, which splits into two messenger bags, one for the MacBook and one for the iPad, along with the Brooklyn, $100, which splits into a backpack for the MacBook and messenger bag for the iPad.
Whether you visit http://www.flight001.com/ or Flight 001 stores in New York, San Francisco, Berkeley or Chicago, the company always has colorful and clever gift-worthy items. This season's selection includes funny luggage tags for $12, including "Lucha Libre" and "Pez" styles; zippered Spacepak bags for packing shoes, clothes, underwear and other items as compactly as possible, $30-$65; and a nifty - dare we say sneaky - undercover laptop sleeve that hides your expensive little computer in a bag that looks like an ordinary padded envelope, $28.
Here's an item that's incredibly useful for many travelers: A wrap. Yes, even male travelers - if you buy a suitable color and pattern - will find this item incredibly handy, as an impromptu beach blanket or sun shade, a head wrap, and a way to carry delicate items. For women, a wrap can be a skirt, a sarong, a baby carrier, scarf or shawl. In a jam, use a wrap as a sling for an injured arm or a handle for a torn bag. They take up no room and are best picked up from the local ethnic market of your choice, but if you need an online retailer, check out http://www.TurtleIslandImports.com, which sells many designs for under $20.
Daisann McLane, who writes the "Real Travel" column for National Geographic Traveler and a blog at http://www.therealtravelblog.com, doesn't like to call them wraps - "I call them whatever they are called in the place I am, rebozo, pashmina, dupatta, etc." One of McLane's favorite stories about their usefulness was the time a traveling companion in Pakistan donated one to fasten a wheel to a busted axle.
"We were just happy to be back on the road and on the way to our destination," she wrote in an e-mail. "Getting stuck on the outskirts of Karachi is not something you want to do."
Long-term New Yorkers, Mark and Robert have also lived in San Francisco, Boston, Provincetown, D.C., Miami Beach and the south of France. The recipient of fellowships at MacDowell, Yaddo, and Blue Mountain Center, Mark is a PhD in American history and literature, as well as the author of the novels Wolfchild and My Hawaiian Penthouse. Robert is the producer of the documentary We Are All Children of God. Their work has appeared in numerous publications, as well as at : www.mrny.com.