I saw a comment elsewhere about a newbie mistake of taking "too much food". As a newbie, this has been bugging me as I can't see it, particularly solo which means that I'm carrying (ballpark) 150kg less mass in tow vehicle/caravan than if there were two of us.
For me, making a meal is part of my (new) lifestyle while carrying what I need with me both reduces my costs significantly and (as my caravan is a heavy duty off-roader) allows me to freely choose where I camp.
Three weeks ago I did a major shop in Mackay (no Aldi) at some $250 (say $150 if I'd had an Aldi) and have been camped at Seaforth with no access to a supermarket since. I still have a weeks major supplies and have spent less than $50 on (expensive) fresh milk/bread locally. So basically around $12 per day on food while eating well.
So what is the advantage of carrying less and or the disadvantage of "too much"?
I buy less more often and don't do any major shopping trips. Buy at the closest shop and don't chase prices, if at MT Dare and I need supplies, that's where I get them and not the next major town.
cheers
blaze
ps homebased atm and still shop the same
We do our normal weekly shopping type purchasing, and top up when necessary. It sounds as though you do something similar, and it has worked for you for a number of years. That being the case keep doing it if you feel right about it.
There is no right or wrong way to do this travel thing. There is your way. just have fun and dont sweat this sort of minor detail.
There is no advantage or disadvantage to any way you do the shopping.
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Regards Ian
Chaos, mayhem, confusion. Good my job here is done
I carry too much food but I'm not full timing . I have a habit this when camping regardless if Im in the van or not. I come back with enough food for several more days when I get back home. Which means I need to eat for a few more days like I'm camping. Often I end up throwing food out, which I don't like doing. So yeah, it's possible, I do it but I'm trying to cut down.
I also keep a few cans of stuff stored just in case but I'm not talking back up foods here.
I like to cook each meal as it's needed - breakfast, lunch & tea. This necessitates having adequate spices and condiments, further I carry dry goods in sealed plastic containers (pasta's, rice, flour, cereals, sugars, etc). Fresh meat fish and chicken, bread and milk is purchased at local stores as we go along. A couple of cans of peas, tomato's, sardines, tuna and soup for when I just want a light meal.
We tend to bush camp mostly on the outskirts of larger towns, so we need to be self sufficient with meals although a fresh bakery pie, fish n chips or counter lunch sometimes temps a few dollars out of the wallet.
We have a couple of times been camped in due to poor weather and have never missed out on a good feed.
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Possum; AKA:- Ali El-Aziz Mohamed Gundawiathan
Sent from my imperial66 typewriter using carrier pigeon, message sticks and smoke signals.
Take as much as you need between shops, that is if you are going camp 30km from a shop you don't want to be driving back and forth, that's not fun if you have a top spot to camp the more you take the happier you will be and save fuel., only get small amounts when driving long distances.