As a frequent traveler, I pass hundreds of suitcases a month, and I’ll often ask a fellow nomad what makes her bag perfect. Of course, no such unicorn exists — one traveler’s Tumi Continental, after all, is another’s albatross.
Personally, I find the boxiness of a hardshell irksome, with its inability to conform both to bulky contents and to the curves of my body. My bag needs to double as a pillow for 10-hour layovers, and it has to be easy to sling on top of a ramshackle excuse for a bus, with three chickens and 20 people inside, heading up into the mountains.
My ideal travel bag is what is known as an immigration bag — and while I embrace it now, it was once a source of great childhood embarrassment.
from WordPress https://jonathanwilhoite.wordpress.com/2017/11/02/the-best-travel-bag-every-food-lover-should-own-travel-intelligence-2/
No comments:
Post a Comment