Why exactly is it so important not to forget my towel when hitchhiking?

7/25/2016 1:03:42 AM

I find a towel to be useful only for drying. I’ve tried sleeping on it, but it seemed to absorb dirt from the ground with ease. Once it was dirty, I didn’t want to dry myself with it.

I’m a living Macgyver, but the towel is a tool with only one use, in my opinion.

6/7/2015 5:23:28 PM

The towel of course helps a lot if you sweat while hitch-hiking.

Secondly, in case of a small cut leading to bleeding, you will need to tie it around the wound to stop bleeding profusely.

Towels can be used to tie up stuff and carry easily which might be wet, or not fit to keep inside your bags directly because of other reasons.

In case of extremely hot weather conditions, a wet towel tied around your head would do wonders in keeping you cool.

While sleeping, it could act as an extra cushion for you head and save your precious night’s sleep.

6/7/2015 2:42:20 PM

When I travel with a big towel, rare as it is, I will almost every night use it as an extra blanket.

Most of the time I travel a small towel, the size many people use as a tea towel, those I only use as an extra blanket when I feel extra cold or then the blankets are too light. (I sleep better with an heavy load of blankets.) It takes care to keep it on me but once I sleep it does not matter that much anymore.

But almost every night in a hostel, lower bunk, I have a towel as a kind of curtain. Allowing the towel to dry and making my bed a bit darker when I want to sleep.

11/6/2011 1:33:50 PM

things I do occasionally with my towel while traveling:

  • fold it to a pillow at night, or cover any (stained) pillows i encounter in cheap hostels/motels
  • place wet clothes on one half, then wrap the other half over it and sleep on it, and the clothes should be dry next morning
  • as a beach towel
  • group loose or dirty/wet items together in your backpack
  • fold it a couple of times and rest my arm on it while driving (the armrest in my car door vibrates too much)
  • cover the steering wheel while you park your car in the sun, so it won’t get hot
  • use it as blanket so you won’t get sunburn
  • make it wet and wrap it around your neck if you go hiking in summer
  • strangle the noisy, drunk backpacker who walks into the dorm at 3am, yelling, slamming doors and waking everyone up
  • or i just dry myself after a shower with it
11/5/2011 3:44:37 AM

Towel? Air dry, if needed.

As for sleeping, I always went with the long johns, ski mask, coat and gloves approach. You can shed those items during the day and take up half the space as a bulky, “look at me I’m obviously a vagrant” sleeping bag.

But yes @Ginamin, towels make amazing pillows.

11/5/2011 3:11:37 AM

I once forgot a towel while backpacking. I was on a minimalist trip, so I didn’t want to buy one and as I was traveling with only a schoolbag sized pack, I had very limited absorptive items (only 2 shirts, one pair of hiking cargos, one pair of board shorts total). So, every morning, I would shower, then use the shirt I wore the previous day as a towel, then I would wash it out with shampoo and hang it on the back of my pack to dry. It worked out okay, but I would have smelled significantly better and avoided some unnecessary rashes if I just remembered me camp towel.

Once in Greece, on Corfu, we were at a toga party (… I know) and my brother fell face first into some rocks. Used the towel as a bandage.

Also, towel = great pillow.

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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