Gadgets and tools among best holiday gift ideas
What’s in your bag when you take a trip? What gadgets, tools and comfort items are essential?
The Associated Press crowdsourced that question on a Facebook thread as fodder for a holiday gift guide for travellers. We heard from folks around the world, from millennials to retirees, from frequent-flying business travellers to once-in-a-while vacationers. Here are their recommendations, plus a few of our favourites.
GADGETS
• A universal travel adapter that converts electric current around the world. The travel store Flight 001 has a “5-in-1” colour-coded adapter, $35.
• Portable chargers to keep devices running on the road. Anker’s PowerCore 26800, $48, can charge an iPhone more than six times. For hikers and beach bums, Anker’s PowerPort Solar Lite, $51, was deemed the best solar charger by The New York Times’ Wirecutter producttesting company.
• The Tile, $35, to keep track of belongings. Attach the Tile to an object like keys or bags, or tuck it inside a passport case or wallet, and you can locate the item with Bluetooth and GPS technology. For outdoor gear, Tile Sport is waterproof.
• Tiny Bluetooth speakers, like the $28 Oontz, to fill a hotel room or vacation rental with music.
• Power strip or cube tap (a cube-shaped adapter with multiple outlets) to charge multiple devices in hotel rooms and airports.
• Headlamp for hiking, reading and crafting. Or the mini Lumio lamp and battery pack, which opens and closes like a book, $150.
PACKING AND LUGGAGE
• Compression storage bags so packed clothes take up less room. No vacuum needed for Roomier Life Roll-Up Space Saver Bags, $16 on Amazon: The air is expelled through an opening when they’re rolled up.
• Packing cubes and ultralight nylon packing bags for organizing. Flight 001’s Spacepak bags, $42 and up, have dual compartments to separate dirty and clean clothes, and also have air vents for compression.
• Hand-held scale for weighing bags. • Colourful luggage tags. • Luggage. For inexpensive and serviceable, Target and Costco; sturdy and sensible, L.L. Bean; stylish, upscale and durable, Tumi. For organized hipsters, the $220 Nomatic backpack/duffel bag. For day bags, Bagallini, LeSportsac and REI’s $33 compressible Sea To Summit Ultra-Sil Daypack. For high-tech, Bluesmart smart luggage includes a built-in weight scale, a GPS tracking device, a battery to charge a phone and laptop, and autolock activated by cellphone.
SLEEP
•Travel pillow. The new trtl travel pillow looks like a neck wrap rather than the traditional U-shape. It supports the head and neck with a system of ribs inside a soft fleece, $30.
• Ear plugs and contoured sleep masks that don’t crush eyelids and lashes.
• Bose noise-cancelling headphones : expensive at around $350, but the brand of choice for frequent flyers.
• White noise machines like LectroFan, $35.
COMFORT, HYGIENE, BEAUTY AND FITNESS
• Travel-size toiletries: toothpaste, sunscreen, deodorant, mouthwash, lotion, antibacterial wipes, hand sanitizer, lip balm, perfume, tissues. Gift a Birchbox subscription for $10 a month and the recipient will get five samples of personal care and beauty products per delivery for hair, skin and style, all in TSAcompliant sizes for carry-on liquids and gels not exceeding 3.4 ounces.
• Toiletry bag that can be hung up upon arrival.
• Tennis ball-size T Spheres, aromatherapy-massage balls, can be heated or frozen, $35.
• Soaragami armrest divider , $30. Have fun explaining it to the stranger on the plane sitting next to you in coach. • Travel yoga mats. • Inflatable Ten Toes stand-up paddleboard, $500 and up.
• Bike helmets that fold flat. Morpher helmets are certified safe in the United States and Canada by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, $149.
PRACTICAL AND FUN
• To make a hotel room or vacation rental homey, a flatfolding mesh laundry hamper; plastic, fold-out flower vase and two-cup travel kettle for boiling water.
• For cocktails on the road, Flight 001 sells a $65 mini-bar kit with tiny glass bottles, metal flasks, stir spoon, funnel and recipe booklet. The vials are sized to be TSA-compliant, but remember that it’s not legal to drink your own booze on an airplane.
• Rain ponchos that fold into tiny flat squares.