CottontailCurl4two
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2015
- Messages
- 30
I'm down to the last things on my to-do list but still have some time before our departure. This is not the norm for a Fort Wilderness trip prep but I'm finding the lack of all the things you have to do with/for your young kids in addition to packing and prepping makes that much of a difference (cause everyone is 18+ now).
All the camping equipment and food is stacked up and ready to pack in the car and all I have left is to add my day to day toiletries to my suitcase and cook our dinner for arrival and chow time after we've set up camp. Our traditional first meal came about because it was easy to throw together while I checked and re-checked packing lists and supervised the kids' packing. It was BBQ chicken that is made by throwing chicken breasts in a casserole dish and covering in bbq sauce then baking for an hour. 2 steps and it's done while I work so we kept it for years of first meals at the fort. BBQ chicken, macaroni salad, baked beans, chips. It's our Fort Wilderness first meal - do you have any traditions that have stayed the same even as your family changes?
I am so excited and can't wait to sink stakes in the sand.
All the camping equipment and food is stacked up and ready to pack in the car and all I have left is to add my day to day toiletries to my suitcase and cook our dinner for arrival and chow time after we've set up camp. Our traditional first meal came about because it was easy to throw together while I checked and re-checked packing lists and supervised the kids' packing. It was BBQ chicken that is made by throwing chicken breasts in a casserole dish and covering in bbq sauce then baking for an hour. 2 steps and it's done while I work so we kept it for years of first meals at the fort. BBQ chicken, macaroni salad, baked beans, chips. It's our Fort Wilderness first meal - do you have any traditions that have stayed the same even as your family changes?
I am so excited and can't wait to sink stakes in the sand.