Moving (advice, ramble, rant)

funkychunkymonkey

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May 28, 2009
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how do you make moving eaiser? I could use some inspration. Ive got a whole aparment to pack and NO desire to do it. I have been purging stuff the last few days to have less to pack but I cant even find the energy to finish that:lmao: Have I mentioned I hate moving? Any advice on moving fragile funiture? Im gonna cheat and hire a crew to load and unload so at least I dont have to do that part. Sorry, Im rambling!
 
Think of this as a positive! You are purging. This is a great time to get rid of stuff, donate to charity start all over clean and organized :goodvibes

Sometimes I think to myself, oh dear lord, if we have to sell this house and have an open house, I'd be so embarrassed. :lmao: Makes me clean up and organize ;)
 
How far is the move? Close? Pack room by room and mark your boxes for which room it goes into. If close move I always get my kitchen put together first if possible. And I use paper grocery bags for the groceries , cupboard things and refrigerator items. I pack up stuff way in advance I know I am not using. And the purging is good. If you have time on a weekend have a yard sale to make extra cash.
 
yes, time to purge!

remember to pack your heavy things in smaller boxes (i.e. books) so you don't risk overpacking a big box and making it too heavy. i made this mistake a few times moving in college and dad-the-mover was not happy. i noticed last time i moved when professionals were packing up that they had smaller boxes specifically for the heavy items!
 

Purge and pack at the same time. If the move is a ways off start with packing things you're not going to need for a few weeks. For example, once the sellers accepted the offer we made them for our house, I started packing up the dining room. I figured I wasn't going to be throwing a dinner party in the next 6-8 weeks so wouldn't need the china and crystal. ;)

The next thing I packed was the decorative items...pictures, knick knacks etc.

Label your boxes with the room the stuff goes in as well as the general contents. For example: "kitchen: utensils and dish towels".

We didnt use any kind of movers and owned our house for a month before we moved in (it needed some work) so I would bring stuff every time I went to th house so by moving day all that was being moved was the furniture.

If you can, don't empty your bedroom bureau drawers. Just take them out of the bureau but leave the stuff in them. Maybe put each one in a garbage bag to protect the stuff. Then when you get the bureau into the new place just put the drawers back in.
 
how do you make moving eaiser? I could use some inspration. Ive got a whole aparment to pack and NO desire to do it. I have been purging stuff the last few days to have less to pack but I cant even find the energy to finish that:lmao: Have I mentioned I hate moving? Any advice on moving fragile funiture? Im gonna cheat and hire a crew to load and unload so at least I dont have to do that part. Sorry, Im rambling!

As far as moving fragile stuff...wrap, wrap, wrap. In addition it needs to be packed correctly so there are no scratches or falls.

Go to UHAUL or some other site and read up on how to properly prepare your fragile stuff.

Let's see...my tv, refridge, and armoire is damaged from my many moves! :sad:
 
I don't know how long you have before you move, but if you have the time, then just try to set a goal of a room or part of a room each day and then do that. Just meet the goal for the day and stop. It gets tiresome when you have to do it all at once. (For what its worth, my husband and I have actually rented truck and moved ourselves or someone in our family 13 times in the last two and a half years! Its been interesting.We have moved kids, parents, etc. I have packed up more kitchens and nothing has broken.) Use packing paper or newspapers to pack dishes, etc.

Hiring movers to load and unload is wonderful. We have done that on the last 3 moves and it was great (especially since the last was a third floor apartment with no elevator.)
 
Have you priced what it would cost to have the movers do the full pack/unpack for you? That might provide inspiration - thinking of how much you're saving or being paid (depending on your point of view) by doing it yourself.
 
The trick is to do a little at a time and not leave it all to the end. This is true for many thing we do.
 
Have you priced what it would cost to have the movers do the full pack/unpack for you? That might provide inspiration - thinking of how much you're saving or being paid (depending on your point of view) by doing it yourself.

I totally agree with this. I don't know why you would think of this as "cheating". To me, it just makes sense--I would rather work overtime doing something I'm good at, so I can pay others to do what they're good at. Given the choice between doing some bloody, gutty thing in the ER and moving a houseful of stuff, I'll take the bloody, gutty stuff any day.

We went through a period where we moved about twice a year for several years. I had it down to a science there for awhile. Pack your most important box first--this one has toilet paper, Clorox wipes, hand soap, paper towels, plastic utensils, paper plates & cups, light bulbs, TV remote, phone, salt & pepper, flashlights, toothbrushes, and can opener. Put that box IN YOUR CAR. This should be the first box to go into the new house. Everything else can be packed and moved by someone else. All you need to do is be sure every box is marked with the room it's going to .
 
I totally agree with this. I don't know why you would think of this as "cheating". To me, it just makes sense--I would rather work overtime doing something I'm good at, so I can pay others to do what they're good at. Given the choice between doing some bloody, gutty thing in the ER and moving a houseful of stuff, I'll take the bloody, gutty stuff any day.

We went through a period where we moved about twice a year for several years. I had it down to a science there for awhile. Pack your most important box first--this one has toilet paper, Clorox wipes, hand soap, paper towels, plastic utensils, paper plates & cups, light bulbs, TV remote, phone, salt & pepper, flashlights, toothbrushes, and can opener. Put that box IN YOUR CAR. This should be the first box to go into the new house. Everything else can be packed and moved by someone else. All you need to do is be sure every box is marked with the room it's going to .

Almost exactly what I was going to say. I lost count of the number of times the military made us move over 35 years. And I bless the fact that they paid for our belongings to be professionally packed- that way THEIR insurers were on the hook if anything was damaged, destroyed or lost.

But we have also helped our kids move several times, using our own muscle and a hired Uhaul plus DH's truck. Buying packing paper is a must- and learning how to use it properly, even more so. If you aren't sure how to properly wrap and pack your dishes and glassware, you can Google short videos of how to do this.

About the box of vital items that you bring in the car- you forgot the booze. You can't survive a move in day without that bottle waiting at the end of the day.:drinking1
 
We went through a period where we moved about twice a year for several years. I had it down to a science there for awhile. Pack your most important box first--this one has toilet paper, Clorox wipes, hand soap, paper towels, plastic utensils, paper plates & cups, light bulbs, TV remote, phone, salt & pepper, flashlights, toothbrushes, and can opener. Put that box IN YOUR CAR. This should be the first box to go into the new house. Everything else can be packed and moved by someone else. All you need to do is be sure every box is marked with the room it's going to .

Great advice! We, too, are veteran movers, and my advice would be to have the beds set up first, then make them up with fresh, crisp sheets, and put clean towels in the bathroom. After your first day of UNpacking, you'll appreciate so much a shower and clean bed linens!


Queen Colleen
 
When I was renting (and moving more often) I always started with the kitchen first. I was single. So - personally I only needed a few things to keep out for the last minute. At some point I would clean the oven, and then the worst of the apartment clean-up projects was done. I didn't "final" clean the stove top until closer to the end of the packing/moving process.

From there - I would assess what I wouldn't be using from "now" until the end of the move. So - at this time of year - all spring/summer clothes would get packed. I would also pack things some of my more fragile items in towels.

I agree about do not pack heavy items in big boxes. A case of paper is ~50 pounds for reference. The paper boxes are ideal for packing heavier items like books - assume you can move a paper box.

Get a couple of permanent markers with fat/broad tips - so you can mark the outside of the box. Mark the outside of the box on the top and on at least 2-sides, then they are easier to see where they need to go.

Find out from your actual movers - do you need to pack up the stuff from your dresser drawers? If they are going to wrap the dresser in moving blankets or in the poly wrap, you may not need to unload them. I would, however, remove anything inside that is breakable.

If I am personally moving (vs getting packed up professionally) I would take a couple of large garbage bags, and put that over the hanging clothes, and just put those in my car, but our last move was only 10 miles away, and yes, that does make a difference.
 
Ok its offical, i need more boxes! I took today off and didnt do a thing. I went to the mall and started birthday shopping for Febuary relitives.:rotfl: It was fun to get away. Then I came back and felt guilty, started purging again, went under the sink for a trash bag and leaned a valuable lesson, saws bite. I got a inch long cut thats pretty deep from that. Also learned one other thing today, JUST BECAUSE you purged it dosent mean u should pack it. I dont know where my head was at but I packed all be 3 towels and put my clothes locker under a bunch of boxes. I dont keep clothes in my dresser anyways, just sheets.
 
For fragile items I used shredded paper. I asked the boss if I could take the shredding from our shredder and that what I used. Put the paper in the box then nestled the items around the paper.
 
My moving checklist (for a local move---long distance is a bit more work):

1. Use PODS. I like PackRat, the local office guy has given me a discount the last two times we used them. Don't use UHaul Pods---they are tarps on a frame, not solid wood.

2. Pack. I use small boxes...it takes more, but I can pack them for my lifting capabilities. I don't pack stuffed animals or hanging clothes in boxes--those go in trash bags, so I can use them as "stuffers". Every room has it's own color sharpie---I don't have to read the words to know that Blue goes to DS's room or Pink to ours.

3. I start in one room, about a month or so ahead of time--usually the garage. I sort through whatever is in there, and box what I don't need in the next few months. If I know we need it, it goes to one side. If it's something I can sell or donate, it goes to a corner.

4. Once that room is done, I start with books and board games. Those get packed and stacked in the garage. If I don't have boxes to fit the games, I just tape the boxes shut (and they can go on the book shelves in the pod).

5. Next is kitchen stuff. Things I don't need, like china, gravy boats, etc. Pack and to the garage. (I'm also sorting as I go, and putting sell/donate stuff in the pile in the garage.)

6. Our bedroom is packed next. Anything that can be packed, is. Spare blankets, pillows, "dress" clothes, towels, etc.

7. DS's room--I keep out a few books, but then pack the rest. His toys are all in plastic tubs, so I just move them to the garage.

8. Living room, all knick knacks, pictures, etc, are now packed.

9. Two weeks from move, get the PODS. Start loading. The bookshelves, dining room table and chairs and big shelves from the garage and spare room get loaded by DH, then during the day, I can load up all the boxes that I've packed.


10. A week out, the spare room is now empty and the garage mostly so. I pack up most of the kitchen--leaving out just enough plates, glasses, silverware and pots/pans for the week. Time to purge--hold a yard sale, a free sale or take to donate.

11. I keep out a week's worth of clothes for each of us, and we POD the dressers (still full), the computer desk and chair, all the beds and the couch. We use air mattresses or our camping cots to sleep on, and we have camping chairs to sit on (and even an inflatable couch, but I hate that thing). The rest of the camping gear is packed away.

12. the spare room is cleaned top to bottom, except for carpets (I always do those last). The spare bathroom is cleaned. Both rooms are now off limits, with doors shut.

13. DS's room then gets emptied, and cleaned. Any toys or books kept out for his fun go into the living room, and we put his cot in our room.

14. Kitchen cupboards are cleaned, and kept shut. All the bedding for our beds is cleaned, stored in trash bags, and put in the PODs.

15. Two days out---I wash all the dirty clothes and bedding, and then the washer and dryer get packed in the POD. At this point, we have only 4 or 5 boxes of stuff sitting around the house, plus the tvs, computers, game systems, camping gear that we're using, and DH's recliner and medical equipment. Our bedroom/closet is cleaned, but we still use the bathroom, so I can't shut it down. The dining room is cleaned and shut down.

16. One day out, clean the kitchen. Fridge, stove, etc. Pack up dishes and pots/pans left out. We eat out that night, and on moving days. Spare clothes (all but two days) packed in the pods. Clean the bathroom and living room.

17. Day of move: Put rest of camping gear, the recliner and medical equipment into POD. have it picked up and moved to new location. TVs, computers, game systems go in the car, along with the dog and cat, and get moved to the new location by DH, while I stay at the old place and clean. One last run through the bathrooms and living room (and usually just a quick dust of the blinds in the closed off rooms) and I clean the carpets and steam mop the tiles. By then, DH is done with the movers and has emptied the car, then comes to get me.

Then I just reverse the process. A quick clean through the new house (wipe down counters, shelves, etc) and we start unloading, exactly in reverse of the load.
 

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