Starling Travel

July 22, 2012

Tic Tac Spice Jars

Filed under: Camping — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

This idea from Skruben is brilliant! Take old Tic Tac boxes and turn them into compact spice jars.

Tic Tac Spice Jars from Starling Travel

They will take up less space and you can have a wider variety of them. I am SO hoarding Tic Tac boxes now! I want ALL the spices in my teardrop camper!

I did this and it takes of a lot less space than before. Look at the difference!

Tic Tac Spice Jars from Starling Travel

I used our Dymo label maker to create the labels. It’s not as fancy as what the original person used, but it still looks good.

Tic Tac Spice Jars from Starling Travel

All of our spices take up less than half the space that they used to in our trailer, so I’m excitedly thinking what other spices we could bring or what we could do with the extra space.

Tic Tac Spice Jars from Starling Travel

The hardest part of this project was getting the labels off the boxes without shredding them to pieces. Pouring the spices into the boxes was easy because I used some paper rolled up into a funnel shape. This whole project took less than a half hour once we gathered all the Tic Tac boxes.

July 21, 2012

A Camper Hotel Room at Huettenpalast Berlin

Filed under: Camping,Lodging,Places To Visit,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

I found this unique little hotel room here:

Instead of your standard hotel room, Huettenpalast Hotel recycles camper trailers and refurbishes and fits them to an indoor space for 40-60 Euros a night!

The room looks adorable!

Camper Hotel Room in Berlin from Starling Travel

I love how they have “trees” in the room to give it an outdoorsy feel.

Camper Hotel Room in Berlin from Starling Travel

I would love to stay at a hotel with this kind of theme, but travel to Germany isn’t in my near future. I guess I’ll just have to hope someone does something like this in the States.

July 20, 2012

The Two-Story Scad-A-Bout

Filed under: Camping,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

The biggest complaint I hear about teardrop trailers (after claustrophobia) is, “Where do the kids sleep?” Until I found this recent teardrop, the answer was, “The kids sleep in a tent.” Yesterday, I found this teardrop trailer on Google Images. It’s the Two-Story Scad-A-Bout.

Two Story Scadabout from Starling Travel

They were built in the 60s and were meant to sleep parents and the kids. Technically, the kids are still in a tent, but it’s on top of your trailer, so it’s a little warmer.

Scad-A-Bout Two Story From Starling Travel

I like how it has an awning that can attach to the top for shade.

Scad-A-Bout Two Story From Starling Travel

I can’t find out much information about these trailers, so I don’t think many exist on the road today, but if you’re making your own, you could certainly borrow from this design to create a teardrop trailer that can sleep Mom, Dad AND a couple of kids.

More photos after the break: (Continue Reading…)

July 19, 2012

The Tiniest of Teardrop Trailers

Filed under: Camping,Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 2:55 pm

I found this teardrop trailer on Brian Greenleafs Blog.

Here’s what he said about it:

I saw the epitome of “tiny” travel trailers. No, this is no novelty.  After some coaxing, the owner climbed inside to show us that he can, indeed, sleep stretched out in this little marvel.  With the advent of more lightweight building materials these days, anything is possible.

The first picture I saw was this one, and I thought that it wasn’t that small.

The Tiniest of Teardrops from Starling Travel

But then I saw what was hauling and realized that it was SUPER TINY!

The Tiniest of Teardrops from Starling Travel

There is a name on the trailer that says, “Serro Scotty Sportsman,” but that trailer looked like this:

Serro Scotty HiLander

That name plate must have been a spare part added after the owner made the trailer from scratch, because I don’t think Serro Scotty ever made anything that small.

The next time I’m worried about how small my teardrop is and how I’m going to fit everything, I’ll remember this one.

July 18, 2012

Printable Car Games To Play In The Car

Filed under: Road Trips — Laura Moncur @ 10:15 am

Road Trip Bingo from Starling TravelWe have suddenly found ourselves with a fifth grader in our house and now planning for our next camping trip is entirely different than I thought it would be. What do I do with him in the car? The drive to our camping destination is over four hours away, so I have to have something to keep him busy while we’re on our long trip.

I’m so thankful for this website:

She not only has travel bingo and ideas for the license plate game, but she had printables for things I would have never thought of like a scavenger hunt, battleship and even song lyrics. Hopefully, with enough of these sorts of distractions, we’ll keep our new fifth grader busy and entertained while we get to the campground. Once we’re there, that’s another story.

July 15, 2012

Rude Plane Behavior: A Lesson in Inner Peace

Filed under: Airline Travel — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

Flying to Disney World from Starling FitnessRude and noisy people are one of the MANY reasons I hate flying, but Lifehacker has a great article about how to ask people to be quiet and get their kids in line.

Their best advice is to introduce yourself BEFORE there is a problem.

I’ve found that before you do anything, however, it’s best to get on friendly terms with the people in your row. This is most easily done by an introduction and a short conversation before the flight takes off. Also, if you have the opportunity to do them a favor—such as help with their luggage or answer a question about the flight—they’ll be more inclined to do you the favor of shutting the hell up if they’re being noisy. This is important because we’re talking about two very distinct first impressions. If you do someone a favor or just come across as nice early on, you’re a nice person asking for something. If the first thing out of your mouth to the person next to you is “could you please quiet down a little?” you sound a little more like a whiney jerk (or a cartoon librarian).

Children, however, are a bigger issue because most parents KNOW their kids are being irritating, but their too embarrassed to do anything about it.

Most parents know that their kids are being a nuisance and feel really bad about it, but are also afraid to look bad and/or add to the ruckus by yelling at the kid to behave. It’s a catch 22 that makes it so they wind up not doing anything until they get home, even though the kid is making everyone, esp. the parent, miserable.

My biggest irritant is with a kid behind me, kicking my chair. Most parents don’t even notice that their kid is doing it, which makes it even harder. I saw a quote from nolite te bastardes the other day that brought it all into focus, however.

Inner Peace from Starling Travel

It reads:

Learning to ignore things is one of the great paths to inner peace.

If that is the case, then flying on airplanes is the surest way to enlightenment, because there is so very much that needs ignoring. Next time something is bothering you on a plane, remember that quote and think of your flight as an exercise in inner peace, instead of four hours locked in a tin can with a crowd of inconsiderates.

July 14, 2012

The Fireworks Trailer

Filed under: Teardrops & Tiny Trailers — Laura Moncur @ 7:00 am

I found this trailer in Arco, ID right before Independence Day. It has been retrofitted to sell fireworks.

Fireworks Trailer 2012 Arco, ID from Pick Me!

Does anyone know the make of the trailer? It kind of looks like a Lil Loafer to me, but I can’t be sure.

July 13, 2012

Arco, ID: The First Atomic City In The World

Filed under: Camping,Idaho,Places To Visit — Laura Moncur @ 8:00 am

Arco ID: First Atomic City in the WorldWhen we went to visit Craters of the Moon a couple of weekends ago, we stayed at the Craters of the Moon KOA in Arco, ID. Arco was the first city in the world to be powered by atomic power and the nuclear plant that powered it is still there to this day (with MANY improvements, I’m sure). The city was so blissful that we were reluctant to leave. (Continue Reading…)

July 12, 2012

Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho

Filed under: Hiking,Idaho,Places To Visit — Laura Moncur @ 2:00 am

From the satellite view of the park, Craters of the Moon National Monument in Idaho looks like a scorched blotch on the earth.

And it is… (Continue Reading…)

July 11, 2012

Disney World Cost Analysis: Driving the Teardrop VS. Flying

Flying Vs. Teardrop Trailer from Starling Fitness

I want to go to Disney World. I’ve never been there and I really want to experience all Disney World has to offer. We live in Salt Lake City, Utah, however, so every time I bring it up, everyone in the family says that we should just go to Disneyland instead. It’s almost the same and it’s so much closer.

In order to convince them, I have to do RESEARCH. How inexpensively can we do this trip? Today, I did that research for a trip in February and what I found, surprised me. (Continue Reading…)

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