Trip Notes ((top)) <EASY EDITION>
Use digital tools for collaborative planning so everyone in your group can see updates on medical terms, parking tips, or schedule changes. 3. Essential "Field Note" Habits
🍽️ Ate at [place]: dish = [name], cost = [ ], rating = [/10] 🚌 Transport tip: 👀 Hidden gem / fail: 📝 Feelings / highlight:
: Take two minutes every night to flesh out the day’s highlights before they fade. trip notes
: Use your notes to capture specific details—the exact blue of the Mediterranean, the smell of street tacos in Mexico City, or the sound of the wind in a mountain pass .
I used to worry that these notes were failures of memory. I worried that by reducing a sunset to a set of coordinates and a temperature reading, I was killing the soul of the experience. But I have learned that trip notes do something far more valuable than preserve the past: they anchor the present. Use digital tools for collaborative planning so everyone
You cannot write a trip note without stopping. You have to pull the car over, or step out of the stream of tourists, or pause in the middle of the café. You have to look. To write “Coffee: 2 euros. Bad. Good view of the cathedral,” you have to consciously assess the coffee and locate the cathedral. You have to engage. It is a small act of resistance against the passive consumption of scenery.
That’s it. That is the record of a six-hour drive. At the time, the headache was a throbbing, all-consuming misery. The sheep were a chaotic, woolly traffic jam that made us laugh until we cried. The driver’s saint photo was a touching, silent devotion I stared at for miles. But on paper, it is reduced to the raw data. : Use your notes to capture specific details—the
Trip notes are a collection of essential information and details related to your trip, compiled in a concise and easily accessible format. They serve as a personalized travel guide, helping you navigate your journey with confidence and ease. Trip notes can include:
Use phone for on-the-go bullets + voice memos, then rewrite neatly in a notebook every 2–3 days.
Page 14, somewhere in the Andes: “Bus smells like wet dog and citrus. Driver has a photo of a saint taped to the speedometer. 3:00 PM: altitude headache begins. Eat coca leaves. Taste like stale tea. 4:15 PM: stopped for sheep.”