A Method to Your Packing Method
By Annika Menginsen
Special to Relocation.com
Packing your things in a specific order can make or break your moving experience.
"I have known families to make a nice pile in the corner of the room of the items they are traveling with … to turn around at the end of the day to find that someone had packed them into the moving van," says moving expert Sandy Payne, author of “Move Your House: Plan It, Organize It and Decorate It.”
But ordering your packing is easy, says Payne, you just need a simple chronological guide:
First: Decide what you like the most.
Based on what you can spend on relocation and the size of your new home, you likely have to choose what will stay and what will go.
A typical American household, says Payne, uses less than 20% of what they own on a regular basis. This 20% should be the focus of what you pack first.
To determine your 20%:
- A few months before moving day, purchase a pack of small sticker dots and mark an item with a dot whenever you use it. When you move, only pack the clothes with dots.
- In your closet, tie a piece of ribbon or string around the top of a clothes hanger. When you wear an article of clothing, put it back in the closet on the empty side of the marked hanger. After a few months, you'll know what you wear and what just takes up closet space.
- For your garage or basement, try purchasing different colored storage bins and putting items into them as you use them.
Next:
Pack your items like your groceries: heavier things first and lighter items on top.
The empty spaces inside your large pieces of furniture – such as drawers and shelves --can be packed with smaller, odd-shaped items after they're loaded into the van. It's a resourceful way to protect breakable items.
Last:
Keep your TV close until the last second, warns Payne. "If not for yourself; you'll need it to keep your children occupied when everything else has been packed away."
As a rule, pack last whatever you need to access quickly during your last days at the house, your stay at a hotel, or during travel, such as children's activities (which serve as welcome diversions on the road), pet items, and your camera.
Never part with legal documentation. Car titles, insurance policies and marriage certificates are the most difficult items to replace but somehow always the easiest to lose. Never pack them -- but do make copies of them on a U.S.B. drive.
Payne also recommends hand-carrying valuable jewelry and other items of high sentimental or monetary value.
Some Final Tips
Empty all your trash cans. Payne has seen movers pack full garbage cans into the van -- not a pleasant welcome gift at your new home.
Keep your luggage away from the house until you need it; it has the tendency to get packed away as well.
Throughout your packing, says Sandy, remember, "Once the van is packed there is no turning back."
Your Next Move:
You Move It, You Pay for It -- Get Rid of Stuff You Don't Need
Make Packing Seem Less Overwhelming
You can have moving boxes delivered overnight; click here for information.
Annika Mengisen is a freelance writer who edits the Freakonomics Blog for The New York Times.
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