Greyhound Baggage

Topic 8278 | Page 1

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Jeff L.'s Comment
member avatar

Those of you like me who are not world travelers might need this info if taking the Greyhound to orientation.

The most common maximum size allowed is 62 linear (total) inches or 27" x 21" x 14" with a maximum weight limit of 50 lbs. per bag. Anything larger, heavier, or oddly shaped will incur additional fees. A charge of $30 - $40 (depending on the distance traveled) will be applied to any baggage above the 62-inch limit. A charge of $30 - $40 (depending on the distance traveled) will be charged for any baggage above the 50 pound limit.One (1) piece of baggage is checked free of charge for adults and children. One (1) additional piece of baggage may be checked for a charge of $15 for adults only.

I have put my big bag away and broke out the two bags I already had and guess what they are just within 27" x 21" x 14". I figure to go ahead and pay the fifteen bucks and take two. Why so much?

I have a small condensed sleeping bag, three pair of nylon hiking- fishing pants, three pair of nylon H/F shorts, one pair of jeans, eight pair of boxer-briefs, two pair athletic briefs, four black t-shirts, two long hoody zip up shirts(like the kind those cool skateboard kids wear), one long sleeve nylon fishing shirt, one nike running hoody (yellow highlight), one pair thermals, eight pair short running socks, three pair winter type boot socks, one jungle hat, three pair of gloves, two flashlights(one little for fifth wheel and the other if I need to call batman), electric shaver, electric clippers, toothpaste, two underarms, two colognes, one aftershave, three small packs of disposable ass wipes and odds and ends that are small for glasses,ears, can opener,accessory type stuff. One pair of running shoes I like to drive in, one for street jogging, one for trail, one for trail if it rains and hiking shoes( I know a little much on the shoes but I need my runs even if they are twenty-five minute, it supplies more oxygen to my brain and God knows I need it). Other stuff like shower and laundry bags, small bag of measured detergent. Paperwork. The rest is little small stuff, accessories and what not. My phone will by on my side, i will be wearing my second pair of jeans, I am only taking my kindle and leaving my lap at home(I will miss her and will be returning for her after I am assigned). I plan to walk to the stores in town for my food start up.

After all this I have two stuffed bags. I am taking light weight clothes and still have two bags. Even if I drop two pair of shoes I would need the second bag. I hope this is not too much stuff but I thought it is kinda light especially if I go from two weeks with trainer straight to 30 thousand miles teams without going home. I am glad it is not winter and I can leave my heavy stuff. I will have to layer with what I have if it does get a little chilly in some places. When I get assigned will I want to have more than two bags? Plan for the worst, hope for the best but what if one gets the heave ho and brings the truck in with more than they can carry? Heard of guys buying refrigerators, do you just leave them? Storage? would that be worth it? I have not even planned my ankle weights in or my two 20lb dumbells( dont laugh I am in my latter forties, I am a badass though). Do you guys get stuff sometimes knowing you may loose it or leave it?

Well they also allow a carry on: small bag up to 25 pounds can be taken on board for each adult or child. Carry-on bags must fit in the overhead compartment or under your seat.

I am wondering if I should just drive, it is only 722 miles away and maps said it would take around 12 hours. But this is a whole new topic with many questions like, parking, security, would it constrict you, and would you have to get it at a later date?

Any way anyone with suggestions on baggage let me know. BY the way is Greyhound as bad as they say? I am going to try to entertain myself and embrace the trip. I hope I sit by someone who speaks Spanish, I need the practice.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.

OWI:

Operating While Intoxicated

OOS:

When a violation by either a driver or company is confirmed, an out-of-service order removes either the driver or the vehicle from the roadway until the violation is corrected.

Donald M.'s Comment
member avatar

While I'm sure you missed quite a few items, I'd like to suggest that you are guilty of overpacking.

Rule 1: Anything that can be bought on-site should be bought on-site. (deodorant, soap, toothpaste, shampoo, etc). I would pack a small toilet bag with a few of the 3oz bottles of shampoo/body soap a travel deodorant, the electric shaver and a toothbrush with a travel toothpaste. Packing laundry soap is flat out ridiculous. If a Wal-Mart or other big box is available I wouldn't pack more than one change of underwear and a set of thermals. Buying a pack of underwear on-site is fine.

Rule 2: Layered clothing is better than specialty clothing. A rain shell can be combined with a hoodie and be more functional than a 3 system jacket. I would rather have a few print Ts, a couple of polo shirts, a flannel shirt, a hoodie, and a rain jacket. Than what you've packed.

Rule 3: Less is always more. Lose the 3rd pair of gloves. Wear the running shoes or boots as your driving shoes (And yeah... I knew a bloke that did running; 99 shoes for every type of run. :) )

Rule 4: Consolidate tech gear. Having personally carried books, tablets, Ipods, smartphones and a 17" laptop; I've definitely found I don't need to lug all of it around. (It's heavy.)

Rule 5: Carry-on luggage ALWAYS contains the bare minimum; stowed luggage carries everything else. NO EXCEPTIONS. If your luggage gets stolen, lost, or misplaced; the carry-on should have everything you need to push off and hopefully run to a stored to replace the rest.

If you've heard anything, I hope you take away that less is more, and do try to remember; those sleeper berths are really only built for 1, and your going to be twp in that canoe for a while.

Sleeper Berth:

The portion of the tractor behind the seats which acts as the "living space" for the driver. It generally contains a bed (or bunk beds), cabinets, lights, temperature control knobs, and 12 volt plugs for power.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.
Chris L.'s Comment
member avatar

I think you'll be fine with what you packed as long as you can sleep comfortably with it on the top bunk. As far as loading up your own truck, if you give proper notice when you quit they will run you by the house to unload your gear before turning in the truck. Anyway that's the ideal way of getting your stuff home when you leave a company.

Jeff L.'s Comment
member avatar

While I'm sure you missed quite a few items, I'd like to suggest that you are guilty of overpacking.

Rule 1: Anything that can be bought on-site should be bought on-site. (deodorant, soap, toothpaste, shampoo, etc). I would pack a small toilet bag with a few of the 3oz bottles of shampoo/body soap a travel deodorant, the electric shaver and a toothbrush with a travel toothpaste. Packing laundry soap is flat out ridiculous. If a Wal-Mart or other big box is available I wouldn't pack more than one change of underwear and a set of thermals. Buying a pack of underwear on-site is fine.

Rule 2: Layered clothing is better than specialty clothing. A rain shell can be combined with a hoodie and be more functional than a 3 system jacket. I would rather have a few print Ts, a couple of polo shirts, a flannel shirt, a hoodie, and a rain jacket. Than what you've packed.

Rule 3: Less is always more. Lose the 3rd pair of gloves. Wear the running shoes or boots as your driving shoes (And yeah... I knew a bloke that did running; 99 shoes for every type of run. :) )

Rule 4: Consolidate tech gear. Having personally carried books, tablets, Ipods, smartphones and a 17" laptop; I've definitely found I don't need to lug all of it around. (It's heavy.)

Rule 5: Carry-on luggage ALWAYS contains the bare minimum; stowed luggage carries everything else. NO EXCEPTIONS. If your luggage gets stolen, lost, or misplaced; the carry-on should have everything you need to push off and hopefully run to a stored to replace the rest.

If you've heard anything, I hope you take away that less is more, and do try to remember; those sleeper berths are really only built for 1, and your going to be twp in that canoe for a while.

Laundry soap is only a small bag , if i remove it it will not affect enough. toiletries and toothpaste and things like that you do not buy at a truck stop if you can help it and will be added to the bags in the truck. I am not worried about the trip up. I am worried about space on the truck. Part of it will shrink when I take my sleeping bag out. One pair of gloves for fuel or inspect, one for utility and one for back up. Your flannel shirt alone will take up more room than what I have worth a full size hoody. I packed a thin running hoody that does not hold moister and i forgot to mention I packed a cheap emergency pancho and am leaving my rain jacket for the second pick up. buying underwear? They still go on the truck and most likely into the bag. Underwear is very important especially if you get wet , either that or do not wear any, cept it aint that warm outside. By the way the suggestion about laundry soap was one I got here.. The fifteen dollars is better spent than what you are suggesting since a carry on would only be two thirds smaller than the bag i have now, still two bags. I could leave one pair of jogging shoes, will be wearing the hiking shoes and it still wont reduce the two bags to one at the size that is accepted without incurring additional fees.

Sleeper Berth:

The portion of the tractor behind the seats which acts as the "living space" for the driver. It generally contains a bed (or bunk beds), cabinets, lights, temperature control knobs, and 12 volt plugs for power.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.
Jeff L.'s Comment
member avatar
double-quotes-start.png

While I'm sure you missed quite a few items, I'd like to suggest that you are guilty of overpacking.

Rule 1: Anything that can be bought on-site should be bought on-site. (deodorant, soap, toothpaste, shampoo, etc). I would pack a small toilet bag with a few of the 3oz bottles of shampoo/body soap a travel deodorant, the electric shaver and a toothbrush with a travel toothpaste. Packing laundry soap is flat out ridiculous. If a Wal-Mart or other big box is available I wouldn't pack more than one change of underwear and a set of thermals. Buying a pack of underwear on-site is fine.

Rule 2: Layered clothing is better than specialty clothing. A rain shell can be combined with a hoodie and be more functional than a 3 system jacket. I would rather have a few print Ts, a couple of polo shirts, a flannel shirt, a hoodie, and a rain jacket. Than what you've packed.

Rule 3: Less is always more. Lose the 3rd pair of gloves. Wear the running shoes or boots as your driving shoes (And yeah... I knew a bloke that did running; 99 shoes for every type of run. :) )

Rule 4: Consolidate tech gear. Having personally carried books, tablets, Ipods, smartphones and a 17" laptop; I've definitely found I don't need to lug all of it around. (It's heavy.)

Rule 5: Carry-on luggage ALWAYS contains the bare minimum; stowed luggage carries everything else. NO EXCEPTIONS. If your luggage gets stolen, lost, or misplaced; the carry-on should have everything you need to push off and hopefully run to a stored to replace the rest.

If you've heard anything, I hope you take away that less is more, and do try to remember; those sleeper berths are really only built for 1, and your going to be twp in that canoe for a while.

double-quotes-end.png

Laundry soap is only a small bag , if i remove it it will not affect enough. toiletries and toothpaste and things like that you do not buy at a truck stop if you can help it and will be added to the bags in the truck. I am not worried about the trip up. I am worried about space on the truck. Part of it will shrink when I take my sleeping bag out. One pair of gloves for fuel or inspect, one for utility and one for back up. Your flannel shirt alone will take up more room than what I have worth a full size hoody. I packed a thin running hoody that does not hold moister and i forgot to mention I packed a cheap emergency pancho and am leaving my rain jacket for the second pick up. buying underwear? They still go on the truck and most likely into the bag. Underwear is very important especially if you get wet , either that or do not wear any, cept it aint that warm outside. By the way the suggestion about laundry soap was one I got here.. The fifteen dollars is better spent than what you are suggesting since a carry on would only be two thirds smaller than the bag i have now, still two bags. I could leave one pair of jogging shoes, will be wearing the hiking shoes and it still wont reduce the two bags to one at the size that is accepted without incurring additional fees.

Did some mashing and dropped my trail for rain down to one with carry on.

Sleeper Berth:

The portion of the tractor behind the seats which acts as the "living space" for the driver. It generally contains a bed (or bunk beds), cabinets, lights, temperature control knobs, and 12 volt plugs for power.

HOS:

Hours Of Service

HOS refers to the logbook hours of service regulations.
Donald M.'s Comment
member avatar

Its a bit of self-discovery when you pack. How little do you need to function; and how little do you need to finish the task at hand. I've been around the world in all sorts of situations; and it took me a long time to get to the comfort level I'm at. I'm not saying that anything you're doing is necessarily wrong; but as you work your way through it; less is more.

I would suggest reviewing at times during your journeys what really sat in the luggage for the entire trip. Did you need to signal Batman? If not, perhaps the Million candle power flashlight was excessive. Did the hotel have a laundry and a soap dispenser? Perhaps packing the bag of soap was not worth the convenience of putting $2.00 in a dispenser. Maybe packing a Tide Pod would have been a better choice (and they could have been packed in the shoes).

There is no right; just what is needed, and what is excessive.

Good luck with your journey!

Jeff L.'s Comment
member avatar

Its a bit of self-discovery when you pack. How little do you need to function; and how little do you need to finish the task at hand. I've been around the world in all sorts of situations; and it took me a long time to get to the comfort level I'm at. I'm not saying that anything you're doing is necessarily wrong; but as you work your way through it; less is more.

I would suggest reviewing at times during your journeys what really sat in the luggage for the entire trip. Did you need to signal Batman? If not, perhaps the Million candle power flashlight was excessive. Did the hotel have a laundry and a soap dispenser? Perhaps packing the bag of soap was not worth the convenience of putting $2.00 in a dispenser. Maybe packing a Tide Pod would have been a better choice (and they could have been packed in the shoes).

There is no right; just what is needed, and what is excessive.

Good luck with your journey!

I hear ya, I would like just to take my survival pack, but I start to stink after a week. lol or just all nylon clothing made for hiking without underwear. Shave? what for?lol I am leaving my K-Bar that is for certain.

Robert B. (The Dragon) ye's Comment
member avatar

I learned my packing skills from Uncle Sam. I roll all my shirts and pants so that I can pack them tight and oddly enough, they don't wrinkle. The company I'm with currently until I start at Knight, I'll usually be out 10-14 days at a time and in a military backpack (daypack style) I can get 4-5 pairs of pants, 7- t shirts undies and socks. It's a bit bulky but it's all in one bag.

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