Travel gifts: Keep comfy, organized and connected

Category: News

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By BETH J. HARPAZ
This undated image provided by Pakems shows the lightweight, comfy, rubber-soled, water-resistant Pakem shoes in five colors. They come in high and low tops, sell for $60-$70, and fold up in a strapped carry bag. As a holiday gift idea, they work for travelers looking for casual comfort after slipping off ski boots or ice skates. (AP Photo/Pakems, Eli Regalado)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated image from Herban Essentials shows the company’s mixed bag of scented herbal wipes. Harriet Lewis, vice chair of the tour company Overseas Adventure Travel, recommends them as a holiday gift idea for travelers; she uses them when she travels to freshen up. (AP Photo/Herban Essentials)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated image from the travel gear retailer Flight 001 shows the company’s 4-in-1 adapter, with four color-coded plugs, good for 150 countries. The adapter works as a holiday gift for folks who travel a lot internationally. (AP Photo/Flight 001)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated image provided by NudeAudio shows the company’s Move M palm-sized portable speaker. The Bluetooth-enabled device has an eight-hour battery. At about $70, its rich sound rivals bigger, pricier models, making it a suitable holiday gift for travelers who want to fill a home away from home with music. (AP Photo/NudeAudio)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated image provided by Rainraps shows one of the garments. The hooded Rainrap weighs under 9 ounces, drapes like a cape and is reversible. It comes in eight two-color combinations and water beads off the silky fabric. As a holiday gift idea, it lets female travelers shrug off rainy days while traveling light. (AP Photo/Rainraps)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This product image released by Polaroid shows the company’s new digital instant camera, the Z2300. The Polaroid can print photos instantly, offers a choice of borders, previews photos before printing and saves images to upload. Harriet Lewis, vice chair of the tour company Overseas Adventure Travel, recommends it as a holiday gift for travelers because it lets you engage with locals by offering photos on the spot in places that may not have easy access to printed images. (AP Photo/Polaroid)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated image provided by High Sierra shows a High Sierra AT7 wheeled backpack with detachable daypack. Edward Piegza, founder of the small-group luxury tour company Classic Journeys, recommends the brand and style as a holiday gift for travelers, especially for kids and teens who need carryon luggage. (AP Photo/High Sierra)
Travel-Holiday Gifts

This undated product image released by GoPro shows the GoPro digital camera, which has become a hot item on ski slopes and other settings. Brian Stacey, director of new product development for Tauck, the cruise and tour company, likes the camera because it attaches “to pretty much anything _ your helmet, arm, leg, canoe” and can shoot images while you’re moving. (AP Photo/GoPro)

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NEW YORK (AP) — Today’s travelers want to be comfortable, organized and connected. With those themes in mind, here are some gift ideas, starting with suggestions from three folks who travel for a living.

(Prices were found online mid-November, but will vary by purchase date, retailer and model.)

GOPRO AND A POWER STRIP

Brian Stacey, director of new product development for Tauck, the cruise and tour company, says his must-haves include Creative Labs noise-cancelling headphones for air travel ($60), and a GoPro camera, which he describes as “the hottest thing out there” (newest model, HERO3+ Black Edition, $400). The tiny digital camera can go underwater or “attach to pretty much anything — your helmet, arm, leg, canoe” — and take video and photos while you’re moving.

He also loves the Orvis businessman’s backpack ($150-$200). Among the things he stashes in it are a bottle protector from TravelSmith ($24) to bring home wine or olive oil without worrying about spills; and a Belkin power strip ($20). With a power strip, he can charge five gadgets with one hotel room outlet. If he’s traveling internationally, he only needs one adapter.

POLAROID AND LAVENDER

Harriet Lewis, vice chair of the tour company Overseas Adventure Travel, recommends the new digital Polaroid camera ($178). She can take photos of people she meets and print copies on the spot, which is a nice way to engage with locals who don’t have easy access to printed images. The 21st century Polaroid also prints multiple copies, offers a choice of borders, previews photos before printing and saves images to upload.

Lewis’ personal comfort items make great stocking stuffers: scented herbal wipes (Herban Essentials, $16), pocket hand-warmers for cold places ($2), and lavender oil ($10 in health food stores). She sprinkles lavender on bed sheets and in her bath, and rubs it on her temples and wrists. (Some travelers sprinkle it on luggage and clothing, as it’s said to repel bed bugs.)

ALL ABOUT THE BAG

Edward Piegza vowed never to check bags again after an airline lost his family’s luggage on a trip to London. Piegza, founder of the small-group luxury tour company Classic Journeys, now uses a carry-on zippered Victorinox bag ($235), which won’t tear when stuffed. For kids and teens, he recommends a High Sierra wheeled backpack with detachable daypack (AT7 model, $176). His sons have used their High Sierra bags for more than 10 years in two dozen countries.

Piegza also recommends Nike Free running shoes — lightweight, comfy and quick-drying ($100); fun, customizable luggage tags from Zazzle.com ($10); and a Gorillapod stand ($20-$30) that secures iPhones to anything “from a tree branch in a Costa Rican jungle to a cliffside terrace in Amalfi.” Combined with a timer app, “you can take some great selfies in spectacular settings.”

Finally, for the ladies, Piegza suggests a pashmina wrap. His wife treasures hers because it’s soft, light and easily accessorizes various outfits. It also folds up small but is big enough to serve as a blanket.

STAYING ORGANIZED

Cellphone, iPod, tablet, Kindle, camera — many travelers carry them all, plus chargers and cables. GreatUsefulStuff.com sells Kangaroomstorage bags to protect and organize gadgets. A two-sided cord pouch ($25) has 10 see-through compartments with slots you can label and removable dividers so compartments can be enlarged. The compact personal media pouch ($13) has six small pockets and can fit a Kindle or iPad Mini too.

Kohl’s carries toiletry kits for young travelers with Batman and Superman logos, and for men, a Dockers brand ($40). ToiletTree has a classy black leather kit ($20), while Flight 001 offers colorful Avery cosmetic bags with Eiffel Tower and white cross-on-red logos ($35).

STAYING CONNECTED

For charging gadgets overseas, Flight 001 sells a compact adapter with four color-coded plugs, good for 150 countries ($25), along with a dual wattage converter ($30) to use North American appliances overseas.

To keep cellphones working on the go, give the gift of backup power, like Anker’s Astro Slim2 external battery ($33). Charge the battery beforehand, and when the phone dies, plug it into the battery. For sunny climes, consider a solar-powered charger. Popular brands include Anker, Solio and Goal Zero, but do your research. Consumer reviews suggest some don’t work as well as advertised.

FOR BIKERS

Gifts for bikers — whether long-distance or day-trippers — include DeFeet Blaze wool socks ($12-$15); a handlebar bag like the waterproof Topeak DryBag with map cover ($75); a multitool for repairs and adjustments, like Pedro’s ICM ($34.50); and a phone case that can be mounted on handlebars, like the Topeak RideCase ($50).

FOR FUN, COMFORT AND CONVENIENCE

For the traveler who wants to fill a home away from home with music, consider a small portable speaker. The NudeAudio Move M, about the size of a fat wallet, has an eight-hour battery, is Bluetooth-enabled, and has rich sound that rivals much bigger, pricier models ($70).

Travelers who want to show off where they’ve been might like Flight 001’s Scratch-Off Map ($20). A layer of gold film rubs off to reveal countries visited in blue; available in December as a scratch-off 3-D globe puzzle ($32).

For kids, here’s a freebie: Travelzoo’s “Map the World,” a new iPad app with nine puzzles that teach geography.

Women can shrug off rainy days while traveling light with the hooded Rainrap ($60). Water beads off the silky fabric; it weighs under 9 ounces, drapes like a cape and is reversible, available in eight two-color combinations.

You can’t wear flip-flops in snow, but Pakems are the next best thing: lightweight, comfy, rubber-soled, water-resistant shoes that slip on after ski boots or ice skates come off. They come in five colors, high and low tops, foldable with strapped carry bag ($60-$70).

Finally, even folks who can’t get away can enjoy a local adventure or dinner cruise. Cloud9Living.com makes it easy to give everything from zip-lining to walking tours in destinations nationwide.

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