DAY 3 (Must be Friday) we got a late start, as more in our party started to adjust to Hawaii time. We headed west to Waimea Canyon. After driving to a few lookouts we came to the end of the road and set off on what we thought was an “easy one mile family hike”. Little did we know what we were getting into. We found the trail marking for a one mile hike and set off happily, humming a little tune. We were soon thinking this wasn’t quite what we had expected. The first half-mile was a good bit rockier and muddier than we’d expected. There were some pretty views, but not much different than we’d seen from the overviews. But surely, we thought, the view at the end must be spectacular. So we traveled on, as the ground got muddier and the trail got steeper, until we were climbing hand over hand, over logs, up steep slopes. All the while we were thinking “I’m really surprised the guidebook called this an easy family hike”.
The Value of Travel Journals
The above paragraph was written in our travel journal in the safety of our Kauai hotel room on the evening after our misadventure on that beautiful island. We had started what was supposed to be a short hike to a waterfall but had turned into an overland adventure when we started from the wrong parking lot. While my wife wrote the words above, our close still were covered with the red clay mud of Kauai.
We have a bookshelf in our living room where we kept some of our most cherished possessions. Our travel journals are keep there above out photo albums where theoretically we could grab them in our hurry out the front door should our house ever catch fire. Travel journals have been important in my family since before we were married. My wife still has the journal from her Spring Break trip to Florida. It sits next to our journal from driving cross country after college in the 1980s. Combined with the photographs, we take these journals help us remember the details of what would otherwise be a faded memory.
How to write a Travel Journal
If you are going to write a travel journal then I would suggest you:
Make sure a journal and pen are on your packing list.
Decide who you are writing this journal for. Our travel journals are written for us. Sometimes they contain witty prose and humor and sometimes they just contains facts we want to remember. They are not my blog. They certainly contain details that would be boring to other people. I don’t care. I would also suggest you write for yourself.
Jot down notes everyday that will help you remember the details of the day. If you don’t have time to write a journal entry, just keep a list of your notes in the back of whatever you are using for a journal.
Set aside time in the evening, at breakfast, on plane, train or car rides to take these facts and write your journal entries. Try and write something for every day of your trip.
Suggestions
Think about what you saw that surprised you.
Think about what amused you.
Think about the sights, smells, tastes, and sounds.
What was the name of that guide, site, etc?
Take a picture of that historic plaque to help you with details you may want later.
Don’t worry too much about editing, spelling or grammar. This journal is for you. You can clean it up later.
Travel Journals
There is no particular requirements for what you write in or on. The travel journal above is 3 sheets of yellowing 8.5″ x 11″ pieces of paper. We have written in small notebooks, moleskine notebooks, and college ruled notebooks. It does have to be small enough that you will take it with you. I once gave my wife the gift of a notebook where I had covered it with our travel photos and them laminated the cover. I loved that travel journal.