Thread: Journaling to archive/preserve your trips...

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  1. #1
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    Post Journaling to archive/preserve your trips...

    I thought it would be interesting to discuss the use of a journal (guys don't keep diaries!) on trips or just in general day-to-day life. There are both practical and philosophical reasons for journaling. For those of us who aren’t trained photographers, the written word gives a chance to bring a different perspective on representing our travels and experiences.

    I have kept a journal on-and-off throughout most of my life (more on than off actually). After this weekend’s trip to TN I was convicted that I need to re-start the habit and keep a travel/trip specific journal as well. I don’t think much, if anything, from my journals will ever be worth publishing, but it makes for interesting reading and I imagine will thrill my children some day. It allows me an opportunity to think in a more deliberate and patient manner.

    Simplicity has led me to use a bound composition notebook from Staples…

    It has quad ruling (graph paper basically) which aids in making sketches or drawings. It has the standard 100 pages and measures 9.75” x 7.5”, a great size for stowing in side pockets on my doors and keeping on bookshelves.

    Practical purposes include the following:
    • Tracking historical data of your travels (mpg, repairs made, tools required, etc.)

    • Recording captions for your photographs

    • Recalling date-specific information


    Philosophical purposes include the following:
    • Makes for darn-interesting reading later in life when the photographic memory doesn’t work as well

    • Pass on insight, lessons learned, and great stories to later generations

    • Recording inspired poetry, psalms, lyrics, etc. spurned by a locations sights, smell, tastes, etc.


    Henry (60seriesguy) had this to say in a paragraph from his “Let's talk Expeditions!” article found here.

    Quote Originally Posted by 60seriesguy
    Tell Us about Your Trip
    Keep a detailed journal of your expedition, including things like average MPG, miles traveled, food consumed, food needed, food left over, parts used, tools used and needed, directions, coordinates, landmarks, names of people you met, etc... This will not only help you plan your next expedition and figure out which captions go with each picture, but will also give you something to do when you get back: writing the log down and telling the rest of us here on the OML about your trip !!
    [note wj: OML means Offroad Mailinglist of course]
    Do you journal? If so how? What tools do you use? Perhaps you keep a voice recorder handy… or merely type your thoughts in a Word document. Elaborate for us?
    Joel Ericson
    - 1997 Toyota FZJ80 (Abu Dhabi)
    - 2001 Land Rover Discovery (Abu Dhabi)
    - 1998 Toyota T100 (underground giant humidor vault somewhere in Kansas)


    So keep'em coming these lines on the road
    And keep me responsible be it a light or heavy load
    And keep me guessing with these blessings in disguise
    And I'll walk with grace my feet and faith my eyes

  2. #2
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    I journal chaotically. I use blank books, a computer (plain text editor rather than Word for future readability), and occasionally a PDA with an external keyboard.

    I prefer the blank, blank books (Bandelier Environmental Papers, if I can find them, or the standard black ones) - bound rather than notebook-style because they look better on the shelf later, and blank rather than lined to encourage me to sketch; I usually keep a lined card behind the page to make it a little easier to write straight. I tend to keep a book in each vehicle so I can write when the mood strikes me, which is often when I'm dining alone in restaurants, or otherwise want to occupy myself.

    I've got about 20 books filled so far, and countless electronic files. I've found I don't really bother to go back and read them, tho the sketches can be interesting. I figure someday they'll be of use to my biographer, or amusing (and probably disturbing) to my great-grandchildren.

    Haven't been doing much lately. When I'm busy or with friends I'm not as prine to writing.

  3. #3
    gjackson's Avatar
    gjackson is offline Overland Training Alumni
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    I started keeping a journal in college for various reasons, including the fact that I enjoy writing and was doing a lot of poetry at the time. I always take the book with me and add to it on trips. It was invaluable on the Africa trip. When you are travelling for 9 months solid, recalling details of when and how things happened can be dicey. And at the time you write things that you don't recall until you go back and read them. That can be a lot of fun.

    I use lab notebooks, a lot like the composition books. They work well. On the Africa trip I also used a mini tape recorder mainly for route info and start/stop times. Makes amusing listening now!

    I thinnk it is invaluable and I'll always do it. Good stuff.

    cheers

  4. #4
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    gjackson is offline Overland Training Alumni
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    I didn't use my journal for mpg and car specific stuff. I have a log book in that car that I use to keep track of all repairs, modifications, fill ups (gas oil etc). That was very useful when trying to complile data like total mpg across Africa and stuff like that. I am a data freak, and it really frustrates me when I can't answer a question like that (mpg across Africa). I like to keep track of all I can, and I think it adds to the data that can be published to give others a resource. I'm planning on having a downloads section of my new web site with a lot of technical info for all to use.

    cheers

  5. #5
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    Great thread - sorry I missed it a few weeks ago, so I'm chiming in late.

    I'm addicted to journals, too. I started in 6th grade and boy is it funny to read all about my dreams and ambitions now (and neat, too: I've achieved many of my 12-year-old dreams!). In college, during field biology classes, I got much more serious about journals to record data and observations. Then it grew into a natural history and trip journal as we travelled more and more.

    For many years my notebook was housed in a great nylon/cordura zippered 3-ring binder cover with pockets and a carrying strap (made by Prisma; can't find them any more; it's for 6x9 paper). I buy reams of acid-free, archival paper and have it cut and drilled to the right size at my print shop.

    I archive my notes in inexpensive blue binders with labels on the spines, which I label by date. I have at least 10-12 now, and it's so much fun to browse them. On overland trips, I also now keep as much information about places, mileage, people, nature as I can - so planning second trips or writing articles is really easy. I got brave about 10 years ago and started sketching (no training!). I got good enough eventually to use some of the sketches in one of my natural history books - so persistence and practice does pay off!

    I recently made this new journal cover for our Africa trips, since my old binder was a little big, and I wanted to tuck it into my Ghurka bag for quick entries. I found some cool leather journal covers for sale, but for $50, and being of Celtic stock (read: cheap and stubborn), I refused to spend that much so stole a scrap of natural tanned leather from Jonathan's leatherworking box and made it myself with a $1 leather shoelace for a strap, and some of my vintage African beads. It has loops inside for a pen and a sketching pencil, and I use a small ruler to keep places. The paper is held in place by a leather lace:



    Anyone seen the crazy montage/collage journals that Peter Beard keeps? I can picture Graham doing something like that, but instead of the montages of surreal African landscapes and gorgeous Ethiopian women (he "discovered" Iman), it would be Land Rovers and cool tools!
    Last edited by DesertRose; 05-19-2006 at 01:14 PM.
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  6. #6
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    What a wonderful and inspiring thread! We will be traveling North for 2 months (Pacific Northwest & Alaska) and I want to remember to keep a written journal. I am thinking of a lovely leather bound journal that Pasquale gave me as a present. The pleasure of putting pen to paper surpasses typing on a keyboard!! http://expeditionportal.com/forum/im...ies/arabia.gif
    Kristina
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  7. #7
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    pskhaat is offline Expedition Portal Moderator 2005 Expedition Trophy Champion
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    Quote Originally Posted by HongerVenture
    I thought it would be interesting to discuss the use of a journa
    I `journal' through voice dictation. I dislike the sound of my own voide but I like to record the sounds and conversations of people on my trips. It seems to keep me more in touch with my trips than simply writing and drawing, partly due to both my grammar and sketching inabilities.

    I usually just keep the snipets on tape (and now Ogg files). I have only ever actually compiled one set of things (and never even finished it :-( ) at http://expeditionportal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=747
    Pskhaat (Scott)
    UZJ100 "Mama Kuiser" built to look cool for the soccer mom
    FZJ80 über rare "Geen", cloth'd & locked


  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by HongerVenture
    Do you journal? If so how? What tools do you use? Perhaps you keep a voice recorder handy… or merely type your thoughts in a Word document. Elaborate for us?
    I suppose you could call what I do "journaling". But it's more note taking. I do a lot of it; trip data, vehicle data, sights, weather, photo data (also GPS tag pictures), people and place names, points of interest, and random thoughts.

    I keep a log book in each vehicle, and a master in MS Excel. There's also a notebook in each vehicle, and I ALWAYS have a note pad in my pocket - and pens.

    I use the following:

    Vehicle Logs; covers #200, sheets #LL851
    Notebooks; #393
    Note Pads; #135
    Pens; #97

    Didn't really like them at first - but after one fell out of the truck on a very rainy night, only to be discovered the next morning, in a puddle, I fell in love. They're near waterproof, and after that night I only use the hi-vis ones.

    I gave a bunch to a mate who runs a RAID support company, they've supported Bowler's Dakar team for a couple of years now, and they went down a treat
    Steven Chanyi
    The Great Canadian Expedition Company
    Expeditions - Logistics - Vehicles - Equipment

  9. #9
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    It makes good sense now because it's so easy to sell via the internet, and with a publisher especially in non-fiction they take all the money and give you peanuts for which you are supposed to be thrilled and eternally grateful . . . written from experience!
    Ah the price of fame - I know it all to well as a liftime musician...

    writing is always great to look back on and have as a well to draw from - "the storyboard of life"
    Pasquale - KE7GVY

    DesertDude Films, LLC <> DesertDude Music.com <> 110 Project Group, Inc

    "Taking the path less credentialed"

  10. #10
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    this is something that never even crossed my mind...until reading this. i will have to start some sort of journal and add pics and drawings...excellent thread!

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