Blogography Logo
spacer

  Home  

Stub

Posted on Saturday, November 16th, 2013

Dave!I fully admit that I'm a total hoarder when it comes to my travel. I save pretty much everything... receipts... ticket stubs... boarding passes... maps... brochures... everything. My thinking has always been that saving all this crap would make it easier to reconstruct my travels so I can remember where I was and what I did while I was there.

Then Blogography came along and all my travels were suddenly being documented.

At least for the past ten years that I've been blogging.

Yet I've still be saving everything out of habit. The problem is that all this stuff has been taking up space and I'm running out of room. And so I've been going through all my boxes of travel crap and throwing out most of it. There's no need to keep a receipt so I can remember the name of that pizza restaurant I like in Cologne, Germany... I just have to Google my blog, and there it is. I don't have to save the ticket stub from the Pet Shop Boys' first concert in Seattle to remember when that was... I just have to Google my blog, and there it is. Having your travels indexed on the internet is just so handy.

But what about my travels before I started blogging? I can't Google a box of crap, so what to do?

One of the ideas I'm toying with is creating blog entries for my earlier travels, then back-dating them. I'm not sure how I feel about the idea though. Is it cheating to have a blog with entries that pre-date blogging? Do I really care? I suppose I could start a second blog for my early travels, but I can't help but think that having everything in one place would be a better way to go.

I just don't know. Guess I'll think about it for a while and see where I land.

All I do know is that I'd love to throw out all this crap I have piled up which covers my travels from 1983 to 2002.

Tags: ,
Categories: Blogging 2013, Travel 2013Click To It: Permalink
   

Comments

  1. susan tepper says:

    I save every play stub, restaurant stubs, etc etc too from when I travel. I bundle them up and put them in a bookcase. Sometimes I take them out to remember the experience. I think it’s hard to throw them out because it’s like throwing that time away.

    • Dave2 says:

      I wish I had the space to keep it all, because it is fun to look back through everything. But I really don’t. So I suppose I’ll keep the essentials, blog the details, then jettison the rest. Then I can look through my old blog entries to remember the experience.

  2. Suebob says:

    Here’s how I solve that problem: every year I buy one of those desk calendar books. Then I make an informal scrapbook, taping boarding passes, hotel keys, brochures, tickets etc inside on/near the appropriate dates with little notes “Dinner with Fred at the Ritz” etc…Scrapbook/calendar combo. I have about 10 of them & it’s fun to look back and remember what it was I was doing.

  3. Erin says:

    I like the blog idea but I’m confused about why you’d back date or start a new blog? Why not just tell the stories to us now and include the date in the title? It gives you something to talk about on days when there isn’t a lot else to talk about, saves you a bunch of work and keeps things searchable. πŸ™‚

  4. Erin says:

    I like the blog idea but I’m confused about why you’d back date or start a new blog? Why not just tell the stories to us now and include the date in the title? It gives you something to talk about on days when there isn’t a lot else to talk about, saves you a bunch of work and keeps things searchable. πŸ™‚

  5. I keep everything as well. Most of it gets pasted into big notebooks to be a travel scrapbook.

    I also started backdating holidays, as per my USA 1983 trip.. but then all of my travel blogs have been “sub blogs” in a separate directory underneath my main blog..

  6. Michael B. says:

    It’s your blog, do whatever you want! πŸ™‚ I don’t see any problem with backdating. If you were to write, say, seven posts for a seven day trip, and then link to all seven posts via one post that gets sent to my RSS aggregator, I would love to go back and read about your old trips.

  7. James Bow says:

    I’d say go for it. Just remember to post a “blast from the past” link at the top of the blog so we all can see it.

  8. Lynne says:

    What if you scanned everything and stored it on a dedicated thumb drive? You could label the drive, and voila! Years of souvenirs now take up next to no space.

  9. If the information is important to you and you have the means of back-dating your blog, then go for it!

    Now, to be “fair” to the whining portion of the greater blogging community, I’d mark each post with the current date as well. I think of this more as an ethical blogging issue than to placate some interweb idiots…..

  10. Carl says:

    I don’t think reconstructing earlier trips is cheating, and it’s so much easier nowadays thanks to the Internet. I now write a travel journal a upon completion of each trip (too busy during the trip), using quick notes, receipts, maps, and the I-net to fill in the gaps. About a year ago I decided to do the same documenting of earlier trips as far back as the 80s. Very happy with the results, and got to re-live some great travels. I still save the best brochures and key receipts in separate, dated file folders, though.

  11. martymankins says:

    I would love to scan and digitize all of my concert tickets, which I save each and every one (even the e-tickets you print out from home).

    As for the backdating of posts, I’ve thought about this. I wonder how to get the newest and most recent of older posts up front so that people will know there’s something from 1985 out on the blog.

  12. i was going ot say what erin did…write about it here. no reason you can’t tell us about your day, then go on to tell us about a previous adventure!

Add a Comment

Blankatar!

   
I love comments! However, all comments are moderated, and won't appear until approved. Are you an abusive troll with nothing to contribute? Don't bother. Selling something? Don't bother. Spam linking? Don't bother.
PLEASE NOTE: My comment-spam protection requires JavaScript... if you have it turned off or are using a mobile device without JavaScript, commenting won't work. Sorry.




   


   


   
   
   
Your personal information is optional. Email addresses are never shown, and are only used by me if a public reply would be too personal or inappropriate here. The URL link to your web site or blog will be provided, so only fill this in if you want people to visit!



   

  Home  

spacer
Welcome:
Blogography is a place to learn and grow by exposing yourself to the mind of David Simmer II, a brilliant commentator on world events and popular culture (or so he claims).
Dave FAQ:
Frequently Asked Questions
Dave Contact:
dave@blogography.com
Blogography Webfeeds:
Atom Entries Feed
Comments Feed
translate me
flags of the world!
lost & found
Search Blogography:
thrice fiction
Thrice Fiction Magazine - March, 2011 - THE END
I'm co-founder of Thrice Fiction magazine. Come check us out!
hard rock moment
Visit DaveCafe for my Hard Rock Cafe travel journal!
travel picto-gram
Visit my travel map to see where I have been in this world!
badgemania
Blogography Badge
Atom Syndicate Badge
Comments Syndicate Badge
Apple Safari Badge
Pirate's Booty Badge
Macintosh Badge
license
All content copyright ©2003-2022
by David Simmer II
   
Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under
a Creative Commons License.
ssl security