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You’re an hour from the campsite. The sun is setting. And you realize you forgot the can opener. Or the headlamp batteries are dead. Or—worst case—there’s no first aid kit.

I’ve been there. Multiple times.

At CampGearLab, we don’t just read Amazon reviews and call it research. We take gear into the actual wilderness—the Space Coast humidity, the Appalachian Trail mud, the unexpected cold snaps—to see what survives.

Here are 10 camping essentials you’re probably forgetting. Every item here has been field-tested, abused, and approved.

  1. Headlamp (Not Just a Flashlight)

Why you forget it: You think your phone’s flashlight is enough.

Why you’re wrong: Your phone battery dies. You need both hands to set up a tent in the dark. And a phone in your mouth is a bad look.

What to look for:

Red light mode (preserves night vision)

At least 300 lumens

Water resistance (IPX4 or higher)

Image suggestion: Person wearing headlamp while cooking at night

  1. Portable Camp Chair

Why you forget it: You think a log or a cooler will work.

Why you’re wrong: Logs are wet. Coolers are low. Your back will hate you by breakfast.

After testing eight budget chairs on rocky terrain, the difference between “camping” and “comfortable camping” is literally a chair.

Quick tip: Look for chairs under 4 pounds with cup holders. Your morning coffee will thank you.

Image suggestion: Camp chair by a fire with steam rising from a mug

  1. First Aid Kit (The Real One)

Why you forget it: You bought a tiny kit three years ago and never checked it.

Why you’re wrong: Blisters don’t care about your packing skills. Neither do splinters, cuts, or twisted ankles.

What your kit needs:

Moleskin for blisters (non-negotiable)

Antiseptic wipes

Tweezers (splinters love campsites)

Athletic tape

Ibuprofen

Image suggestion: Open first aid kit with moleskin and bandages visible

  1. Power Bank

Why you forget it: Your phone was at 80% when you left.

Why you’re wrong: GPS drains battery. Photos drain battery. Playing music by the fire drains battery. And then your phone is dead by noon Saturday.

The rule: 10,000 mAh minimum for weekend trips. 20,000 mAh for 3+ days.

Image suggestion: Power bank charging phone inside tent opening

  1. Camp Sink or Collapsible Basin

Why you forget it: You’ll “just use the stream.”

Why you’re wrong: Soap in streams is bad for fish. Cold water doesn’t clean grease. And washing dishes in a river is miserable.

Better solution: A $15 collapsible sink. Holds hot water. Packs flat. Makes dish duty almost enjoyable.

Image suggestion: Collapsible sink with soapy water and a scrub brush

  1. Extra Guy Lines & Stakes

Why you forget it: Your tent came with exactly what it needed.

Why you’re wrong: Wind laughs at factory stakes. So does rocky soil. And sandy ground.

Always bring: 4 extra stakes. 2 extra guy lines. Paracord (25 feet minimum).

Pro tip: Replace your tent’s aluminum stakes with MSR Groundhogs. They’re ugly. They’re heavyish. They work on everything.

Image suggestion: Hand driving a heavy-duty stake into rocky ground

  1. Biodegradable Wet Wipes

Why you forget it: You have toilet paper.

Why you’re wrong: TP doesn’t remove campfire smoke from your hands before dinner. It doesn’t clean your face after a dusty hike. And it definitely doesn’t handle unexpected messes.

The rule: Buy biodegradable. Pack out what you pack in. Leave no trace.

Image suggestion: Pack of biodegradable wipes next to a camp stove

  1. Lightweight Camp Blanket

Why you forget it: Your sleeping bag is warm enough.

Why you’re wrong: Your sleeping bag stays in the tent. You’re sitting by the fire at 10 PM when temperatures drop 20 degrees.

A packable down or synthetic blanket changes cold evenings instantly. Drape it over your shoulders. Wrap around your legs. Share with a partner.

Image suggestion: Person wrapped in a camp blanket by firelight

  1. Multi-Tool with Pliers

Why you forget it: You have a pocket knife.

Why you’re wrong: Pliers open stuck stove valves. Pliers pull tent stakes from frozen ground. Pliers fix zippers, bend pot handles, and rescue dropped gear from tight spaces.

The classic: Leatherman Wave or Skeletool. Expensive? Yes. Buy once, cry once.

Image suggestion: Multi-tool with pliers extended on wooden picnic table

  1. Dry Bags (Not Just Ziplocs)

Why you forget it: “It’s not supposed to rain.”

Why you’re wrong: It always rains. Or a water bottle leaks. Or you drop your phone in the lake.

What to protect:

Phone and electronics

Extra socks

Sleeping bag (if pack is questionable)

Fire starting materials

Size guide:

5L for phone/headlamp/batteries

10L for clothes

20L for sleeping bag

Image suggestion: Dry bag clipped to backpack with lake in background

Bonus: What NOT to Bring

After testing hundreds of products, here’s what’s overrated:

Camping-specific utensils → Just use a spoon from home

Single-purpose gadgets → Egg holders? Lettuce knives? No.

Heavy “emergency” gear → That 5-pound survival ax? Leave it.

Your Camping Essentials Checklist (Printable)

Save this before your next trip:

text

◻ Headlamp + extra batteries
◻ Portable camp chair
◻ First aid kit (check moleskin!)
◻ Power bank (charged)
◻ Collapsible sink
◻ Extra stakes + guy lines
◻ Biodegradable wipes
◻ Camp blanket
◻ Multi-tool with pliers
◻ Dry bags (3 sizes)
◻ WATER. Always more water.

Field-Tested Recommendations

ItemTop PickBudget PickHeadlampBlack Diamond Storm 500PETZL TikkinaCamp ChairREI Co-op FlexliteOzark Trail DirectorPower BankAnker PowerCore 20100INIU 20000mAhMulti-toolLeatherman Wave+Gerber SuspensionDry BagSea to Summit LightweightOutdoor Products

Note: We earn commissions on purchases through our links at no extra cost to you.

The Bottom Line

Camping doesn’t need to be expensive or complicated. The difference between a trip you talk about for years and a trip you try to forget is usually two or three items on this list.

The headlamp you bought but left in the garage.
The chair you thought was unnecessary until hour three by the fire.
The first aid kit you never opened until you needed it.

Don’t be that camper.

Pack smart. Test your gear before you leave. And when in doubt, bring extra guy lines.

Have a camping essential we missed? Drop it in the comments. We’re always testing new gear.