The Perfect Beach Setup
Field Guide No. 02 · Base Camp · Opinionated
Field Guide No. 02 · Base Camp Essentials
The perfect beach setup is the foundation of a great day. Think of it as your basecamp, designed to support whatever the day brings.
This guide covers what you bring to the beach and how you stock the cooler at the center of a well-run base camp. The slut bag is covered separately — that’s what you take on the trail.
Footwear
Every destination in this guide will ask more of your feet than you expected. Footwear is the unglamorous decision that determines how much of the day you enjoy versus how much you spend compensating for a bad call made in the parking lot. Invest in a pair of sturdy shoes and your feet will thank you later.
“Bro, just get proper shoes. I showed up to Black’s Beach in slides and that trail humbled me in ways I was not prepared for. Not the vibe. Not the vibe at all. 💅”
Adam, San DiegoSun Protection
We don’t have time for sunburns in the wrong places or premature aging, so our approach is layered. Start with a good sunscreen, applied generously and often. Then add shade. We prefer a beach tent for its portability — most pack down to the size of a small log and slide easily into a beach bag.
There are two main styles of tent. One is essentially a large sheet anchored with sand bags; they offer generous coverage but can be tricky to adjust as the sun moves. Our preferred option is a pop-up beach tent with built-in windows for cross-ventilation.
The Towel Setup
Yes, you need a towel at the beach. But the setup matters. The best approach is two layers: a wide bottom sheet that creates a buffer between you and the sand, and a proper towel on top. The sheet keeps the sand under control. The towel does everything else.
“Every time I use mine I’m back there. Each one tells a story about the place it came from. Sisterhood of the traveling towel — but make it gay and oceanfront.”
D.C. Andrews, EditorComfort
You will be at this beach for six to eight hours. A beach chair is a luxury that becomes a necessity once you’ve had one. The case for it: you will want somewhere to sit that isn’t the ground. The case against it: you have to carry it in and out. The right chair resolves this argument entirely.
Odds and Ends
Insulated tumbler. Portable Bluetooth speaker. Utensils. A good book. A coozie. Wet wipes, always. And your slut bag — packed separately. That’s what comes with you on the trail. The base camp stays at the towel.
The Cooler
You already know what you like to eat. We’ll focus on small adjustments that make the most of limited cooler space and a long day in the sun.
Wraps are our go-to for lunch. Frozen fruit, especially pineapple, does double duty: it keeps the cooler colder longer and turns into a refreshing treat as the day goes on. A light sprinkle of Tajin doesn’t hurt. And yes, pineapple has other benefits. We’ll leave it at that.
Box wine gets a bad rap, but it’s the right call for a beach day. No glass to worry about, and it fits far more efficiently in a packed cooler.
“Uncrustables. I know. But they travel perfectly, don’t spoil, and somehow taste even better at the beach than anywhere else. A true game changer.”
D.C. Andrews, Editor
We strongly prefer soft-sided, leakproof coolers with closed-cell foam insulation. They’re lighter and easier to carry on longer walks to basecamp.
Yeti may be the most recognizable name, but we’ve found RTIC to be the smarter buy. Comparable performance and a friendlier price point. The right cooler is one that’s fully stocked and still comfortable to carry for a 30-minute walk. If it feels like a chore before you arrive, it’s too big.
Pre-chill everything. That includes adding ice into the cooler the night before. A cold cooler keeps cold things cold. Block ice lasts longer than cubes. Pack in layers: ice on the bottom, food in the middle, frequently accessed items on top. Separate wet from dry — use zip bags set on top of the ice so nothing turns into a soggy regret.
“The best base camp is one that’s already there when you get back from the trail. Set it up right the first time.”
D.C. Andrews