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Bringing order to parental chaos is an uphill battle, but there are a handful of products that can help organize certain aspects of a dad鈥檚 life.
Bringing order to parental chaos is an uphill battle, but there are a handful of products that can help organize certain aspects of a dad鈥檚 life.

The Dad in Your Life Wants Order for Father鈥檚 Day

Bringing order to parental chaos is an uphill battle, but these products can help

Published: 
Bringing order to parental chaos is an uphill battle, but there are a handful of products that can help organize certain aspects of a dad鈥檚 life.

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I鈥檒l tell you a secret: The dad in your life doesn鈥檛 want things for Father鈥檚 Day. Yes, golf clubs are nice, and if you鈥檙e thinking of getting him a new mountain bike, you should definitely do that. But what he really wants is a little bit of order in his life. Because fatherhood is chaos. There are shoes everywhere. My basement is basically just a sea of Legos,聽stuffed animals, and Nerf guns. For some reason, someone put a hairbrush and scrunchies in the fridge. And don鈥檛 get me started on the car, which is聽a superfund site. My family consists of聽two kids, a dog, a geriatric cat, a wife with an affinity for kitchen gadgets, and we鈥檙e all crammed inside a house that鈥檚 roughly the size of a cubicle in corporate America. That鈥檚 why I dream about books arranged alphabetically on shelves and a robot butler that follows my children around picking up all of the half-eaten sandwiches and dirty glasses they set down throughout the day. Bringing order to parental chaos is an uphill battle, but there are a handful of products that can help organize certain aspects of a dad鈥檚 life, from the garage to the campsite.

Organization for the Car: Decked D-Bag ($175)聽

(Courtesy Decked)

Don鈥檛 think of the as an expensive duffel bag. Think of it as a go-bag for the most fun aspects of your life. This expandable hardshell/softshell hauler聽was designed to be packed full of gear, with a 42-liter outer bag that鈥檚 loaded with interior organizational features, like a tool roll that has slots for wrenches and screw drivers, and two zippered bags for loose items like batteries or snacks. The tool roll snaps onto the hardshell panel, but can snap out and roll up to be carried separately. There鈥檚 also a smaller duffel that snaps in and out of the bag too, like聽Russian nesting dolls of organization. The D-Bag is designed for聽jobs that聽require tools, but I鈥檝e found it鈥檚 perfect for holding all of my mountain bike gear (helmet, shoes, gloves, extra layers, snacks, tools, pump, and tubes).聽The flat, hard-shell shape of the bag makes it easy to pack in your truck or trunk, so it can live inside your car.


Organization for the Garage: Front Runner Wolf Pack ($40)聽

(Courtesy Front Runner)

People have been using the 鈥渂in system鈥 for garage organization since caveman times, so the concept at play here isn鈥檛 groundbreaking, but the 聽by overlanding brand Front Runner聽is a superior bin. It鈥檚 made from plastic that鈥檚 tough enough to stand on with lids that lock tight. The bins stack on top of each other like Legos, which makes storing and packing more orderly. At 31 liters, I think it鈥檚 the perfect size鈥攂ig enough to fit an entire camp kitchen set up, but not too big that you start overstuffing it with crap you don鈥檛 need. I have two of these: one聽to hold all of my camp kitchen supplies, and the other holds my fire kit, kindling, matches, a small axe, and work gloves. If I could, I鈥檇 have a dozen of these stacked in my garage, each neatly containing a different aspect of my outdoorsy life.


Organization for the Backpack: Peak Design聽Packing Cubes ($30 and up)

(Courtesy Peak Design)

Not all packing cubes are created equal. Peak Design鈥檚 are loaded with smart features and聽are made from super-light recycled weatherproof and abrasion-resistant nylon. It has the typical main compartment for stuffing shirts or socks, but the back of the cube has a second expandable compartment that separates dirty clothes from clean pieces.聽It also has an expansion zipper that doubles the size of the cube, but then zips back down to compress the contents inside. The small version fits nine liters of clothes (about 10 shirts) and the medium is twice as big. There鈥檚 also a shoe-specific pouch that rolls up tight when you鈥檙e not using it. When I travel again, I will organize my pack or roller luggage with these nifty cubes. (I can say nifty because I鈥檓 a dad.)


Sponsor Content
Organization for Workouts: Garmin聽f膿nix庐 6 Pro Solar ($799.99)

(Courtesy Garmin)

If your dad is the best, his watch should be too. The f膿nix庐 6 Pro Solar premium multisport GPS watch has a solar charging lens with a customizable power manager mode to stay performance-ready for weeks.


Organization for the Campsite: NiteIze Gear Line ($20)

(Courtesy Nite Ize)

My family brings a lot of stuff to camp. I can somehow manage to wear the same shirt and pair of shorts for six days in a row, but my son burns聽through an entire wardrobe before breakfast. For a semblance of organization, we hang dirty clothes on the tent poles outside of the tent鈥攏ot a good look. And then there are water bottles,聽lanterns,聽mugs, toys,聽and other random items tossed around camp. Enter the , a four-foot long ribbon of order with D-ring webbing and built-in carabiners. It lets me hang clothes, hats, and all of the little things that clutter a campsite. I wish the Gear Line was twice as long, but as is, it鈥檚 the perfect length to hang inside your tent or between two trees.

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