The inspiration for the traveling tailgate began during a family trip down to see the Jets play in Carolina. They perpetually got season tickets to Jets games, but this special trip motivated Walker to organize a crew of men that were gung-ho about the thought of making it an annual tradition.
If you have a grouping of friends who all root for the same squad, then you’ve acquired your complete travel team. But you can also look past the evident and use this as a means to help strengthen household attachments between contemporaries — get Grandad, your boys, chums, and close cousins interested to make meaningful memories that will last a lifetime.
Instead of exploring restaurants and bars online, make friends with the locals for good testimonials. Ask them about good places to go before and after the game, where to get food and beverages, etc. You can end up at a genuinely great hole in the wall you’d never have encountered. Plus, half the fun of journeying is seeing the local flavor.
Don’t Leave Your Camera
After all your hard work orchestrating, designing and tailgating, document your accomplishment. Make a point to get one genuinely great group shot that takes everyone in the tailgate with the stadium in the backdrop.
When you get home, blow up the optimal shot of the bunch and get one framed for each guy. This produces a fantastic souvenir and will remind you of all the fun times at the tailgate party you had together. Hopefully one day you will have 32 of them hanging on the wall!
For those with tailgating in their hearts, ready the best of your ‘boys only’ escapade through America’s football sports stadiums with our Guidebook the the Moving Tailgate.
In Part I of this article we talked about orchestrating your travelling tailgate crew. Now, in Part II, we have the items on good goodies for the big tailgating day, the exact attire, and cooking points to insure a ideal expedition on game day.
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