I like to have a swimsuit with me on holiday, even if I am not expecting to go swimming. You might stop for lunch at a hotel with a pool. In Cyprus we went on a morning walk up to see a waterfall.
At the top was a flat area where a girl who lived locally donned a swimsuit and waded forward and stood under the cold showing waterfall. They had travelled by car, so no problem with transporting a towel.
Several people wanted to be photographed in the pool. I don't stand in running water in case of currents. However, many people like to do so.
On day trips to the beach, i sometimes try to pack a thin towel of the sort which is quick dry, just to dry my feet when paddling in the sea, or getting wet feet from unexpected waves on the beach.
I have also looked into adding velcro to turn a thin towel into a wrap around skirt or strapless dress. A towel dress with shoulder straps is more secure. I have also made a swimming pool throw-over by cutting a slit in the middle of an old, thin towel. You can buy towelling dresses.
I pack with my swimsuit and night dress in a handy place on top of my suitcase. On arrival at a hotel I ask what time the pool closes. I might want to rush to the pool before evening dinner.
When I was a teenager in the late 1960s, I went on a holiday with a fellow student to Greece, Turkey and Israel. I travelled in a bikini. It acted as bra and pants. I showered in it. I swam in it. No need to undress.
After the swim, we would sit in the sun. The bikini was cotton and dried quickly.
In countries requiring a one piece costume, you need another solution.
Kaledonia Waterfalls, Cyprus.1The solution is to have a large towel which somebody else, family or friend, can hold.
2 If you are alone, you could change behind a large umbrella.
3A wrap around skirt is another solution.
4 Or a wrap around dress.
5 Or a sarong.
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