Best way to avoid stirring up trub while bottling/kegging from the primary?
Since I started brewing I've ALWAYS transferred to a secondary after about 2 weeks. This was how I learned and what many recipes say to do so I always did it. And I felt that this was a fantastic way to really remove that yeast cake and trub at the bottom out of your fermenter, ultimately providing less of a risk to stir it up and have it in your bottles or keg.
Many discussions here and entries in books have made a very convincing argument to STOP transferring to secondary unless you're actually performing a second fermentation or lagering. And I think I'd rather take the risk of stirring up some trub than contamination/oxidation so I'm going to try this.
My question is, given basic homebrew equipment, and avoiding additional gear purchases, what are the best ways on bottling day to avoid picking up the cake at the bottom and keeping it out of your beer other than just being as careful as you can?