I carry the following: Showers pass touring jacket, multi tool, spare tube, patch kit, saddle cover, winter gloves, tire irons, extra prescription eye glasses, spare wool socks, elastic headlamp for roadside repairs on my bike or riding at night to see where I am turning, maybe or maybe not a flask with whiskey when its cold, my camera, when I get one.....a small cook stove and coffee making stuff, usually a spare zip tie, probably will start to carry some first aid stuff along with T.P. and or course some food, cash money, wallet, and a cell phone. This goes in a Carradice Nelson Longflap saddlebag and if I run out of room I strap on my Hobo bag.
On Jan 26, 1:11 pm, Brad Gantt <[email protected]> wrote: > Rivendell riders, with their ample baggage, are able to carry a wide > variety of things beyond a tiny multi-tool, patch kit, levers and > tube. I am curious what others in the Bunch find indispensable, > useful, fun, etc. It would probably be useful to describe the bag, > type of riding, etc. I'll start it off but I'm pretty boring since > until a couple of weeks ago I was limited to a tiny underseat bag. > > Bag: Brand V Seat Bag > > Type of Riding: Fair weather day trips up to 6 hours on mixed terrain. > > Contents: > Inside Burrito Wrap- Quick Stick tire lever, 2 tubes, patch kit, tire > boot (made from old road tire with bead cut off), chain tool, spoke > wrench & assorted hex wrenches, $20 bill &$1 bill (also works as a > tire boot in a pinch), small shop rag (wrapped around pointy tools) > > Outside Burrito Wrap- 4,5,6 Allen Y wrench (still doing small fit > tweaks given the newness of my bike), Lezyne Pressure Drive Mini-Pump, > Olympus Stylus Tough, iPhone, Food (bananas, homemade bars, etc.) -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch?hl=en.
