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I'm a bumbag convert now - for day rides I tend to have a couple of bottles and the minipump on the bike and can fit food, tube, shell jacket, tiny amount of first aid, multitool, chainlinks, phone and asthma puffer (evidence of TUE can be provided) in a relatively small bag. I hardly notice it when it's on, and it makes longer rides so much more comfortable.
I don't bother with the bottle in there now, didn't want to end up poking myself with it if I fell off. I regret the colour, but that's getting fixed by all the cow shite I keep riding through. 🙂
Seriously flirting with the idea of a bumbag for shorter rides having used them loads years ago. This thread is not helping.
Just bought a Raceface Rip Strip for £20 from CRC and must admit that I'm impressed. I can fit 1 x tube, 2 x levers, 2 x canisters, 1 x multitool, small bag of links, puncture patches, zip ties, iPhone 5 and some first aid stuff (enough to make a decent compressions dressing to stop a bleed, not just a couple of plasters). A water bottle on the bike and I'm sorted, plus it's so flat against my back that it fits under my jacket/jersey. Highly recommended.
I have a race face stash tank. Great thing that fits under a jersey and holds loads of stuff, including a bladder. Not cheap but way nicer than a pack on a toasty day. Winter i just use a pack...
The only time my camelbak gets an outing is for a big off road ride or when I really don't want anything on the frame - e.g. trail centre
All last winter I was using a bottle on the frame and a bumbag, which I can fit all my stuff into
I've been using my existing bikepacking bags on my rigid bike for local pootles
- Wildcat Tomcat for random bits like phone, keys
- Revelate Tangle for gilet/jacket, pump, snacks
- Revelate Jerrycan for spare tube and tools
It's been lovely riding without anything on my back, although I didn't really mind the bumbag (and I'll revert to that if I take another bike)
