Some things just work

Ever had that itch where you know the ideal solution is out there somewhere but you can’t quite find it? I had this recently, and then, almost by chance, found it was beside me all the time. 

I travelled a lot this year and tried hard to find my ideal rig. I like backpacks for the freedom they give when walking through the airport. I have an overnight backpack that is a real favourite, but that can’t do the extended trips. I read articles and reviews and bought a highly recommended 35l Osprey backpack. It worked very well for a three-day run, but there was something just not quite right. It’s a big bag to manoeuvre if all you need is a charger on the bus. 

Another trip followed quickly, and I explored the wheelie/laptop bag combination. I looked at a few without getting inspired, and so with time pressing I went back to some old friends – an Antler wheelie bag has been a solid servant for nearly 20 years and is pretty much bullet-proof. I also use a Muji clamshell bag when heading into the city. In combination they sit together really well and with some unexpected little features.

The wheelie bag is 49 x 35 x 22 which sets it nicely inside the TSA limits and is also a fair bit smaller than many other “approved” bags. I was only slightly smug on a recent pass through Boston Logan on a packed domestic flight where bags were being pulled for gate-stowage. They waved me through.

The clamshell has an outside pocket to stash a magazine or other small stuff without unpacking the whole thing and the metal handles are just wider than the handle struts on the wheelie.

This means that one handle can slot through and “clip-in” the two bags so they are pretty solid as I walk the corridors. This is a really neat accidental feature that is so useful. I can detach the bag to have by my feet whilst the wheelie is in the locker. It takes up minimal room yet holds my iPad, notebook, meds, chargers etc, all close at hand. That means minimum fuss which is a travel stance I like a lot.

It’s simple things like that which appeal to me – and when stuff just works, I keep going back to it.

Multi-use gear – how many is enough?

I really like equipment that can do more than one thing as a way of reducing what I carry. I have always tried to travel as lightly as I could, but there is no escaping the need for gear that works well once you get there.

I can keep the clothing to a minimum with a few well chosen items. Colleagues lug a large overnight bag or bursting wheeled carry-on as I feel quietly smug about my lightweight backpack as we are sprinting for a connection.

Let’s park the whole business laptop thing for a moment. Right now the centre of my universe is the phone. Especially now I have started to use it as an e-reader.

I figured out years ago that books are bulky and awkward. The obvious Kindle alternate is a great reading experience – size, weight and screen are all well tuned. It’s just another piece of kit (plus another charger) at the security scanner. I like it a lot but just couldn’t persuade myself to add extra items.

The iPad worked well for many years with the Kindle app and became my book of choice. It is slightly bigger, slightly heavier and a bit more obvious on a crowded subway train. Almost but not quite brilliant.

Lately, I have been trying the iPhone 7 as an alternate. The Kindle app still works fine, it is compact in the hand and discreet when everyone is thumbing theirs on the subway. I also love the accessibility on a plane – I can grab it from my back pocket without having to climb up to the overhead locker. Not even the Kindle can do that. But it doesn’t have the paper-wight screen…..

Early signs are good. I’ll see how I go for a couple of trips on the super-light packing list that is now an iPhone 7, an iPad with remote desktop app (in lieu of the laptop) and a charger cable. Minimalism sounds great but can I make it work? Watch this space.