#160264 - 12/28/08 03:17 AM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: username_5]
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INTERCEPTOR
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 07/15/02
Posts: 3760
Loc: TX
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DW refers to me as a "Bag-Ho" because I'm always getting another murse. I have one for when I'm out with her, another when I'm out with the daughters in civilized places, a third when I'm out in the woods with the daughters, one just for teaching my edible plant class, etc... Oh, and don't forget my traveler's vests. I recommend Kakadu bags. -Blast p.s. No one other than my wife has ever said anything derogatory about my bags.
Edited by Blast (12/28/08 03:19 AM)
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#160266 - 12/28/08 03:35 AM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: username_5]
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Sherpadog
Unregistered
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Sherpadog, I like your 'shoulder bag'. I guess man purse/murse might be a midwestern term since folks around here seem to be instinctively/reflexively homophobic.
What I like about it is that it is longer from top to bottom than from side to side. My 'man purse' is longer from side to side than top to bottom which makes it look more purse like, whereas your looks more utilitarian and thus 'manly'. I'll post some pics tomorrow of the inside of the bag and its contents.
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#160268 - 12/28/08 03:39 AM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: KenK]
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Sherpadog
Unregistered
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When I rode the train to work I used to stow my gear in a bag VEEERY much like that shown by Sherpadog, but made by Eagle Creek. I think it was called a Guide Bag or similar.
I looked at Eagle Creek's web site and don't see it listed. The one Sherpadog showed looks so much like it I wonder if someone bought or licensed the design. Nice bag. MEC (Mountain Equipment CO-OP has had this same basic bag design for at least 8-10 ten years that I know of. Regardless of who designed or licensed the bag, it is one of the best investments that I have ever made. The one main difference between the bag pictured and the one I have is the color. Mine is a deep blue but I am thinking of getting the olive colored bag the next time I am near a MEC store.
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#160281 - 12/28/08 05:45 AM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: username_5]
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Jakam
Unregistered
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I have an Eagle Creek shoulder bag that I carried for years as a man purse, my wife called it my Bag Of Plenty (BOP) even back then. I carried it all over Europe with everything but the kitchen sink, and retired it afterwards.
No I compartmentalize rather than try to carry the kitchen sink everywhere, so opt for vest/coats with lots of pockets. After being stalked by a pickpocket in Paris that obviously coveted my BOP, and the contents, I decided discreet carry was the better option.
But I have BOP's in reserve just in case!
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#160289 - 12/28/08 12:16 PM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: ]
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Icon of Sin
Addict
Registered: 12/31/07
Posts: 512
Loc: Nebraska
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I have an Ameribag Coil , terra cotta. Decent bag, I take it for trips when I wanna play the tourist. Worthless for ccw, but great for toting stuff around. I don't EDC enough stuff to warrant a bag everyday. I'd put it down somewhere and forget it anyway.
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#160292 - 12/28/08 01:27 PM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: Desperado]
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Addict
Registered: 12/06/01
Posts: 601
Loc: Orlando, FL
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Desperado, you have me beat. I only have a little Silverado 1500.
But you're right about it being a cool purse that no one objects to.
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#160295 - 12/28/08 02:31 PM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: username_5]
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Addict
Registered: 11/30/05
Posts: 598
Loc: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
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I carry a Maxpedition Fatboy everywhere (except for fancy dress up events -- it clashes with my suit).
Most folks ask me if I'm a photographer (guess it looks like an old fashioned camera bag to some folks).
_________________________
peace, samhain autumnwood
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#160297 - 12/28/08 03:01 PM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: samhain]
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Rapscallion
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/06/04
Posts: 4020
Loc: Anchorage AK
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I first started regularly carrying messenger bags from everest.com back in 2002. I edc'd all sorts of stuff in it. That was back in the day when I was working telecoms and would find myself in fairly remote locations in eastern Washington. I also had one specifically for hunting, which was equipped somewhat differently to suit my needs on the trail. I had a couple friends who also bought into the messenger bag routine. Occasionally we referred to them as possibles bags as well. Most of eastern Washington is what I call Hayseed territory; most agricultural interspersed with minor municipalities, nothing even closely resembling metropolitan (anyone who would consider any part of Spokane to be metropolitan must live out in the sticks). Anyways, I reckon anyone who saw us with our messenger bags over a shoulder probably figured it was man-appropriate, something akin roughly to John Wayne slapping a saddle bag over his shoulder on his way through the desert or some such.
When I forsook my eastern Washington life for a trip to the sandbox, I left the messenger bag hanging on the doorknob to the reloading room and grabbed a backpack to convert into a bug-out bag which was routinely edc'd. I re-equipped at the PX and off the internet for the environment there, and upon my return home, I loaded the BOB into the foot locker and now it resides on the shelf, roughly equipped with most of the same BOB supplies, but adding a few more goodies as I encountered them over the years. When I got to New York, I decided that, since I had to tote my laptop to and fro, I would get a stout shoulder bag/briefcase that would accomodate my laptop and a whole bunch of edc items, thus ending up with a 30 lb man-purse of sorts, but I doubt anyone would actually mistake it for a purse per se. That Swiss Army bag went with me to Brisbane, Florida, and now here in Denver. Unfortunately my company upgraded my laptop and now the bag weighs more than my shoulder will tolerate, so I swapped out my bag for a slightly larger case with wheels and a telescoping handle, which I drag around behind me day in/day out to and from work. I still have it stocked full of most of the same edc stuff (fak, tools, supplies) as I have had more or less for the past 5 years.
As my social life picks up, and I am starting to get out and play more and more here in Colorado, I will most likely load up one of my daypack-style backpacks with appropriate gear and supplies to tote with me up in the hills, out to the shooting range, or just bum around town.
I still have my old messenger bags, and they still have gear in them, but I just haven't really felt much like throwing one over my shoulder again. BTW, I think messenger bags of the type I have are far superior to toting fanny packs around. I never got used to strapping one of those around my waist. I had one back in the 90s, mostly for my pistol CCW, and it just never felt right.
_________________________
The ultimate result of shielding men from the effects of folly is to fill the world with fools. -- Herbert Spencer, English Philosopher (1820-1903)
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#160301 - 12/28/08 03:54 PM
Re: man purses (murses)
[Re: benjammin]
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Veteran
Registered: 11/01/08
Posts: 1530
Loc: DFW, Texas
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Ben,
If you have to go back to a bag for the laptop look at Oakley brand bags. I have two, the one listed above for the MacBook and a true backpack for my 5 ton pc laptop (17" HP). They do something different with the suspension that makes the load much more bearable, even with bad shoulders. Swiss Army also has a good one. I actually picked both up at the Apple store, one in your neck of the woods. YMMV
_________________________
I do the things that I must, and really regret, are unfortunately necessary.
RIP OBG
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