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I’ve always used a small backpack for day hunts into the back country. 1-2 pints of water, a lunch, rope, fire starter, space blanket, and small miscellaneous items as well as maybe scents or a rattle bag. Two things I don’t like about the backpack. 1. You have to take it off to get anything out of it. 2. The straps being padded, are not real helpful to a good stance if you are shooting your rifle wearing it. They add a lot to the length of pull. A Fanny pack seems like what I’m looking for, one without shoulder straps. Reading reviews I’m not seeing much good out there. I’m thinking a good padded hip belt will be desirable. I never had much of an ass to begin with, and I lost 20 pounds this past year. I’m thinking it might be a challenge to keep a Fanny pack around my waist. What have you all had luck with?
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Joined: Jun 2004
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I have a mountainsmith day. It works pretty good. I don't use it for hunting though. I use it for short hikes and fishing. It works great until you start adding alot of weight. Let's say you have your day gear and 2 liters of water....can get heavy on the waist and bouncy. It has side straps that let you pull it in tight to your waist and helps stabilize the load.
It has plenty of room for you I would think. Not expensive either. Some people just use the shoulder carry strap as an additional load stabilizer. Wear it cross body opposite of your shooting side. The shoulder strap allows you to swing it to your front without taking it off as well.
I will say I did purchase the "strapettes" for it. I always found I was loading it with more than I liked to carry on just my waist. The straps are pretty low profile and worth every cent IMO. Plus I can unbuckle the waist and swing it around front if I need to...without taking it off.
Another great option is a sling pack. It only goes over 1 shoulder. It is designed to be able to rotate it to your front and be in perfect position to access your gear. I have a maxpedition Kodiak gearslinger. It has enough room for day gear and has a water bottle pocket. It also has a stabilizer strap that you can connect which will keep it stable regardless of how you move.Very simple to use. If you are a righty it goes over your left shoulder leaving your right shoulder free and clear. There are several models out there. Some are even ambidextrous if you are a lefty or want to be able to shift it from side to side.
Regardless it will take a little playing around to see if you can use either the way you want. Good luck!
"You only know one thing for sure about a broken down old man........He's the survivor...."
Incoming rounds have the right of way.....
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Another great option is a sling pack. It only goes over 1 shoulder. It is designed to be able to rotate it to your front and be in perfect position to access your gear. This. miguel, I use a sling pack for exactly what you're doing. I'm sure there are better sling packs but this one does pretty well and can be adjusted to move the strap to either shoulder. https://www.tenzingoutdoors.com/shop/hunting-packs/sling
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I use either a fanny pack with shoulder straps or a sling pack. Can't keep the fanny in place without shoulder straps. Never liked a backpack for day use.
Let's Go Brandon! FJB
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Another great option is a sling pack. It only goes over 1 shoulder. It is designed to be able to rotate it to your front and be in perfect position to access your gear. This. miguel, I use a sling pack for exactly what you're doing. I'm sure there are better sling packs but this one does pretty well and can be adjusted to move the strap to either shoulder. https://www.tenzingoutdoors.com/shop/hunting-packs/slingScott, that looks really interesting. Thanks Everyone for your suggestions.
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I'm in the same boat so far as lacking an ass. I'm pushing 60. I've also lost 35 pounds this year. I have enough trouble just keeping my damned pants up so I don't look like some punk-ass skateboarder. I also haven't had a lot of luck with shoulder bags. Where I grew up hunting there's quite a bit of water .. sidehill, miles wide, miles high slide-ish area with gullies that hold a small trickle year around. Though I grew up just drinking from the stream, I no longer do. Before she died mom had a bout of giardia and it didn't appear to be much fun. I don't really like drinking face down, feel vulnerable. My answer for that area is to carry a collapsible cup and a life straw to drink through. Takes away most of the need to carry any weight of consequence. The rest I can address by wearing a vest with big pockets.
Maybe a bird vest would do what you need.
I haven't had a lot of success with sling packs. I've got a couple from 5.11 Tactical which fit the gear I carry but otherwise I hate 'em. They never ride where I want. Smaller sling .. call 'em pouches maybe .. like a Mystery Ranch forager .. seem to work pretty well. I have two for fishing, one for spin gear, one for fly gear .. including the reels for each, so I just grab a rod, a pouch, and go. And fishing high mountain streams, just like where I grew up hunting, a collapsible cup and life straw will meet the need.
Among day packs, I've got a Mystery Ranch "In and Out 19". It is not meant for loads, just maybe clothes you're shedding plus a bottle of water. It only has a bottle holder on one side. The shoulder straps are flat rather than padded and it has no waist band. I use it mostly when I'm walking creeks fly fishing. It doesn't interfere with casting. Might be worth a look.
I hesitate to suggest something I haven't tried, but I'll throw one on the table. Could be that a Hill People Gear prairie belt and appropriate pouches might do the trick.
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I have a first gen Badlands Monster Fanny, it must be 25 years old. It's been alot of places and has a few patches and scars. I like it well enough but it doesn't hold enough stuff for me. The Tenzig sling pack Scott posted looks real interesting. I tried a couple sling packs for fly fishing and found they moved around too much. The Tenzig may have solved that issue.
Another option is the Hill People Gear Tarahumara pack coupled with their chest rig. That's my current inclination for day/scout/turkey/fly fishing set up.
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For day hunts, I still wouldn't hunt with a pack of any kind that isn't capable of hauling meat
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Another great option is a sling pack. It only goes over 1 shoulder. It is designed to be able to rotate it to your front and be in perfect position to access your gear. This. miguel, I use a sling pack for exactly what you're doing. I'm sure there are better sling packs but this one does pretty well and can be adjusted to move the strap to either shoulder. https://www.tenzingoutdoors.com/shop/hunting-packs/slingI actually like that scott, hate a daypack strap over my right shoulder while “huntin”. Rifle doesn’t fit even close to right with a strap on your shootin shoulder. Missed a damn nice whitetail several years ago for that reason
Ping pong balls for the win. Once you've wrestled everything else in life is easy. Dan Gable I keep my circle small, I’d rather have 4 quarters than 100 pennies. Tryin not to step on my Dick since 1975…
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If I don't want to tote a regular daypack, I use a regular Versapack, or a haversack. Moving up some I'll use a hunting vest or a Cabelas Safari vest or a dove belt I sewed ALICE LBE straps on. If that's not enough capacity, a regular daypack is pretty much a given ( to me) I can't see using a large capacity sling pack. If I feel the need to hump a goodly amount of gear, might as well skip on to a proper frame pack , my old Kelty or med ALICE or LC LBE basic load, buttpack and pouches etc.
Probably just have to do like everybody else does and buy and try different things until you find the diamond that suits you and put your chunks of coal online for the next guy
Good Luck
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Couple options on here. You need the official uniform to hunt those Big woods. 😂 Fanny packs
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I went for a simple solution. I bought an inexpensive daypack and removed the padded portion of the right shoulder strap. My wife sewed in an unpadded nylon strap to replace that part. Problem solved.
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Can a fanny pack carry the first 90lb load of meat out?
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i used fanny packs they suck and back pack is always better believe me at 69 years of age hunted many years in the mountains and woods don`t waste your money on a fanny pack.
LIFE NRA , we vote Red up here, Norseman
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Maybe if I were a minimalist still hunter a fanny pack would make sense, but I learned long ago that I'm too clumsy to catch up with much that way, so I'm a scout and sit kind of hunter and for that, more is better. You can put a little in a back pack, but you can't put a lot in a fanny pack. Having it and not needing it sure beats needing it and not having it. The shoulder strap thing never entered my mind because the pack comes off when I get to my stand. Your method of hunting might be way different than mine.
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My HPG buttback arrived yesterday along with the prairie belt. I'm looking forward to giving it a try in the next few days.
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