How to travel with just one bag (& zero sacrifices)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 พ.ค. 2024
  • The most important travel lesson I've learned is the difference between cost vs price, and traveling with one bag, although filled with items that may have a higher PRICE, ultimately, saves on so many ongoing COSTS associated with packing too much, and in this video I share how I travel with one bag and zero sacrifices.
    This enables me to have everything I need without paying for extra baggage fees, and needing to pay for taxi rides everywhere because I can't carry everything, not to mention, the constant reduction in stress and amplified enjoyment by just not needing to remember and lug stuff around, finding elevators, and all that noise… one bag travel, whenever possible, is the way to go.
    ===============
    TIMELINE + LINKS
    ===============
    Some of the links below are affiliate links. For example, as an Amazon Associate, I may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you!
    0:00 - Intro to One-Bag travel
    🔗 Pakt Travel Backpack V2 - 45L: shrsl.com/49vif
    👆🚨: This one linked here is the NEW Version 2 that was released in October 2023. There are slight differences with the Version 1 shown in this video, but in my opinion, Version 2 is unequivocally better. One thing that you MAY not like about the V2 that was shown in this video, is that there is no more removable mini-sling-hip-belt. Doesn't bother me because I'm very particular about my slings, but if this was a major positive feature for you, consider researching other bags for yourself. Both the 35L and 45L of the Version 2 are compliant with international (and domestic) carry-on size regulations. I made a comprehensive review of it here: • By FAR, the Best Trave...
    0:48 - Clothing - Effective & Complete
    Main Outfit/What I wear on the plane:
    🔗 Unbound Merino Tencel-Blend Jogger: shrsl.com/3ugz1
    ✅ Get 10% off with code "MAURICEMOVES" at checkout
    🔗 Unbound Merino T-Shirt: shrsl.com/3ugz2
    🔗 WesternRise Versa Cap: bit.ly/3BLutul
    ✅ Get 15% off with code "MAURICEMOVES" at checkout
    🔗 Unbound Merino Compact Travel Hoodie: shrsl.com/3ugz5
    What I pack:
    🔗 CIPWAY Compression Cubes on Amazon: amzn.to/3V0iCzu
    🔗 Western Rise Merino Button-Up: bit.ly/3C77URh
    ✅ Get 15% off with code "MAURICEMOVES" at checkout
    🔗 Western Rise Spectrum Jogger: bit.ly/3HKX3A0
    🔗 Hanes Anti-Chafing Boxer-Briefs on Amazon: amzn.to/3PCZbeV
    🔗 Fruit-of-the-Loom Ankle Socks on Amazon: amzn.to/3Yvojs7
    4:17 - Tech - For Work & Everyday Carry
    🔗 Nitecore P20ix Flashlight on Amazon: amzn.to/3BKeo8k
    🔗 Epicka Travel Plug Adapter on Amazon: amzn.to/3FwHoS2
    🔗 Nitecore NB10k Powerbank on Amazon: amzn.to/3Wcp9sb
    🔗 Side-by-Side Power Packer on Amazon: amzn.to/3I1W8eL
    🔗 OribitKey Nest on Amazon: amzn.to/3PFtK27
    OR... ✅ SAVE 10% with code: MAURICE10 on their website: bit.ly/3CjqDK4
    🔗 Kaweco AL Sport Pen on Amazon: amzn.to/3EBOBRw
    🔗 Sandisk Extreme 1TB SSD on Amazon: amzn.to/3UXKCUP
    🔗 OLight Arkfeld on Amazon: amzn.to/3t2p9hx
    OR... ✅ SAVE 10% off regular price items with code: MAURICEMOVES
    🇺🇸 www.olightstore.com/s/VKE94D
    🇨🇦 www.olightstore.ca/s/F2ATQ4
    🔗 Glasses/Clip-Ons: eyebuydirect.com (search "clip on")
    7:07 - Hygiene Kit
    🔗 Aer Travel Kit: shrsl.com/3ugzi
    7:37 - Support - Useful Extras
    🔗 - Alpaka Utility Pouch: alpakagear.com/products/utili...
    ✅ LIMITED TIME SAVE 15% sitewide with code: MAURICEHOLIDAY15 at Alpaka!
    8:54 - Pakt Travel Backpack Features
    In a few weeks, I'm headed on an extended trip to 5 or 6 countries and as someone who has typically been out of town for at least a quarter of the year for over a decade, I thought this video on sharing how to effectively pack with just one bag for long-term travel might help anyone who is about to head abroad (especially if you are someone who typically overpacks).
    Beyond the everyday carry considerations that change when travelling, being intentional while also refusing to sacrifice on comfort and convenience is important to me. I'd love to know in the comments if you have any travel tips to share!
    #Travel #TravelBag #edc
    Want to connect more?
    Instagram: @mauricemoves / mauricemoves
    Let's Get It Together!
    DISCLAIMERS:
    Some of the links above have an affiliate code, if you purchase gear with these links I will receive a small commission at no additional cost to you.
    Unless explicitly stated in the paragraph below, this video was not paid for by outside persons or companies. This means that the content of this video and my opinions are 100% my own, and were not reviewed or paid for by any third party.

ความคิดเห็น • 2.2K

  • @MauriceMoves
    @MauriceMoves  ปีที่แล้ว +3174

    *PRO TIP:* remember the difference between *COST vs PRICE* . I've seen a few comments talking about how "expensive" this setup is. To me, the PRICE is high, but the COST is *dirt-cheap* because I average 20+ flights per year. The absolute lowest extra-baggage charge I've ever seen on the airlines I've flown is $75. With 20 flights, those extra-baggage charges would *cost* me an extra $1,500 per year... *every* ... *single* ... *year* . Not to mention the added costs of NEEDING a taxi because it's too cumbersome to carry a bunch of luggage or the inconvenience-cost of visiting a place that doesn't have as many elevators and escalators as you're used to in your home city. Cost vs price is one of the most expensive lessons I learned when it comes to travel, but I even welcome you to examine all areas of your life, and you'll soon notice that the concept of cost vs price exposes a lot of financial waste you hadn't previously considered before.

    • @bsame
      @bsame ปีที่แล้ว +143

      Sage advice. As always, like you said, it depends on one's use case. If a person travels once or twice a year, he/she probably doesn't require most of these things, but what's important is to know that these things exist and how they could help smoothen the travel experience.

    • @franksmith8128
      @franksmith8128 ปีที่แล้ว +136

      im not going to lie, I was about to write a comment about how expensive the stuff in ur vid is but this price vs cost thing you wrote blew my mind. Same reason why I got rid of my car cuz its cheaper to uber the 2 to 5 times a week id typicalkly drive than it is to pay car payments insurance and gas. respect dude

    • @dimathieu
      @dimathieu ปีที่แล้ว +26

      @@franksmith8128 I'm curious about where you live to have ubers being cheaper than using a car day to day. The situation is probably really different between different countries, because where I live, an average Uber drive for a 14.5km/9miles journey costs A little bit more than 30€/32$ and there's no way a few daily round trips per month end up being cheaper than car expenses (at least I think so but idrk since public transports works best here :) )

    • @primemeow
      @primemeow ปีที่แล้ว +45

      I’m not sure if this is a good response to people complaining about the fact that the total price of everything shown in the video is $1600 plus tax and shipping. However, it is good advice overall, and it does highlight the differences in use cases. You are trying to pack as light as possible to easily be able to work in 6 different countries over the course of weeks or months. A lot of the people this got recommended to are the type that usually stay in one place for like a week max and therefore don’t need to pack like this.

    • @TheSimonboyle
      @TheSimonboyle ปีที่แล้ว +38

      Both cost and price (which are synonymous anyway) are ridiculously high. Come on man. This is simply you pimping products for cash. Not anywhere near that value in that bag. Can have many similar for much much less. Ridiculous to try and say otherwise man. Would have looked better if you'd not tried to make this comment 😂

  • @theroamingsavage8813
    @theroamingsavage8813 ปีที่แล้ว +3893

    Pro tip:
    Instead of paying $100 for every pouch (hygiene, utility, tech, etc) just go to ur local ROSS and buy 3-4 travel pouches for $8 each and use those.
    Trust me, u don't need military zippers, aeronautic grade carbon fiber panels, outer space proof grab handles on pouches to keep ur toothbrush and wall charger lol

    • @saimanohara6399
      @saimanohara6399 ปีที่แล้ว +227

      A lot of times, these items are quite overrated. I can understand the "cool" part of all this. But the amount of money you spend for all this should be based on how often you need to use them. Perhaps, the same applies to everything we buy.

    • @magicbusboy
      @magicbusboy ปีที่แล้ว +169

      this guy has an appreciation for the gear he uses often, and I can understand paying extra for that if you can afford it

    • @JK8
      @JK8 ปีที่แล้ว +21

      @@magicbusboy that’s not what he or she said

    • @coreyw5981
      @coreyw5981 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      Hell not only did i get those cheap packing cubes from Ross, i even found a way cheaper alternative to the pakt, with all the same features. Wish me luck on it holding up!

    • @quentin6893
      @quentin6893 ปีที่แล้ว +39

      ​@@magicbusboy He travels a lot for work so it is understandable that he has higher quality material.

  • @grzesiek2321
    @grzesiek2321 ปีที่แล้ว +7217

    Solid setup, but as a onebag travel enthusiast myself I would add at least a water bottle, spork, travel towel, lightweight flip flops and bigger first aid kit ;)

    • @poxalmazro3e734
      @poxalmazro3e734 ปีที่แล้ว +163

      most hotels provide towels so I think its okey to skip it, also eating utensils are easy to find.

    • @shuegottschalk
      @shuegottschalk ปีที่แล้ว +352

      I thought I was being overly cautious bringing a quick-dry towel/washcloth, but I used them in 100 ways during 7 months traveling...bring your own lightweight compact towel (most hostel towels suck)

    • @UrbanExplorer614
      @UrbanExplorer614 ปีที่แล้ว +148

      @@shuegottschalk Sarongs are better than compact towels. Dry quicker, can be used for headwear, shade, and also used to cover up if you go into a religious or a more conservative area.

    • @fobii
      @fobii ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@UrbanExplorer614 do you have any sarong recommendations?

    • @UrbanExplorer614
      @UrbanExplorer614 ปีที่แล้ว +67

      @@fobii I usually buy mine locally when I travel. It's nice to go shopping and when you use it back at home will always remind you of where you went.

  • @livinglikelaura4282
    @livinglikelaura4282 ปีที่แล้ว +2208

    I have one other category - "comfort items" - small bag with headphones, sleep mask, ear-plugs and such (cough drop, lip balm, mints, tums). But I really love the video - as a female traveler - things are a bit more complex and a few more other categories - but I really like your system.

    • @daniibp23
      @daniibp23 ปีที่แล้ว +87

      I'd add a journal and some pens too!

    • @livinglikelaura4282
      @livinglikelaura4282 ปีที่แล้ว +44

      @@daniibp23 agreed - and sketching stuff!

    • @flakeycakey
      @flakeycakey ปีที่แล้ว +42

      can't travel without headphones!!!

    • @brimstone33
      @brimstone33 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Probably carries that stuff in one of those three -purses- sling bags.

    • @ElizabethLopez-hx6xv
      @ElizabethLopez-hx6xv ปีที่แล้ว +72

      This! I got probably 4 minutes in before I realized I would probably benefit more from a woman showing her one bag approach. I’m not a “one-bagger” per-say but travel frequently so prioritizing multi-purpose clothing items and using luggage cubes have long since been part of my system. The work I do makes it so clothes are usable a max of 2 times (3 only if you’re willing to suffer the layers of dirt and sweat!) so unfortunately that’s not a place of compromise for me

  • @alanbirkner1958
    @alanbirkner1958 ปีที่แล้ว +842

    My husband and I (both in our 70's) went on a 15 day cruise. We each took an overnight bag and a small bag for medications. We live near Chicago, so we wore
    our warmest clothes. We have mobility issues, so our overnight bags are wheeled, but we can lift them. We've seen people with 2 huge suitcases waiting for people to
    help them move their things. We've gone on bus tours, other cruises, and stayed in foreign countries. Traveling light means you are as independent as possible.
    Tina, Al's wife

    • @davidsaxby5400
      @davidsaxby5400 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      You are true travellers and deserve respect and thanks

    • @morchedlafferty8614
      @morchedlafferty8614 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Thanks for sharing! :)

    • @maxp6521
      @maxp6521 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +23

      Yes, many times a small overnight bag is really all you need. Thanks for sharing!
      Max, Al's husband

    • @ezze-does-it
      @ezze-does-it 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      ​@@maxp6521holup...who's husband?

    • @shzd.pk-gazi
      @shzd.pk-gazi 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +14

      @@ezze-does-it Is there an issue here?
      Johnny Sins, Al's daddy

  • @ice9dragon
    @ice9dragon ปีที่แล้ว +919

    Never been a fan of all these fancy, multi- pouch/ pocket bags, but this one is incredible. Well thought out design and plenty of great features.

    • @Heizenburgerz
      @Heizenburgerz ปีที่แล้ว +22

      fanny pack and the side water bottle holders were my favourites

    • @Scolopente
      @Scolopente ปีที่แล้ว +4

      I'm a bag fanatic and have lots of super duper next level travel bags. But the one that goes with me is actually a cheap cabin max wheeled expandable backpack i bought for $40 😔
      Its so light....

    • @jaynniejane
      @jaynniejane ปีที่แล้ว +13

      As an owner of this bag that ALWAYS overpacks when I travel I gotta say I've been very impressed with it. It really shines when I have it at max weight then have to run from one end of an airport to the other for a connecting flight. Set the shoulder straps for correct weight distribution, tighten that hip strap clip the chest clips and it does NOT jiggle. I can't recommend their bags enough.

    • @Fetucinee
      @Fetucinee ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Pakt is the kind of expensive, heavy, over-engineered pack I tend to avoid, a case of too much of a good thing trying to be all things to all travellers. I'll pass.

    • @TychoKingdom
      @TychoKingdom ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank because you don't have enough things that need to be separated and organized. If it's just clothes a sack is fine.

  • @E_velynn
    @E_velynn ปีที่แล้ว +354

    I'm not really a travel enthusiast, but this bag is just absolutely astonishing and it was a absolute treat to watch this overview of it.

    • @smgp2023
      @smgp2023 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      same lol

    • @Alejandro.96U
      @Alejandro.96U 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +11

      I wanted to get one but when I saw the price I bailed 💀

    • @randomaccount3364
      @randomaccount3364 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      @@Alejandro.96U It's not even the most expensive bag you can get in the grand scheme of things. The backpack hobby, like any gear acquisition hobby, goes deep. For this amount of functionality, it's a very solid bag, although you have to really be into this type of one-bag lifestyle for your travel needs for the price to justify the purposes. For people who live their daily lives in the same city like you probably do, this bag is certainly quite useless because in its attempt to become the perfect one-bag travel pack, it compromises itself as a regular backpack(which is why the hip belt turns into a sling bag lol, so you can leave the specialty-designed chunky partitioned backpack in your hotel room and walk around with the sling).
      This is the first video I've ever watched from this channel and I just happened to stumble upon this video, but I like backpacks. As Maurice mentions in his pinned comment, there's a significant difference between cost and price. The bag is pricey, but it saves him cost in the long run. From not having to pay oversized luggage fees, being able to buy cheaper tickets in the first place because he only has one bag, not having to lug heavy suitcases up and down stairs in inconvenient places, the bag might have a relatively high one-time price, but it saves him money.
      Further in my opinion though this is a general commentary on backpacks rather than this Pakt Travel backpack in specific, if you travel with expensive stuff like laptops or cameras, I personally feel safer placing trust in a backpack that might cost more but is surely made of higher quality materials over more inexpensive schoolbags - particularly if you take stuff like cameras out on long hikes up mountains. Your backpack is less likely to fail if it's higher quality, and your equipment will not be exposed to the elements. I've seen cheap backpacks deteriorate heavily just because they carried heavy loads. But if you don't carry around expensive stuff, or your backpack usecase is strictly limited to running around between school, home, and town, there's no real reason to buy a big ol expensive backpack. The fifty-buck Jansport is the trademark of college students all around.

    • @russano7045
      @russano7045 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Top tier profile pic

  • @tfrtrouble
    @tfrtrouble ปีที่แล้ว +464

    These tips are genuinely useful. Still every time I open one of these "you're packing way too much, you only need one backpack" videos, I realise it's for people doing relatively urban trips in mild weather. As someone who gets cold easily and loves the outdoors and food, there is no getting around needing a lot more clothing and shoes than this. Especially for women's clothes, there is really no overlap between appropriate clothing/shoes for a full day hike and eating in a nice restaurant. This is especially true in cold weather but if you're hiking up a mountain, warm, weatherproof clothing is needed for safety even if it's summer. These things take up space really fast. And before people tell me about these miracle lightweight minidresses that you can hike and go to dinner in; yes but not if it's cold or you have pale skin and need sun protection. Not to mention that fact that I prefer not to wander round half naked when travelling alone.

    • @fjodorf7341
      @fjodorf7341 ปีที่แล้ว +90

      Yeahhh, this is for people who (business-) travel for few weeks to a specific place, then directly come back again, only stay at decent hotels where everything else is provided. The white sneakers say everything, no sneaker wipe is gonna help if you go hiking with these things ONCE lmao. Similarly, all this is not realistic for digital nomads who actually work for multiple hours on the computer every day (just a tiny laptop will result in all kinds of pain when you finish your work day) or people who travel the world and sleep in hostels or longer term accomodation where you need your own towel, slippers (ok, this is specific to asian countries) or even bed sheets.

    • @annaheya2109
      @annaheya2109 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Trueree

    • @lelandunruh7896
      @lelandunruh7896 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +22

      I've managed a 6.5-month trip which started in the mountains of western China near Tibet in late winter, was in India during high summer, and was in Finland in the fall--all with one 40-liter bag. I also had business meetings in Hong Kong. It can be done IF you plan well and are cool with ditching your cold weather gear and suit jacket (I gave all mine to charity orgs or random people I met after I no longer needed them; I had bought everything secondhand with this very plan in mind). My wife has not travelled as much as I have, but we visited the Caucuses together in early spring (when it gets quite cold in the mountains but rather warm in the lowlands) and she travelled with one bag as well. And unlike me, she has no Mesoamerican blood and thus burns rather easily, so layers and a smart pair of black jeans, white blouse, and black turtleneck really do wonders for an elegant night out.

    • @lelandunruh7896
      @lelandunruh7896 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      @@fjodorf7341 I fit your entire description and manage one bag travel everywhere I go. I spent three months of last year in Europe, with nine weeks on a road trip through 15 countries, and managed to bill 30-40 hours every week (but only 20 when I had corona in Kosovo). I've routinely travelled with one 40-liter bag for about 20 years, and have been a self-employed lawyer billing 20-40 hours per week while travelling for nine of those years. I assure you it is perfectly possible, but I do agree that what this gentleman is showing is geared to people on the more entry-level end of travel.

    • @kawaiidere1023
      @kawaiidere1023 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +5

      Fr. My mom is always like “why do you have such a big bag?” but I need it to hold my water bottle, wallet, charger, power splitter, utensils, drinking cup, laptop, notebook, light reading, and space for small purchases. If I’m going on a trip, I’d like to have toothpaste, electric toothbrush, floss (I need to long kind that works with my wire), shampoo, allergy pills, at least 1 jacket, a pair of alternate shoes to avoid breaking them, a change of shorts and shirt since I sweat a lot and my town isn’t conducive for the no sweat vibe, a change of socks per day, a change of undies per day, and some various travel equipment. I can try and fit it in one bag plus carry on quite easily, but I could never fit it all in a single bag, especially since there needs to be enough room for things to not get crushed, space for small purchases, etc
      Nobody (besides overly judgy people) cares when I bring my bag with me. I think they understand that for someone who’s only option is biking long distances in Texas heat, a good backpack is a necessity.

  • @jasminealixandranorth
    @jasminealixandranorth 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +40

    I bought this backpack along with their original bag (can't remember the name of it). I had this backpack shipped overseas from the states. I was so excited to receive it (paid 300USD). I honestly was shocked to discover how heavy the backpack was - even empty!! - I ended up never using it and virtually gave it away. It is way to heavy for small people or anyone over 40 - I think this is a perfect backpack for teenagers, 20 something or 30 something - but do not order if you are over 40, want something light as this will destroy your back - even when empty.

    • @ShejinCherian
      @ShejinCherian 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

      Wow, nobody is addressing this...

    • @XJLCA
      @XJLCA 15 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Thank you for bringing this up, it is a very important factor to consider.

  • @franciscloutier5387
    @franciscloutier5387 ปีที่แล้ว +1760

    As someone who spent the last 4 years doing full time 1 bag travel, I admire the people who can do merino wool. I found it overpriced, of pretty poor quality in general, usually too warm, and lacking in style. I instead went with regular t-shirts who have lasted better and offer more flexibility of outfits. I travel with 5 tshirts (in 5 diff colors) and 2 long sleeves (one which i wear while traveling), 3 pairs of shorts and 2 pairs of pants (again, 1 of which I travel with). This all fits in my Aer Travel Pack 3, alongside a toiletry pouch and a tech pouch, plus my laptop. Pretty damn heavy though lol

    • @sweetwater88
      @sweetwater88 ปีที่แล้ว +41

      Yep, I've traveled to 60 countries in 15 years and typically my trips are about 2 months long to a year. I just use regular t-shirts and a 1 or 2 button up shirts for occasions. Not a fan of laundry day so I've given up ultra-light travel so at minimum 45L now. 8 t-shirts, 8 pairs of underwear, 8 pairs of socks for example works pretty well thought that depends if I go on a hot summer holiday with lots of sweating. I also do the DayReady packing method: large dual-sided clean/dirty packing cube and stack a set of folded t-shirt, underwear, and socks and then repeat. Dirty laundry is quickly folded into the reverse side while fresh set is taken out the other side.

    • @wildwanderer6025
      @wildwanderer6025 ปีที่แล้ว +67

      Merino wool is expensive, needs to be washed carefully (like wool in general) and looks like outdoor clothing looks, that is correct. On the other hand, it's light, packs small, is warm and you can wear it for many days before it starts to stink. So if you go to a warm country, don't plan to go hiking and give your clothes away for washing, you want something else. If you want clothing that is light, extremely flexible, can be worn for hiking, the city, on cold and warm days etc., nothing beats merino wool. I even wore my long sleeve merino as sun protection while kayaking, it worked well.

    • @TrifectaMonkey
      @TrifectaMonkey ปีที่แล้ว +34

      I find sports wear tshirts (like those adidas synthetic ones) pretty good to travel with. They dry super quick, easy to clean, compress and don't crease. I still carry 1 Merino thermal layer when I travel to cold countries where temperatures are under 0C. But other than that, layering a thin puffer jacket and a wind breaker + neck gaiter and beanie is usually enough for me.

    • @Stangya888
      @Stangya888 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      And less cruelty. Merino sheep have been bred into a life of torture .

    • @clonkex
      @clonkex ปีที่แล้ว +42

      @@Stangya888 A life of torture? Might be overstating just a bit

  • @barongerhardt
    @barongerhardt ปีที่แล้ว +522

    I like to add two small things. First a small power strip. In hotels or guest rooms, it can make the one convenient outlet be all you need. For airports and stations it makes it easy to get someone to share. The other is a small sewing kit. Like first aid, not used much, but very nice to have when needed.

    • @naazahs9045
      @naazahs9045 ปีที่แล้ว +27

      You forgot the washing machine.

    • @brimstone33
      @brimstone33 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Sewing kit is a keeper. Though a dude who wears T-shirts and joggers everywhere would probably consider a hole in his clothes to be a desirable style feature. But he's only got a laptop and phone to charge, and he can charge the phone from the laptop. Why would he lug around a power strip? I tell you what he doesn't have, and this makes me doubt that he ever traveled anywhere internationally. He's got no electrical plug adapters.

    • @barongerhardt
      @barongerhardt ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@brimstone33 The sewing kit isn't for ascetic reasons, but to address immediate structural issues. When traveling light you don't have extras, the kit buys you time to find a proper replacement, for the cost of something the size/weight of a credit card.
      The major point of the power strip isn't for you to be able to plug in several things, but gaining access to an outlet in the first place. Many airports, aircraft, trains are getting better, and batteries last longer but I still regularly run into being stuck in public locations for hours and the limited number of outlets are occupied. Pulling out a small (200g, 1/2 lbs) travel strip and asking to share works significantly better than hoping someone will finish soon.
      To me plug adapters are more of an European issue. If your business is in North/Central America or Japan, same plug. Also, the one you need is readily available at the destination airport for cheap. No need to remember or lug the wrong one, or worse multiples around.

    • @barongerhardt
      @barongerhardt ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@naazahs9045 They do make small and light travel washing bags for hikers.
      For hotel travel, just use the sink/bath tub with shampoo/hand soap and layout to dry. If that isn't good enough for you, use the laundry service, or find a laundry mat, or lug more clothing around.

    • @ehhzuulaa
      @ehhzuulaa ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @@brimstone33 he literally showed a travel plug adapter at 5:14

  • @spaceducc3471
    @spaceducc3471 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This was an incredibly informative deep dive about effective compact traveling for me that I wasn't even aware that I needed. I'm now going to rethink my entire setup and I'm not even remotely upset.

  • @nicolecreamer1091
    @nicolecreamer1091 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    Thank you for showing what the clothing looks like when worn and for placing links in the description. The editing is also well done. 😊

  • @Dave-sw2dm
    @Dave-sw2dm ปีที่แล้ว +147

    As a lightweight motorcycle traveler, I really liked your organization. Being organized is key. A place for everything, and everything in its place.

  • @oliviaraney4307
    @oliviaraney4307 ปีที่แล้ว +352

    The scripting on this was fantastic. Seamless and efficient blend with video and graphics.
    Easy to follow

  • @naimahq8739
    @naimahq8739 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    He can maximize this bag because he knows how to organize space so it is utilized efficiently! Kudos! I travel light but I will model my next 4 day trip based on this!

  • @smartstrength4414
    @smartstrength4414 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I'm literally going on a short flight + roadtrip with my father next month and this was SUPER helpful. Great content!

  • @grindstaff
    @grindstaff ปีที่แล้ว +371

    The "collar buttons" are what make the shirt a "button down" vs a "button up". If you are searching in the future you can search for button down if you want the buttons or button up if you prefer without.

    • @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii8818
      @iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii8818 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      While true for more general non specific shirts. If you get nerdy with dress shirts, its not that simple.

    • @bobv5806
      @bobv5806 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Collars are button down, shirts are button up.

    • @brimstone33
      @brimstone33 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@bobv5806 Yep it's a button-up shirt with a button-down collar. BTW I bought that exact shirt and returned it. It has some kind of jersey-knit merino, way too soft a drape for a dress shirt. Looks like someone put buttons on a t-shirt. Probably looks good on a guy who wears joggers everywhere though.

  • @samuraijack6870
    @samuraijack6870 ปีที่แล้ว +2710

    This entire video seems like a barely disguised ad

    • @lululee1653
      @lululee1653 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +143

      It may seem so but he is demonstrating what he likes to use. It wouldn’t make sense to show another item that he doesn’t use

    • @icusawme2
      @icusawme2 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

      He should have been paid by sponsors for this video

    • @Vyz3r
      @Vyz3r 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +59

      @@lululee1653 Ever heard of this thing called lying?

    • @lululee1653
      @lululee1653 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +52

      @@Vyz3r he would jeopardize his channel being monetized so it wouldn’t be advantageous for him to lie about something that inconsequential

    • @RubSomeDirtOnIt
      @RubSomeDirtOnIt 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +53

      ​@@Vyz3r People can like things enough to want to rep them and show them off. It's not like that's uncommon lol.

  • @BB_Sebring
    @BB_Sebring ปีที่แล้ว +46

    As both an engineer and a chronic over-packer (I kinda took the BSA motto of "be prepared" to heart), this is simply incredible!

  • @leftycrafter
    @leftycrafter ปีที่แล้ว +154

    I’m an over packer and this was the first minimalist packing video that made sense. As a woman and a mom traveling with kids, I have very different needs, but the concept here is still solid. My one bummer is that merino wool is itchy to my skin, yes, even the most expensive quality ones. So I’m still stuck packing too much or doing too much laundry. Our trips are also often active, snorkeling, snowmobiling, so gear-heavy. Then there’s keeping everyone comfortable on long flights, eye masks, earmuffs, snacks, entertainment devices, etc. Finally, as a germaphobe, I really struggle to not bring my own pillowcase, slippers, tons of sanitizing supplies, etc. You can see the overpack building up as you read, ha!

    • @jimthechaosbunny
      @jimthechaosbunny 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +17

      I'm allergic to wool, so I hear you on the itchy! I've found a range of lightweight plain thermal tops in an acrylic/viscose mix that fit my 'lightweight, fast drying and suitable for all occasions' requirements. Mine are from Marks & Spencer in the UK, but there are probably more international brands that make similar things.
      My other top priority tip is invest in a good microfibre towel - again, lightweight, compact and fast drying. If you get the biggest one you can find, it'll have a million uses! They're incredibly versatile, and they last *forever*. My first one that I bought in 1998 is still going strong, though I upgraded it recently because I found an even larger one with a built in zip pocket. Best travel investment I ever made! I've worn mine as a sarong in warm places and as a scarf in cold weather, used it as an extra bedding layer, a picnic blanket, a draught excluder, all sorts of other things. My travel towel functions just fine as an eye mask for long flights, wrapped around my head, and it works great as a pillowcase wrapped round a hotel pillow too. It might not solve all of your overpacking problems, but I suspect it'll help!

    • @classicsciencefictionhorro1665
      @classicsciencefictionhorro1665 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      @@jimthechaosbunny Wow, you can WRITE! And the microfiber towel is a really good tip. Thanx.

    • @lesliehunter1823
      @lesliehunter1823 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      If you are allergic to the wool just wear silks under it.

    • @jt.633
      @jt.633 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      "As a woman and a mom" lmao does mom alone not encapsulate both

    • @lord0jackostar
      @lord0jackostar 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Merino wool is really a love/hate fabric. Linen, cotton, or bamboo fabric are decent alternatives; bamboo especially if you’re after something decently wrinkle-resistant.

  • @erikaso_
    @erikaso_ ปีที่แล้ว +33

    The bags you've been recommending makes so much sense and I'm really impressed with the functionality! Looking forward to all the content you make, Maurice! Take care and travel safe :)

  • @kipkey8104
    @kipkey8104 9 หลายเดือนก่อน +31

    As someone that works on ships and needs to pack for typically 6-7 months at a time, I've finally been able to crack the code on what I need for clothes (only took 3 years). 3 work pants, 3 work shirts, 1 work shorts, 1 non work pants, 3-5 non work shirts (double as sleep shirts), 1 button up, 1 shorts/sweatpants, 1 hoodie/jacket depending on itinerary, 1 pair work boots, 1 pair everyday sneakers, and a decent selection of socks and underwear.
    All fits in 2 large size packing cubes and 1 small one for the socks/unders. Went from luggage that could barely close to having room to spare. Actually recently had to downsize my luggage cause I didn't need the xtra space (went from 31" to 26").
    Sadly for non clothes items I still have a tendency to overpack, I always seem to assume that I'm going to do more "fun" things then I end up doing :)
    Video def gave my some ideas on organizing, though I couldn't do the 1 bag life sense I have to bring quite a few tools for work, that need to be checked luggage

  • @SophiaShinAhreum
    @SophiaShinAhreum ปีที่แล้ว +4

    As a chronic overpacker who loves traveling, I love your setup!

  • @kaya8882
    @kaya8882 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I have had this bag for over a year now, and too usually only bring one bag, however until now never knew how to properly pack minimally with it. This video is amazing thank you so much for adding value.

  • @xcessa
    @xcessa ปีที่แล้ว +62

    I’m super nerdy about my packing after years of business travel and really enjoy this video. In my line of work I’d also need a blazer and pair of dress shoes but love your ideas as a base to riff off. ❤ from Vancouver Island

  • @craig8876
    @craig8876 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This video scratched an itch I didn't know I had. I, apparently, am a terrible packer and these tips/products have helped tremendously.

  • @Tomoki92
    @Tomoki92 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Definitely the neatest and most organized video I've seen for one bag travel. Will def be using these tips on my next trip.

  • @Mattcruzedc
    @Mattcruzedc ปีที่แล้ว +29

    I don’t plan on going anywhere any time soon, but when I do, I’m glad this video exists for me to go back and watch.

  • @kylehunter
    @kylehunter ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Definitely opening my eyes to how much I overpack. This is extremely useful insight

  • @gaelle4328
    @gaelle4328 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This was really interesting as a person who has been a very frequent traveler myself you tend to develop a recipe that works for you and it normally develops over time, and type of trip. My experience is that a good base for 10 - 15 days can easily be converted with a couple of extras to adjust to seasons for much longer periods of time.

  • @dannywimbish982
    @dannywimbish982 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks so much for this video. I've been looking for a better way to pack. Your way just makes way more sense than most others I've seen.

  • @kristie9144
    @kristie9144 ปีที่แล้ว +143

    I'm planning a 3 week multi-city trip and absolutely do not want to have to deal with traditional luggage, particularly when moving through train stations and airports. This video is brilliant and will be an asset when putting my packing list together.

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      Be ruthless. All your tops and bottoms should mix and match. Consider a very thin solid color pashmina for the plane, and a colorful, patterned scarf, for variety, with solid blouse, T or jacket.

  • @fatimashouabzaidi1978
    @fatimashouabzaidi1978 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    i usually don’t watch the videos in which people only talk
    idk it seems boring
    but this video literally made me watch till the end and i enjoyed it alot
    the baggages were full of space!
    i really liked the video!

  • @mclenachan
    @mclenachan ปีที่แล้ว

    I just came across your channel and I can’t stop watching. You are so informative, concise and well-spoken. You have a new subscriber.

  • @jayrock911
    @jayrock911 12 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I'm leaving on a trip out of the country and I've watched a bunch of your videos. You're the absolute best on YT. LOVE your content.

  • @irock550
    @irock550 ปีที่แล้ว +38

    This video is everything!! I especially appreciate the fashion advice because I’m going abroad for a semester in a month and I have no clue what to bring. And thank you SO MUCH for linking everything! This is exactly what I needed!

    • @coscorrodrift
      @coscorrodrift ปีที่แล้ว +6

      if you're going abroad for a semester my advice would be to take a bigger suitcase than a carryon and to check it in (you're gonna do this like 4 times at most), i'd pack goodies from your home country (canned/stuff that doesn't expire in 6 months) that you'll know you'll miss and that you won't get until/unless your family visits you. maybe i'm sentimental but i got a bit homesick towards the middle of the semester hahaha and these goodies bring you warm feelings in those moments.
      i would definitely pack 2 of every cable and 2 chargers of each if you can (leaving one charger at the dorm and leaving one in your backpack is a couple minutes every day that add up). maybe this is obvious stuff but i've always used desktop computers and only started using my laptop abroad
      and definitely enjoy it! and give the video a rewatch for when you're traveling using ur new city as a "homebase", there these tips will be more relevant, as you don't pack your clothes for your day to day in regular life, but you do when traveling.
      it's just six months so if it's a bad experience that can be a consolation but honestly it probably won't be. my main regret is probably not living like i lived those six months when i came back from them

  • @blue3374
    @blue3374 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Great video. With the airport luggage crisis happening lately, I'm def one-bagging as much as I can this year

  • @junngabang644
    @junngabang644 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for this video! It makes me very excited about my travels especially for work.

  • @treytomes
    @treytomes 18 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you. I have the hardest time figuring out how to pack for long trips with my family. I like how you think through the different scenarios throughout this video.

  • @Dasingindoc
    @Dasingindoc ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Love it! Every traveller needs to see this! Thanks!

  • @DanzEnglish
    @DanzEnglish ปีที่แล้ว +91

    Man, this is exactly what I needed. Went to Scotland and Belfast literally in the past few days, I had no idea what to pack (brought too much snack that I ended up not eating them). Thank you for your valuable tutorial. Subbed immediately.

    • @maximilianjack1764
      @maximilianjack1764 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Why would you travel with snacks?

    • @DanzEnglish
      @DanzEnglish ปีที่แล้ว +14

      @@maximilianjack1764 Why not? Can't walk and think properly with empty stomach. Not to mention that the food around might be more than our budget.

    • @pNo415
      @pNo415 ปีที่แล้ว

      Or there may not be any options!

  • @kathypeterman2886
    @kathypeterman2886 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love how minimal this is! Nicely done.

  • @piplup10203854
    @piplup10203854 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This is an extremely well made video, it's true to the title and very informative whilst all being very digestible and clear in delivery. I left a life and I definitely will be re-visiting this video later. I love my backpacks and different bags and although I don't really travel and only work from home I do occasionally have to get on a plane and I love minimalist packing, I personally need very little when going anywhere but I love versatility and having as many options as I can just to stay flexible and this video and the items in it very much help that so I appreciate it ☺ great video! I am glad it was recommended to me.

  • @brianloper6669
    @brianloper6669 ปีที่แล้ว +26

    I like the vid and love to see it. All the equipment is cool, but if anyone other budget travelers like me are worried. I’ve been fine with a regular school backpack for 2 week trips and my relatively small 48L bag for 2 month plus trips. All in how you use those pockets. I think one multi-month trip I bought a 3-pack of sit-on-them “vacuum” bags for $10

  • @lisaeshunwilson14
    @lisaeshunwilson14 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    So well done!! Such a fan of how you organized this amazing video!

  • @rio6709
    @rio6709 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’ve been traveling and living out of my bag for the past 4 months. I have this fjallraven fishing bag that has a surprisingly light aluminum frame that doubles as a seat. Surprisingly useful and very sturdy. 👍

  • @ericmehoke8362
    @ericmehoke8362 ปีที่แล้ว

    This is one of the most useful videos I've used on youtube. Thanks for the great advice.

  • @fjtalleyauthor2242
    @fjtalleyauthor2242 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I could never go with that small amount of clothing, particularly for the areas to which I travel. But that bag is excellent! It could easily fit my needs.

  • @gypsybelle4757
    @gypsybelle4757 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Hand washing items while in the shower is genius!! I have never heard that travel hack before. So smart! Thank you!

    • @brianloper6669
      @brianloper6669 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I’m still partial to a bathroom sink myself. I need more than spraying water since I like my things to soak, just always seemed cleaner to me

  • @hoser7706
    @hoser7706 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Simply a fantastic, well executed breakdown. Perfectly presented and a pleasure to watch. Thank you.

  • @deanastyxhades
    @deanastyxhades ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Woah. Smart yes, great recommendation yes, but I’m wowed by the video itself. You did such an awesome job of setting up and editing this video. Super well done video, great tips, and sounds like great products. Thanks for sharing.

  • @chrisdewa63
    @chrisdewa63 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I loved it!! Really minimalist & clean backpack setup!!🎉

    • @user-jk2zm7uq5s
      @user-jk2zm7uq5s ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Facewash body wash shampoo and hair product - that's four bottles! I dunno but that certainly ain't minimalist, especially considering that the majority of hotels supplies that stuff anyway?
      Also: Don't liquids need to be in that tiny zip lock bag because TSA?
      But: the guy is certainly more fashionable than myself - because i'd wear dark shoes and then wouldn't need the "shoe cleaning wipes"...but there's more than one way to travel ;)

  • @nicolassarcanschi4427
    @nicolassarcanschi4427 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Bro, first time watching your videos and let me say you have and amazing way to explain and edit videos. How you synthesize the information and make it also pleasant to watch. Definitely new suscriber :)

  • @michellegomes5561
    @michellegomes5561 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is so so helpful! Thank you so much for sharing it! 🙏🏼

  • @xander0901
    @xander0901 ปีที่แล้ว +83

    I'm interested in traveling more once the pandemic settles down and I really like the idea of traveling with just a carryon. I've done some one bag travel before, but definitely felt I made many mistakes. Really appreciate you sharing your loadout.

    • @ignjatmarinkovic7884
      @ignjatmarinkovic7884 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      The pandemic has settled down! You're Free! Just go outside!

    • @franciscloutier5387
      @franciscloutier5387 ปีที่แล้ว +23

      if you still worry about the pandemic, you're probably not cut out for travel

    • @defaultworkouts
      @defaultworkouts ปีที่แล้ว

      covid is growing big time in china and is gonna spread. you gonna keep waiting to live your life?

    • @Xaforn
      @Xaforn ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@franciscloutier5387 they’re probably referring to the rules in various countries

  • @engineeringnotebookguide9980
    @engineeringnotebookguide9980 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    This is my favorite video you have done so far! It is so well done!
    Even though I am female and thus need more/different things, travel less frequently for different purposes in colder weather, and am limited on how much weight I can carry or take on a plane some places I go, there is a gold mine of info here I can learn from.
    I am already team merino, but right now I use thin sweaters and wool tights from thrift stores for travel. I hadn't considered looking for merino t-shirts and pants there. I will start, and microfiber is also a good idea from the comments here.
    The bag is awesome and out of my price range, but I can look for key features it has in other bags.
    I have never traveled with a spare pair of glasses but I will now. I have backups purchased online and even with my complicated prescription can get them for less than $50.
    I love seeing how you organize the non clothing items. You can still do a lot of the same things with cheaper small bags you already have.
    You are absolutely right that it is worth investing in the right things to avoid baggage fees, taxis, laundry, costs of lost luggage, and to save time. By learning what features are possible and could be beneficial to you, you usually can do something similar at nearly every price point.

  • @Claudia-he6sj
    @Claudia-he6sj ปีที่แล้ว

    Initially thought this was clickbait but you got me completely sold. Super realistic and beautiful filming/layout. You got me sold!!

  • @tagatote
    @tagatote 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    i am guilty of overpacking all the time. this to me, is a great weekend away trip. thank you for the video!

  • @kwakusa
    @kwakusa ปีที่แล้ว +4

    One of the best travel backpacks I have seen on the web at the moment.

    • @ValerioCantamessi
      @ValerioCantamessi ปีที่แล้ว

      @@OfficialMaurice_Moves WOULD YOU BE SO KIND AS TO SPECIFY WHAT MODEL OF PAKT YOU'RE SHOWING IN THE VIDEO, THANKS.

  • @gtrfreak
    @gtrfreak ปีที่แล้ว +278

    As someone who just got back from spending 6 weeks backpacking around Thailand I can definitely say less is more. I used an Ausprey 55 (great comfortable bag) but would love to minimize/compact my luggage down to be able to take something smaller next go around 😅

    • @user-jk2zm7uq5s
      @user-jk2zm7uq5s ปีที่แล้ว +20

      Tropical (hot) countries like Thailand are actually really easy to travel around very light. Since you realistically only wear shorts, sandals and a T-shirt (and since you sweat a lot) you simply wash them nightly at your hotel. You only have a single set. What's in your bag now? Yes: A tooth brush and a phone charger. Don't need an adapter: fly without the charger and buy a phone charger that fits whatever plugs they use at the first convenience store you encounter. Now you only have a single brick instead of two bricks ;)
      Since it's hot everything you wash in the evening will be dry enough to wear in the morning.
      You do need one set of long pants/long sleeved shirt for the plane and air conditioned buses (or: thermal underwear under your shorts: looks silly but kinda works) and that's what is going to take up most space in your backpack abroad.
      Wearing sacrificial threadbare/worn out pants/long sleeved shirt on the plane works too - I'd have thrown that item of clothing anyway but now it will keep me warm one last time...

    • @gtrfreak
      @gtrfreak ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@user-jk2zm7uq5s I brought 4 changes of clothes and there were days when I went through 3 changes of clothes in one day. I would go out and see some sights and then when I came back to my condo sweaty 😅 I would take a quick shower and change. I also enjoyed going on long walks to the street markets every day. I need to compact down my toiletries bag and electronics bag similar to his set up and I’m also considering just buying the same bag

    • @foilcap
      @foilcap ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@gtrfreak "4 changes of clothes" - all I need is at most 2 shirts - not t-shirts - but thin cotton shirts with chest pockets with buttons for cash and cards. No bulky wallet. One pocket for cash in small bills, another large bills and cards. You come to the hotel, take a shower and in 15 minutes either your shirt is dry or just it put it on wet - it will be dry in 15 minutes outside and you'll be pleasantly cool during that time.

    • @davidmartin1015
      @davidmartin1015 ปีที่แล้ว

      One question. Do they allow one of those powerful , re-chargeable torches in carry-on? (Australia).

    • @gtrfreak
      @gtrfreak ปีที่แล้ว

      @@davidmartin1015 I know there are limits and standards when it comes to what kind of rechargeable batteries and power banks are allowed on board the plane and security in Thailand and Malaysia were always diligent to check mine. I brought a dapper design mini flashlight and it worked out great, def a must have

  • @Keith_Aerotrunk
    @Keith_Aerotrunk 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is quite interesting for an overpacker traveler like me. Great tips!

  • @justaninja1
    @justaninja1 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, that's a crazy versatile bag. Good job on mentioning all the names and models of the products. 👍

  • @lelandunruh7896
    @lelandunruh7896 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    I've been travelling with one ~40-liter bag for almost 20 years now. It makes life SO much easier. I have done this on two six-month+ trips, and multiple multi-week or multi-month trips, including for business (I'm a lawyer, so I wear my suit jacket while flying and then just have it steamed or dry-cleaned as needed). I'm 6'1"/186cm and wear size 14 US/48 EUR shoes, so I choose one pair of all-purpose walking/sport shoes, one pair of nice-looking but comfortable leather shoes or boots, and hardy but light sandals for showers and beaches. I bring seven days of underclothes, a couple pairs of pants, shorts/trunks, three or four shirts, and a merino sweater. And that's it. If I can do it, so can you!

    • @roninmedicalconsultancy
      @roninmedicalconsultancy 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I do very similar. Avoiding luggage loss / delay is a bonus.

    • @randomaccount3364
      @randomaccount3364 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      A man of your immense build can carry anything. Think of the short people who would topple over if they carried a backpack your size daily.

  • @NobD2
    @NobD2 ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Awesome vid as always, Maurice! One thing I appreciated is you leaving space for souvenirs, gifts, etc. - I feel most packing vids neglect this crucial detail!

    • @sophiagray3191
      @sophiagray3191 ปีที่แล้ว

      Probably because most hardcore travellers don't buy many souvenirs

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      For gifts, I always think small and / or flat - Keychains, fridge magnets, stickers, jewelry, tote bags, place mats, flip flops, dry spices or tea (checking customs rules for returning before i buy), fishing lures, hair accessories. It’s getting hard to find things that you can’t just buy anywhere in the world.
      For souvenirs, I pack things I am ready to replace anyway, and if I buy something to replace it, that becomes my souvenir. New phone case, new wallet, new shirt, new socks, sun hat, ski mask. And I throw the old thing out when packing to come back.

  • @DatBoiSaint
    @DatBoiSaint 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

    My favorite part is the hidden storage in the back part.
    I love this bag when I travel.

  • @alexandrenamineto7604
    @alexandrenamineto7604 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    This is AMAZING, congrats and thank you for the tips!

  • @Komplexitet
    @Komplexitet ปีที่แล้ว +553

    Im surprised that you didn't pack your journal considering it's your most used item according to previous videos

    • @tuomi1154
      @tuomi1154 ปีที่แล้ว +18

      I believe he didn't show his most used EDC like Waller and journal set ups since it has stayed the same from previous videos

    • @peter_parkour
      @peter_parkour ปีที่แล้ว +148

      You know TH-camrs just lie for content 🤷🏼

    • @tuomi1154
      @tuomi1154 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      @@peter_parkour yeah thats one theory, but we can never know which I think is the whole point of social media

    • @africanmermaid234
      @africanmermaid234 ปีที่แล้ว +34

      Brands brands brands brands brands brands brands brands.

    • @basementvibe2441
      @basementvibe2441 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      His journal wasn't really relevant to the video tho. Of course the stuff is what he says he uses but the overall idea of the video is how he organizes objects and objects that he uses that could be used by everyone in one bag. Not everyone uses a journal when they travel and it's not a major problem whether he shows that he packs one or not.

  • @Imevul
    @Imevul ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I moved to another country, and used to haul around a huge bag every time I traveled home to visit family. Only travel 2-4 times per year, but even then I realized I wanted to travel with only a smaller bag to reduce some of the hassle. I don't really need a fancy setup like this though. What I did instead was get an airtight storage box from IKEA and filled it with enough clothes for extended home visits, charging cables, hygiene products, etc. Now I just travel with my laptop and some tech stuff. I also leave any half-empty medicine I have left after a trip, so most times I don't even need to bring more.
    Next time I'll bring a laptop to leave there as well so I can just hop on a plane without any luggage at all. Also, instead of having smaller containers for each type of clothing, I do army rolls. Basically it's socks, underwear, and a tshirt all rolled up into one neat package. Very practical to have a clean set ready to go after a shower. Doesn't really work for shirts and jeans though, so those I fold.
    A bit expensive to have "duplicate" stuff that I don't use that often, but the convenience of breezing through the airports is well worth it.

  • @marketguy2
    @marketguy2 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Great video. Your presentation was as organized as your bag. Thanks for some really great ideas.

  • @neilsbruno9842
    @neilsbruno9842 ปีที่แล้ว

    That backpack is amazing. Thank you for your videos.

  • @xxtiamide
    @xxtiamide ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great video! I'd be really interested to see how you might pack for a really REALLY cold climate!

  • @CoryBurke
    @CoryBurke ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Dude! This was a fantastic, straight to the point, informative video! I love the setup and all the recommendations. The bag looks bad-ass. I typically travel with a Samsonite 19" roller and a backpack, so I never have to check anything, and I would love to force myself down even further to a one bag setup like this. Appreciate the info! Cheers!

    • @skskitta4940
      @skskitta4940 ปีที่แล้ว

      lekker uitbundig he hihi

  • @elizabethrufener7280
    @elizabethrufener7280 ปีที่แล้ว

    Darn Tough wool socks are my absolute favorite. I wear them year round in San Diego and wherever I go and can be worn multiple days. 🧦 Thanks for another great video!

  • @MrAnkit-pq7xf
    @MrAnkit-pq7xf ปีที่แล้ว

    really really nice bro, from the core of my heart

  • @madhuvjk
    @madhuvjk ปีที่แล้ว +655

    I love how realistic this was. I get travel anxiety a lot and having lighter and simplified luggage would help me loads.And the merino wool recommendation is fantastic! Was wondering though if you've tried Uniqlo's merino line and if you like it?

    • @ogi22
      @ogi22 ปีที่แล้ว +89

      Almost everything was so perfect... untill he brought that tactical flashlight... I literally spilled my coffee... in a spray pattern over my desk.
      So minimalistic clothes, nice pack... and a LOG for a flashlight... Don't get me wrong, I AM THE GADGET GUY. I usually have up to 5 different knives and 3 flashlights on or near me all the time. But for that flashlight he could have my latest purchase and love - Fenix E-lite. Or any small, rechargable O-light ones. Or even a small rechargable noname you can buy at any sport store.
      He is going on a business trip, not to kill baddies in the jungle with a flashlight 😁

    • @userunavailable__
      @userunavailable__ ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I find Indian audience everywhere 🇮🇳

    • @nataraja4645
      @nataraja4645 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      By the way where do I get this type of bags in India

    • @molonlabe9602
      @molonlabe9602 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @@ogi22 True...I carry an inexpensive LED flashlight that's not much bigger than the AAA battery used to power it. AAA batteries are everywhere and who really needs another charging cable while traveling. Besides, in a pinch, there's a flashlight option on most smart phones.

    • @robinh9047
      @robinh9047 ปีที่แล้ว +31

      @@ogi22 You spilled coffee all over your desk because he packed a flashlight you don't prefer?

  • @AnthonyAiroldi
    @AnthonyAiroldi ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Fast to the point and super pertinent! Love your video! Also just wondering, have you consider switching your power packs for a 100w or more Anker one with multiple usb c/a ports or do you find it more convenient to have both since your cellphone will mostly charge next to your bed and computer stays at the desk? Have a great day!

  • @LuisMolfino
    @LuisMolfino 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Amazing tips and products. Thanks Maurice!

  • @Corona_Paul
    @Corona_Paul 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Dude you just sold me on the backpack! Subscribed bro

  • @Dracomies
    @Dracomies ปีที่แล้ว +16

    As a fellow Onebagger I do have some suggestions.
    I actually wouldn’t use this backpack. It’s not good for Onebag travel because of its weight. Without packing the backpack, it starts at 4.5 pounds. That’s a deal-breaker. Especially in flights like EVA, New Zealand, Emirates where you have a max load out of 15 lbs. So a 4.5 lb backpack Is a no-go. For $100 less you can get something like the Bellroy Transit which not only weights much less but carries just as much.
    I would replace the Apple chargers and swap them out for smaller Anker chargers. That move alone would save you much in weight and volume.
    I would only bring 1 flashlight and something lighter. There’s no reason to carry 3 flashlights that add even more weight to your 4.5 pound bag.
    I’d ditch the Orbit. I actually think it’s your crutch. What it does is no different from other containers that can potentially weigh less. You are confined to carrying that around with you - and it's become your crutch imo :P
    I’d use different packing cubes than Cipway. Those weigh nearly 11 ounces. By swapping to either something like the Eaglecreek Specter or Tripped, those weigh only 4 ounces, so you could save about 8 ounces right there.
    I’d swap out white shoes and use black running shoes instead. Imo black running shoes are far more versatile. You can bring them to the streets, they don't get dirty, you don't have to baby them, and in this case you don't have to bring special wipes for them, you can bring them to the gym or dress up with a dress-shirt and walk into a club or date.
    I’d change out the socks and pare them down to 3 and use DarnTough socks instead. DarnTough socks, because they are merino wool can go weeks on end without odor. That will save you a bit of weight there.
    I’d swap out the Sandisk and use something smaller and compact like the Samsung Bar or equivalent. That cuts down on weight and volume. ie it's the size of half a pinky. That said, I’m not the same video producer as you and you likely need to carry that clunky thing - but otherwise for me, I found I was fine cutting it out. You're only gone for 1 week anyway.
    For anyone on a budget, instead of using Unbound Merino wool (which honestly I found quite scratchy) you can also use synthetics. So for hot weather, Uniqlo Airism. And for cold weather, Uniqlo Heat or 32 Degrees Heat.

    • @Dracomies
      @Dracomies ปีที่แล้ว

      Forgot to mention that I think it's important to pack flat food. So something like a bag of dried mangos or a pack of beef jerky, ie Old Trapper's Peppered Beef Jerky. These fold flat, take up very little weight but are filling. I'd also bring a collapsible water bottle. A microfiber towel. Some diarrhea medicine. Sunblock that you prefer, since many countries will not have them. Also a tiny coin pouch since many of the street food stalls will just dump coins at you.

    • @L-Man-Gaming
      @L-Man-Gaming ปีที่แล้ว +7

      The only thing I did not agree with was the back pack choice. I get leaving extra space, but let’s be real here, my man had an extra 10L of space he wasn’t even using. And he flat out said he does t even use three of the pockets. On top of the fact that he is particular about his slings but got a backpack that has a sling built in? I feel like this was an advertisement for the backpack, probably sponsored.
      I think everything else was great, but it’s pretty obvious a 22 to 25L backpack would have been perfect.

    • @OM-ex1st
      @OM-ex1st ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Agreed. That bag is terribly heavy. Anyone in the know would never use something that weighs that much.

    • @missmayflower
      @missmayflower ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Synthetic clothing really stinks after just one wear. No thanks.

  • @gratitude1
    @gratitude1 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    One addition or change - I take a small shampoo BAR instead of bottle of shampoo. The bar is easier to carry, no risk of leaks, lighter and compact. One small dry shampoo bar is good for several washes. Yes, of course, hotels will provide, but there are situations that you need your own, and/or in a pinch use the provided shampoo bottles for laundry and your own dry shampoo bar for hair washing. This is especially helpful for people with longer hair! I've traveled many places for extended time with only the smallest roller bag (overhead compartment size). Never had issues with too little. Unless you are going very remote most basics (hygeine, clothing, comfort) are available. The tech is not - and most critical.

  • @michalurbanful
    @michalurbanful ปีที่แล้ว

    That's some well thought out kit. Thanks for sharing! Regards from the Czech Republic! :)

  • @Legionnaire2010
    @Legionnaire2010 ปีที่แล้ว

    What an awesome video! makes me want to buy everything you carry 😀 Great job! 👏

  • @christablokhuis1079
    @christablokhuis1079 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you for sharing! And for referring to a female's option for the merino wool clothes. I also appreciat reading the comments that suggest adding a few more (specific) things. Here's my own: bring a shampoo / shower gel bar. It has the size of a 5-6 cm soap bar, but is completely free of plastics, and you can use it for 3-4 longer than any fluid shampoo or shower gel. You can easily pack it in travel soap holder. Enjoy your trip!

    • @owieprone
      @owieprone 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Completely agree on the bar shampoo and conditioner, I tend to either cut them smaller for travelling (qtr for 2 weeks), or keep the small bits when it disintegrates and stick them a small screwtop tupperware for travelling, you can get a full wash of waist-length thick hair off one thumbnail-sized bit of shampoo. Also gets round the stupid liquid rules. Solid deodorant is also great. I'm not sold on tablet toothpaste, it's alright for a few days though, saves space if you don't have a shoe to shove it in and no leakage worries.

  • @sweetwater88
    @sweetwater88 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Of course, always pack for the type of travel you plan to do. My travels involve a lot of hiking and walking so white sneakers are a big no-no, street grim and hiking trail dust will quickly dirt white shoes. All black sneakers/trainers are the way to go. So a way I cut down on packing was to find a nice pair of trainers designed with hiking in mind. I find the Adidas Terrex line has some great options.

    • @brianloper6669
      @brianloper6669 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      That was my go to as well. Wore my boots for the flight, packed the shoes

  • @bantamgolf
    @bantamgolf ปีที่แล้ว

    Love this video. Will be ordering this backpack asap. Thank you!

  • @chirantha
    @chirantha ปีที่แล้ว

    Pretty awesome setup you got there! Thanks for sharing.

  • @TheGoodTheBadTheRowdy
    @TheGoodTheBadTheRowdy ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Great setup for travel! For me, I also pack a dark angel medical kit, 2 extra tourniquets, grayl filter bottle, paper maps of places I will be visiting, pair of crocs as I usually have shoes on but may need something to stand in shower with or for casual outting and needing foot wear that breathes. Recently switched out my macbook for my ipad mini 6 as it can do everything I use my laptop for, hand sanitizer. Wish I could use a bag this small! But I also have a spare Gieves & Hawkes suit, dress shoes, belt, soft armor, and etc depending if its for general meetings/travel or if working PSD/EP or HVAR Operations stateside or abroad.
    Thanks for the great video!

    • @Phoenix.219
      @Phoenix.219 ปีที่แล้ว

      Why do u pack 2 extra tourniquets? I am really asking out of curiousity bcz even in my hospital we use 2 and they are being used for few months that I have been there. But if u have some health condition where u regular need some med injected or u have to take blood out for some tests then I understand.

    • @TheGoodTheBadTheRowdy
      @TheGoodTheBadTheRowdy ปีที่แล้ว

      @@Phoenix.219 there not for use solely ON duty as a Dep, nor solely at MY hospital, as I am also an RN, Ive stopped to help injured, and have had a tq fail. During riots one of my deputies was stabbed and is now paralyzed by the way, by rioters... and applied a tq to an arm and also to leg of his TRO. How many MasCas events have you responded to? We had a massive pile up because of snow and reckless drivers, just 10h ago... Ive been driving home from work and seen a landscapers edger, the blade cracked and scatter and gone into a few spots on them...
      Im surprised you work in I.M. and dont believe or understand redundancies...

    • @randomaccount3364
      @randomaccount3364 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@Phoenix.219 Two is one, one is none. If one fails, you have another. If there are multiple wounds, you have another. If the wound you sealed off first is determined to be safe to seal off in a lower location or can be sealed off better as the first was a rush job, you have another.
      This isn't really a hospital thing. In a hospital you have everything at your disposal, it doesn't matter how many you carry because you can just go to a storage room and find another. Especially in a hospital where I don't think they'd use a tourniquet much at all, because you're already at the hospital just do the damn treatment. This is a first responder/camper/survivalist habit to carry a redundancy of medical supplies in an environment where the only supplies that exist are your own, particularly of tourniquets in the case of American first responders who need to cater to knife or gunshot wounds.

  • @zazamospanapolus
    @zazamospanapolus ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Every traveller has different travel needs and will have different travel set ups. While I don't think I could use your set up 100%, your organizational technique and methodical thought process in this video was still very helpful!

  • @tatk
    @tatk ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for the video. This is the best backpack I have ever seen. I want to travel. And only ysing this backpack.

  • @lindawarren6721
    @lindawarren6721 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you, I needed this guidance, I am a overpacker!

  • @wayman88
    @wayman88 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    That backpack looks cool but for $315 I'll respectfully pass. The eBags Motherlode backpack is on sale for $89 right now and is bigger, lighter, has everything this backpack has plus a laptop compartment and also comes with a lifetime warranty. I've been using the Motherlode for domestic and international one-bag travel since pre-covid and it's rock solid. When I pull the tightening straps on it I've been able to stow it under the plane seat in front of me to avoid gate-checking it when all storage bins are full. Lastly, the merino wool suggestion is 100% critical for one-bag travel as well as quick dry underwear.

  • @EdwoodCA
    @EdwoodCA ปีที่แล้ว +9

    *9:50** THIS concept has sold me on this bag!* The fold out mesh bag for my on-person small items to go thru TSA... will save so much hassle/time vs fishing it out of a plastic bin / tray! Just a personal pet peeve of mine that ups the value for me. YMMV. But the price of the bag is not a value for my limited travels.... so, I might have to find an alternative bag and or fabricate my own version of the fold out mesh bag into my exiting bag[s]. DIY FTW, if I can pull it off.

    • @jacquigriffin5973
      @jacquigriffin5973 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Also at this cost, would thieves want the bag itself, never mind the contents?

  • @angelsancheese
    @angelsancheese 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Damn that bag is super nice. The water proof compartment or the pocket in the back for passport keeping it extra safe is really nice

  • @friktionrc
    @friktionrc ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Def one for the single traveller or a couple travelling for short breaks. The one thing that used to put me off using rucksacks like this when I used to travel alone was that they were so easy to break into, but these new designs look way stronger than the thin material we used to get back in the 70s and 80s. I have no need for one of these any more, but watching this video has made me want one hahahaha Nice job

  • @maryannrose7957
    @maryannrose7957 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I’ve traveled for months at a time and the ONE extra item I always bring is a power strip with USB and universal outlets.
    It has an extension cord, which is invaluable in NY… and anywhere really! And when I was in Chile I had my computer in one universal outlet and a Chilean lamp in the other, no problem! The ability to charge multiple items simultaneously is key!

    • @progression_decibel
      @progression_decibel 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Do you have the name/model of that strip with universal outlets?

  • @AnywhereGoes
    @AnywhereGoes ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Awesome set up! Very inspiring, totally agree with the extra glasses- it's a must. Do you ever get any issues with travelling with a safety razor in a carry-on?

  • @Koropatel_Koro
    @Koropatel_Koro 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    WOW. That was both interesting and useful to watch!

  • @sprintslow
    @sprintslow ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Amazing travel kit! So well done.

  • @aliabdaal
    @aliabdaal ปีที่แล้ว +106

    Amazing video

    • @tristank275
      @tristank275 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Hey Ali! You should make travel content too haha

    • @Bred_555
      @Bred_555 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Imagine not getting likes 😂💀

    • @Ansh.Katiyar
      @Ansh.Katiyar หลายเดือนก่อน

      no one noticed you here? lol