Hi! I am looking to invest in a new over-the-shoulder bag heavy duty enough for my around-the-year biking to work regimen. I'm considering a Chrome bag or Timbuk2, but recommendations for these have come from dudes. Any women out there who can offer some insight?
I'm really sorry if this question has been posted before. I tried searching the forums, but didn't find anything. If it has already been discussed, a link to that post would be great!
Thanks,
Betsy
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Agreed--racks and panniers are great. My winter rig has a rack and I used a Trek bag that's sort of grocery carrier. Not ideal (not waterproof), but a lot nicer than toting something on myback. You will definitely be less thrilled about a messenger bag when it's 90 degrees outside, too. I still like to have one, though, for short trips. Even as I'm about to put a rack on my road bike, I will still probably occassionally use a bag on my back.
Hey Betsy,
Po Campo's doing a trunk show today at Florodora Shoes, 348 S. Dearborn. Our rack bags are pretty spacious and then you don't have to carry something on your back. (We actually started Po Campo because we were sick of the shoulder strain and sweaty back problem). Stop by if you're in the area and we'll show you what we have.
- Maria, Po Campo co-founder
@ everyone who responded "rack and panniers are best". Sunlite...make a water proof messenger pannier that when you take it off your bike, it can becomes a messenger bag. I added think link to the bag in a previous response to this thread. And you can also get a water proof bag as well. to the lady that reponded on the waterproof grocery bags, try an insulated bag, they have a liner them.
Rene'
I tried a couple bags, but just found them uncomfortable, sweat and neck tension-inducing. I kept a Timbuk bag which I use for trips to the train, etc. The caveat is short trips only because the cross-body strap is uncomfortable. I think messenger bags just aren't ideal for women's bodies.
I gave up and switched to rack/panniers or rack/milk crate. Lot easier on the back to let the bike carry the load.
O.K. Here's my issue with a rack. I'm usually carrying my laptop, and somehow I think it's safer in a bag on my body than bouncing around on a rack on my bike. Is that rational?
I just traded my chrome messenger bag for a chrome backpack and i like the backpack a lot more. the messenger back didn't fit my body and looked weird in the boob area, and it really hurt my back if i was carrying anything more than a few notebooks.
The backpack fit is super comfy but i do find that I don't usually carry enough stuff to fill it. I usually carry around a couple notebooks, a planner, pencil case, lock, water bottle, and a few other things and theres just sooo much room - which is actually good when it comes to grocery shopping.
If you wreck with it in a rack it is going to the ground with, maybe, the weight of your bike on top of it and a cushioned case would probably save it. If you wreck with it on you and fall on it even if it is padded there is a good chance it is toast.
I try to avoid biking with a computer but when I do I carry it on a bike with a basket and strapped down well so it is protected as much as possible.
Michele said:
O.K. Here's my issue with a rack. I'm usually carrying my laptop, and somehow I think it's safer in a bag on my body than bouncing around on a rack on my bike. Is that rational?
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