First time bikepacking.
Moderators: Bearbonesnorm, Taylor, Chew
First time bikepacking.
Hello everyone,
My first time here and first time bikepacking.
Basically I've never bikepacked but I was told about this site by a friend of mine.
I'm a keen mountain biker and occasional gravel rider, so my fitness is pretty good.
After waiting for a few years I now have the opportunity to do the Way of the Roses coast to coast ride this year, in August. Planning to do the ride over 3 days. I've got a Kona blast hardtail which I'll be using for the ride.
My question is I'm not sure what kind of bikepacking equipment I'll need to carry my stuff in. I'm not camping, staying in BnBs.
So I've been looking at frame bags & pannier racks and panniers. But all the stuff I've seen (Amazon, eBay etc) doesn't fill me with confidence. Bit cheap looking to be honest. It just didn't look very sturdy and durable. One of the limitations is I don't have any bolt holes on the rear of the bike to fix a pannier rack. So I've been looking at racks that fix to the seatpost, it's not a carbon seatpost.
So any help/advice/recommendations would be much appreciated.
Thanks.
Ian.
My first time here and first time bikepacking.
Basically I've never bikepacked but I was told about this site by a friend of mine.
I'm a keen mountain biker and occasional gravel rider, so my fitness is pretty good.
After waiting for a few years I now have the opportunity to do the Way of the Roses coast to coast ride this year, in August. Planning to do the ride over 3 days. I've got a Kona blast hardtail which I'll be using for the ride.
My question is I'm not sure what kind of bikepacking equipment I'll need to carry my stuff in. I'm not camping, staying in BnBs.
So I've been looking at frame bags & pannier racks and panniers. But all the stuff I've seen (Amazon, eBay etc) doesn't fill me with confidence. Bit cheap looking to be honest. It just didn't look very sturdy and durable. One of the limitations is I don't have any bolt holes on the rear of the bike to fix a pannier rack. So I've been looking at racks that fix to the seatpost, it's not a carbon seatpost.
So any help/advice/recommendations would be much appreciated.
Thanks.
Ian.
- whitestone
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Welcome
Staying in B&Bs you don't need a lot - one set of clothes (the second B&B won't know you wore it last night
), a pair of shoes/sandals if your cycling shoes aren't walking compatible, toothbrush and toothpaste. That's about it.
There's a lot of generic "Chinese" bikepacking bags that get rebranded. Above those you have companies like Acepac (not sure if they've a UK importer now, Stu will know), Alpkit who make decent bikepacking bags. Then at the top end you have companies like Wildcat and Revelate, much more expensive but it's top notch kit. For the above kit you probably only need a seat pack of about 10L and say a top tube bag or Stemcell for to-hand riding snacks. The seat pack straps to the seatpost and saddle rails - a cut up inner tube over the seat post helps protect it.
The other option, it looks a bit old school, are the Caradice saddle bags. My wife did Lands End to John o'Groats using one in some "interesting" weather so it's more than doable.

Staying in B&Bs you don't need a lot - one set of clothes (the second B&B won't know you wore it last night

There's a lot of generic "Chinese" bikepacking bags that get rebranded. Above those you have companies like Acepac (not sure if they've a UK importer now, Stu will know), Alpkit who make decent bikepacking bags. Then at the top end you have companies like Wildcat and Revelate, much more expensive but it's top notch kit. For the above kit you probably only need a seat pack of about 10L and say a top tube bag or Stemcell for to-hand riding snacks. The seat pack straps to the seatpost and saddle rails - a cut up inner tube over the seat post helps protect it.
The other option, it looks a bit old school, are the Caradice saddle bags. My wife did Lands End to John o'Groats using one in some "interesting" weather so it's more than doable.
Better weight than wisdom, a traveller cannot carry
-
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Hi Ian. Doing the WoR on a Blast. Isntit better taking the gravel bike especially since there's hardly any offroading from what I recall. I did the western half on 25mm tires and they were adequate
Welcome to the world of BPing btw and like me, Imsure you'll learn and appreciate loads...

Welcome to the world of BPing btw and like me, Imsure you'll learn and appreciate loads...
- Bearbonesnorm
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Re: First time bikepacking.
As Bob says, if you've accommodation sorted then you need very little, thus not much luggage either ... remember, the more space you have available, then the more rubbish you'll take.
I'd be tempted to go for for a saddle-bag of 12l -15l for my main capacity. While some are 'better' than others, bad luggage is hard to come by now and all will work - it's really just a matter of budget. To that I'd add a TT bag or small frame bag for tools and snacks and also a small bum-bag to carry the essentials that I'd rather not lose.
I'd be tempted to go for for a saddle-bag of 12l -15l for my main capacity. While some are 'better' than others, bad luggage is hard to come by now and all will work - it's really just a matter of budget. To that I'd add a TT bag or small frame bag for tools and snacks and also a small bum-bag to carry the essentials that I'd rather not lose.
May the bridges you burn light your way
Re: First time bikepacking.
Way of the roses is a road ride unless there is a different off road one . planning on doing it this year as well but setting off from homw adds 30 ish miles
As for luggage what they all say
Rear seat pack as big as you want( generally use a 7 litre one as forces you to TLS ( take less stuff) and some form of front rack that allows you to fit a dry bag to it as much easier to load and unload. Acepac ALPKIT wildcat whomever you prefer / can afford.
B and B bike whatever you want when you get to the hotel ( change of clothes for me )and the tools and clothes for the ride.
As for luggage what they all say
Rear seat pack as big as you want( generally use a 7 litre one as forces you to TLS ( take less stuff) and some form of front rack that allows you to fit a dry bag to it as much easier to load and unload. Acepac ALPKIT wildcat whomever you prefer / can afford.
B and B bike whatever you want when you get to the hotel ( change of clothes for me )and the tools and clothes for the ride.
Re: First time bikepacking.
Hi everyone,
Hope I'm replying to everyone and thanks all for your help.
Firstly I'm very much a believer in buy cheap buy twice. So I'm after decent stuff & who knows if this trip goes well I might take up more bikepacking.
At least now I've got some decent brands to start looking at & more ideas about what I'll need to take & how to pack. The other consideration is weight distribution on the bike. I assume you don't want all the weight on the back of the bike?
To the person who mentioned the gravel bike. I don't actually own a gravel bike. The blast is my kind of all round road/gravel bike with low rolling resistance tyres.
I'll start looking online now for bikepacking stuff.
Ian.
Hope I'm replying to everyone and thanks all for your help.
Firstly I'm very much a believer in buy cheap buy twice. So I'm after decent stuff & who knows if this trip goes well I might take up more bikepacking.
At least now I've got some decent brands to start looking at & more ideas about what I'll need to take & how to pack. The other consideration is weight distribution on the bike. I assume you don't want all the weight on the back of the bike?
To the person who mentioned the gravel bike. I don't actually own a gravel bike. The blast is my kind of all round road/gravel bike with low rolling resistance tyres.
I'll start looking online now for bikepacking stuff.
Ian.
-
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Ian... If you want the very best saddlepack (IMO) then it has to be the Spinelock by Revelate. Comes in two sizes so you could go for the 13 (or is it 11) litres to help you take less stuff
Strong as anything too and the shape means you don't lose any capacity whilst carrying unhappy shaped items (ie. ones that don't squish small enough to yake that funny space between the seatpost and before the pack becomes normal sized/volume).

Re: First time bikepacking.
Welcome! I got loads of good advice when I posted before heading out on my first bivvy. You can see what I asked and the advice I got in that thread -> viewtopic.php?p=201830#p201830
There are theories at the bottom of my jargon.
- Cheeky Monkey
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Weight distribution- depends how much you're carrying. Better more at back or frame bag than on a bar bag.
Most bags are fine, even secondhand. Just get whatever you can, if the bug takes then maybe get particular about it.
All IMO
Most bags are fine, even secondhand. Just get whatever you can, if the bug takes then maybe get particular about it.
All IMO

Re: First time bikepacking.
Hmm, not sure about that at all.
I’ve been using a tapered Alpkit airlok dry bag as my only seatpack for the last 6 or 7 years. Think it cost about £12 when I bought it.
If you don’t know if you are going to do this regularly, I would definitely buy cheap (or buy used).
- voodoo_simon
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Footwear is probably the biggest issue for BnB style riding and going minimal, flip flops or sandals for compactness or I’ve used inov8 barefoot shoes in the past. Other than that, you won’t need more than a t shirt and shorts for the evening and maybe a thin fleece for heading to the pub plus basic wash kit
Re: First time bikepacking.
Refining your gear is a journey in and of itself if you get the bug and a bottomless money pit if you want to let it be
I've been B&B touring on my gravel bike a couple of times and I just used my usual bikepacking gear but with a smaller dry bag for my bar harness: a 6L dry bag in a seat harness, 8L dry bag in a bar harness, 4L half frame bag all from wildcat and a top tube snack bag from acepac. Spare clothes, toiletries and puffy went in the seat pack, electronics & tools / tubes go in the frame bag, snacks in the top tube bag and the bar bag contained the stuff I'd need during the day: extra layers, water proofs, etc. If I was to make things slightly touring friendlier at the cost of a bit more weight, I'd consider getting a top loading bar bag to make things easier to access, something like a CamelChops Mr Heckles or a Restrap Bar Pack. If I was going for more than 3-4 days I did look at getting a Ortlieb Quick Rack and their gravel panniers but ended up just getting a bigger seat pack because that forced me not to overpack and that bag only really gets emptied at the end of the day anyway so accessibility isn't really an issue.

I've been B&B touring on my gravel bike a couple of times and I just used my usual bikepacking gear but with a smaller dry bag for my bar harness: a 6L dry bag in a seat harness, 8L dry bag in a bar harness, 4L half frame bag all from wildcat and a top tube snack bag from acepac. Spare clothes, toiletries and puffy went in the seat pack, electronics & tools / tubes go in the frame bag, snacks in the top tube bag and the bar bag contained the stuff I'd need during the day: extra layers, water proofs, etc. If I was to make things slightly touring friendlier at the cost of a bit more weight, I'd consider getting a top loading bar bag to make things easier to access, something like a CamelChops Mr Heckles or a Restrap Bar Pack. If I was going for more than 3-4 days I did look at getting a Ortlieb Quick Rack and their gravel panniers but ended up just getting a bigger seat pack because that forced me not to overpack and that bag only really gets emptied at the end of the day anyway so accessibility isn't really an issue.
Re: First time bikepacking.
Ok thanks everyone. At least now I've got a few ideas about what & how to pack. I'm looking on ebay and Facebook marketplace for used saddlebags and panniers and racks. There seems to be more saddlebags available so I might go down that route.
Re: First time bikepacking.
If you're a Cycling UK member, then you get 10% off at Restrap...
And, Alpkit have discounts quite often too, like now.
And, Alpkit have discounts quite often too, like now.
There are theories at the bottom of my jargon.
- fatbikephil
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Re: First time bikepacking.
Bikepacking bags regularly come up in the classified here too.
Re: First time bikepacking.
First off welcome.
If you are staying BnB then you can go real minimum. For that type of trip I’d go flat pedal and therefore no second pair of footwear needed.Spare t-shirt and shorts that would do three days in accom, you can dry the riding gear each night if it gets wet. IME better to go minimal and build up as you gather experience. If BnB then any misery is limited to one day
If you are staying BnB then you can go real minimum. For that type of trip I’d go flat pedal and therefore no second pair of footwear needed.Spare t-shirt and shorts that would do three days in accom, you can dry the riding gear each night if it gets wet. IME better to go minimal and build up as you gather experience. If BnB then any misery is limited to one day
Re: First time bikepacking.
I have a 15 litre Topeak Backloader saddlebag I'm looking to move on. Used a handful of times. I cam send photos tonight if you're interested?
- Cheeky Monkey
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Re: First time bikepacking.
If we're whoring our wares
I've still got all this stuff:
viewtopic.php?f=9&t=23042
The Apidura bar bag and pocket might be of interest. I have better images and am open to offers.

viewtopic.php?f=9&t=23042
The Apidura bar bag and pocket might be of interest. I have better images and am open to offers.