What’s In Your Get-Home Bag This Year?

BlueSkyWanderer

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May 6, 2025
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What’s In Your Get-Home Bag This Year?

Curious what everyone’s packing in their get-home bags this year—any new additions or things you’ve ditched? I’m reconsidering my water filtration setup and switching to more compact gear. What’s proven indispensable for you lately?
 
I’m reconsidering my water filtration setup and switching to more compact gear. What’s proven indispensable for you lately?

Switching to more compact gear makes sense—back when I first put my bag together, I crammed in a full-size pump filter. These days, I’ve settled on a Sawyer Mini. It’s light, foolproof, and takes up hardly any space. I keep a couple of water purification tablets as a backup too, just in case. The last storm knocked out our tap for a day, and I was grateful for redundancy.

Aside from water, I realized extra socks are a must. Feet take a beating, and it’s miserable slogging home with wet ones. I’ve also swapped out thick multi-tools for a smaller folding blade and a tiny screwdriver, since the big ones rarely left my pack in years past.

BlueSkyWanderer, what are you switching to? I’ve heard good
 
Switched out my old flashlight for a little hand-crank lantern this year—no more dead batteries when I actually need light. Also tucked in a few herbal salves and bandages; blisters and bug bites are a pain if you’re hoofing it home. Found I don’t really need cooking gear for my usual route, so that freed up space for a small rain poncho. Anyone else carry homemade remedies or is it just me?
 
I’m reconsidering my water filtration setup and switching to more compact gear. What’s proven indispensable for you lately?
Switching to more compact gear makes sense—back when I first put my bag together, I crammed in a full-size pump filter. These days, I’ve settled on a Sawyer Mini. It’s light, foolproof, and takes up hardly any space. I keep a couple of water purification tablets as a backup too, just in case. The last storm knocked out our tap for a day, and I was grateful for redundancy.

Aside from water, I realized extra socks are a must. Feet take a beating, and it’s miserable slogging home with wet ones. I’ve also swapped out thick multi-tools for a smaller folding blade and a tiny screwdriver, since the big ones rarely left my pack in years past.

BlueSkyWanderer, what are you switching to? I’ve heard good

Redundancy with water is so important—totally with you on packing both a tiny filter and tabs. I made the same switch to a compact filter after hauling a bulky pump for years; what a relief for my old shoulders! Agree on extra socks, too. Nothing slows you down quicker than sore, soggy feet. I haven’t thought about downsizing my multitool, but your point makes sense—maybe I’m carting around more than I need.
 
I’ve heard good

Couldn’t agree more, redundancy with water just gives real peace of mind, especially when things go sideways. Felt the difference in my back too after swapping that old filter for a tiny one. You make a good point about multitools—I’m guilty of carrying a whole “just in case” toolkit, but honestly, it’s mostly dead weight. Might be time to rethink what actually gets used. Are there any little tools you still consider essential for