Everything I Own 2023

Nothing says ‘that weird time between Xmas and New Year’ more than an annual list of all the stuff I keep in a bag and carry with me like a totally normal person… right? Well even if nobody reads this I use it as a useful log of what I have / had, what worked and what was ditched quickly and when I discovered that perfect thing that still sparks joy (is Marie Kondo still a thing?).

I’m gonna mix this up slightly by just discussing the new stuff then pulling it all together with the weights table at the end. Starting with the thing I’m typing on right now; possibly the greatest laptop ever created…

Asus Expertbook B9

Let’s cover off the best bit first… this thing is 990g. It honestly feels like a toy holding the thing in one hand. This is, in itself, prettty cool but when you check out the specs on this bad boy you realise I’m not overstating how perfect this machine is (at least for me);

  • 13th gen 10-core i7 processor
  • 32GB RAM (sweet)
  • 2TB SSD (very rare to find this)
  • 2880 x 1800 OLED screen
  • 2x USB-C and 1x USB-A ports
  • full HDMI port (rare these days)
  • 1080p camera (Windows Hello)
  • awesome (Dolby) audio
  • US Mil-Std certified (tough)

This thing runs like a dream, almost silent and barely any heat output – save for high performance activities but with a beefy processor these don’t take long anyway. The keyboard is a delight with a perfect amount of depth and response, and the trackpad becomes a numberpad with the flick of a switch (if you need such a thing).

It replaces my 6+ year old, 1248g HP Spectre x360 which has been a wonderful machine but the 8th gen core i7 processor was struggling with Windows 11 and I had outgrown the 1TB SSD (relying heavily on cloud storage).

The Asus doesn’t have a touch screen but I’m old so rarely used that anyway – plus I can throw away my barely touched 16g HP touch-pen and even the 10g HDMI adapter. The Dolby audio output is better than my 62g Anker Soudcore Ace 0 portable speaker so that’s gone too (although I seldom used it anyway). All up that’s 346g shaved.

OK so this thing wasn’t cheap at $3249 AUD (on sale from $3649!) but it just ticks so many boxes. Suffice to say I absolutely love it and given that my livelihood depends on my laptop I reckon it’s justifiable.

Lowe Alpine Escape Flight 36L

This bag was a recommendation from the good folks over at /r/onebag. I have loved my 3.5-yr old Minaal 3.0 35L backpack but – to me – it feel unnecessarily heavy at 1491g or 1555g with rain cover. It has some superb features but I still miss my good old Tortuga Air from a decade back which weighed in at just 1030g for 35L.

Enter the Escape Flight 36L from Rab (branded Lowe Alpine; a brand I remember from my childhood in the UK). This thing weighs just 967g (although it does ship with a removable 73g shoulder strap that I don’t use).

This bag cost me just $189 AUD shipped (as opposed to the $521 AUD asking price on the Minaal right now – plus $51 shipping!) making it a budgetworthy offering.

Features-wise the Escape 36L is very much like a pared down Minaal. It opens the same way with a ‘scoop’ clamshell from the base of the bag, although the Escape has a zippered mesh section to the entire internal front whereas the Minaal has two zippered mesh sections to the internal back. There is no other organisation internally (save for the 2 internal compression straps) which does mean you’ll be relying more heavily on packing cubes (fine by me).

The top easy access pocket is the full width of the bag and maybe 1.5L but the zip is not the full width of the pocket making access a little trickier than the two easy access pockets on the Minaal. The laptop sleeve is minimal but padded and features the all-critical false bottom, it’s a long way from the Minaal Nest but it’s the absence of features like these that provide the weight saving and my new laptop in US Mil-std ruggedised anyway.

The straps are padded and comfortable (although thinner than the Minaal) and they can also be stashed in to compartments on the back enabling the bag to be used as a duffle (although stuffing the straps in to their requisite compartments can be tricky when the bag is full). The Minaal wins again here as the zip cover provides a much simple means of achieving the strap-free look although this is a feature I never used anyway as I always carry as a backpack. There are no load lifters but there’s a capable sternum strap and fully loaded the bag feels very comfortable and secure – possibly even moreso than the Minaal.

The Escape has a side mesh water bottle pocket which is actually better than that on the Minaal offering good stretch. There’s also a hidden passport pocket in the laptop sleeve but again, not on a par with the Minaal’s secret passport zipper on the back of the bag. Finally the bag is not waterproof and there’s no rain cover but thankfully the Minaal rain cover fits perfectly and it’s just 64g.

The dimensions are 55 x 33 x 23 which makes the bag compliant with most carry-on dimension requirements and very similar to Minaal’s 55 x 35 x 20… which makes you wonder where the extra 1L comes from…

All that said; I bought this bag for the capacity/weight ratio which is superb at 26.8g per litre – the extra 1L capacity is actually noticable because my gear, which was something of a struggle to squeeze in to the Minaal, fits in the Escape with ease. I’ve not tried the bag on a proper trip as yet (recent acquisition) but I am excited to. The weight saving here is 524g (allowing for the 64g rain cover).

Lencent 20W Universal Travel Charger

I knew someone would eventually make a lightweight universal travel charger for smartphones. The bricks usually pedalled as ‘universal travel chargers’ usually weigh more than 150g – this baby is just 61g which is less than the actual 20w charger that came with my phone. Actually sorry – this was an Apple device so it was sold separately – silly me.

The Lencent not only works in (almost) every country (offering UK, AU, US and EU charging pins) it also has both a USB-A and USB-C charging port (although only a 20W output so no fast charging two phones at once, all for a very reasonable $30 AUD. I have tested this on a couple of trips now and I’m delighted with it.

Lululemon ABC Slim-Fit 5-Pocket Pants

That is not a name I ever imagined I’d be typing in to my blog and yet… here I am; a corporate sellout in remarkably comfy pants.

And they are that. Rumour has it the ABC used to stand for ‘Anti Ball Crushing’ (although this has since been rebranded ‘Always Be Comfortable’) suffice to say the fit is superb and the four-way stretch allows for easy and comfortable movement. There is a hidden zippered pocket in the back and a neat keys/coins pocket in the front.

The ‘Warpstreme’ material is (very) breathable, anti wrinkle, quick drying, smoother than most travel pants, snag (and cat claw) resistant. It looks sharp and works just as well in a boardroom as ‘bored at home’. It’s not *amazing* in cold weather but it excels in heat.

These pants are available in a classic ‘formal’ pocket configuration (as opposed to the 5-pocket jeans style) and in regular fit (as opposed to the slim fit) but the differences are negligible (particularly in black) and paired with a belt and shirt these are perfectly fine for the few days of the year I’m in the office.

Despite multiple recommendations over the years, one of my hesitations with Lululemon has been their environmental credentials but they seem to have upped their game significantly in the last few years – releasing a Social Impact report that is genuinely impressive. I am also erring towards locally available products since I have spent an arm and a leg on international shipping and import taxes over the years. These pants are available in Australia for $129 AUD.

This is one of the two reasons I turned my back on my beloved Western Rise. I wore their Evolution 1.0 pants for many years and even had 4 pairs at one point but these pants now cost a whopping $265 AUD delivered. Worse than this the upgrade to Evolution 2.0 has involved a material changed from [96% Nylon / 4% Elastane] to [90% Nylon / 10% Elastane] leavingh the pants feeling noticably more synthetic. The ‘swishy’ noise is much more annoying and the comfort level is reduced. It’s a real shame as I their ‘onebag travel’ approach to product design is one I can absolutely get behind but these are no longer in my case of travelling pants.

The Lululemon pants weigh in at 398g as opposed to the 316g WR Evolution 1.0 (and 355g for WR Evolution 2.0) although this is offset as I only have two pairs (instead of the previous 3 WRs). That said – I may have to invest in something (likely heavy) for colder weather at some point.

Lululemon Commission Short 9″

So it turns out I’m a corporate sellout in remarkably comfy shorts too. Who knew that the clothes everyone else was buying were actually excellent technical performers and reasonably priced?

After almost 8 years my Outlier New Way Longs were just about done (zippers were shot), and Outlier only make the New Way Shorts these days (at $289 AUD delivered!) so an alternative was required.

The Commission relates to the ‘chino’ style pocket configuruation (i.e. not 5 pocket) but these shorts only come in this style and the pocket configuration is actually pretty great with a perfectly formed phone slip inside the front right pocket and a zippered pocket (for wallet and keys) in the front left pocket too.

The ‘WovenAir’ material is even more breathable than the ‘Warpstreme’ so much so that it has visible tiny holes in it (that thankfully don’t make the shorts see-through). This makes the material very quick drying and very light at just 234g a pair (as opposed to the Outlier NWL 277g). They’re a similar length too – at 9″ which is more of a boardshort than a short-short.

The fit adopts the ‘ABC’ technology of the pants which makes them very comfortable although they don’t have quite the ‘heavy’ drape of the Outlier shorts and don’t feel like they have quite the same durability. That said replacement is significantly more plausible at $79 AUD delivered per pair (a 72% cost saving over Outlier).

Citizen Wolf Merino V-neck Tee

My beloved Outlier Ultrafine Merino tees were sporting extra ventilation even at the end of last year and I hadn’t sourced a solution. This is mostly because the Outlier McKenzie 200gsm merino is untouchable, simply the best material out there. However each tee is now $258 AUD delivered so that’s another big nope from my quietly weeping credit card.

Citizen Wolf (a Sydney based startup) make custom fit tees using their patented ‘magic-fit’ combined with a trial and error free returns period and laser perfect cutting for future orders once the perfect fit is established.

The custom fit extends to the removal of scratchy labels (which I’ve never understood) and they offer a V-neck which I favour greatly. This of course means the fit cannot be faulted – it’s literally perfect.

They also make the tees in Sydney (how rare is that?) which massively reduces the environmental impact.

All up they are *almost* perfect… except the 150gsm merino they use (also Australian) just isn’t quite as soft and beautiful as Outlier’s. It is, however, comfortable, breathable, crease resistant, odour resistant, quick drying (quicker than Outlier) and pretty awesome. It’s also lighter (143g as opposed to Outlier’s 180g) and 42% cheaper at $149 delivered. Given the weight saving I’ve swapped out my 6 Outlier tees (1080g) for 7 CW tees (1001g) and thus far I’m feeling pretty happy with my decision.

Allbirds Trino Trunk

I really did try to love the super lightweight Uniqlo AIRism boxers – especially after so many rave reviews, but ultimately they’re still synthetic and while that works for some things… it doesn’t work there for me. I guess I’ve always been a natural materials kinda guy (hell my first blog post in 2015 was about the benefits of merino wool).

I wasn’t keen to go back to Icebreaker Anatomica having ditched them last year for durability issues so I was looking for a natural, lightweight, breathable, fitted, alternative; enter Allbirds Trino Trunk.

The Trino trunk is actually 65% tencel, 28% merino and 7% spandex but that still makes it 93% natural and remarkably cost effective at $36 AUD delivered when compared with entirely merino boxers.

The fit is remarkably excellent (snug in all the right places) and pilling is, thus far, minimal.

The weight is good at 64g although this is a sizeable increase on the Uniqlo AIRism 41g – 512g as opposed to 328g for all 8 pairs. It’s still better than the 70g Icebreaker Anatomica, the 74g Unbound boxers and the 85g Wool & Prince boxers.

Darn Tough Tactical Socks

I’ve been wearing Darn Tough socks for a while now but a recent new release attracted my attention; the all black Tactical brand. These are higher merino content [55% Merino / 43% Nylon / 2% Lycra] as opposed to the Light Hiker [43% Merino / 54% Nylon / 3% Lycra], this is particularly imortant for high friction clothing where a high nylon content can cause pilling.

The Tactical socks are also available in quarter length (halfway between crew and no-show) which creates a much more satisfactory seal above the ankle, frustrating bastard mozzies and reducing the amount of forest floor carried home after a hike.

They are available with confusing levels of ‘weight’ and ‘cushion’. I opted for:

3 pairs of lightweight no cushion quarter length ‘T4093’ 48g (for summer)

2 pairs of lightweight no cushion micro crew length ‘T4018’ 69g (for formal) and

2 pairs of midweight cushion micro crew ‘T4066’ 81g (for Winter / planes).

This all means I do indeed still have 7 pairs of socks 🙂 weighing in at 444g, a whopping 80g more than last years 364g but hopefully these will suit my use cases better and pill less too.

Matador Soap Case

Having discovered a single bar of soap that can do it all (Tilley’s coal tar soap – made in Australia), I needed to find a soap case that would work for Onebag travel.

The Matador Flatpak Soap Bar Case is designed for exactly that; offering dry-through technology (enabling the soap to dry out without making a soapy mess inside your Dopp kit) this thing fits the Tilleys 100g perfectly.

Despite being manufactured in the US there are Australian retailers including the awesome Rokolife who sourced mine for $25 AUD.

And that’s it for new stuff. I ditched a couple of things that weren’t being used like the Sea to Summit dry bag (clothes just get washed in the sink), the Griffin car charger (cars have USB ports these days), the Anker battery (less relevant now that the iPhone battery lasts so long) and my Ice watch (battery ran out and I didn’t miss it).

So with those changes in mind here’s the final weight tally:

The big ol’ geeky table of weight

CLOTHES
6Outlier Ultrafine Merino Tee (195 gsm) (1x worn)1801080
7NEW Citizen Wolf Merino V-neck Custom Fit Tee (150 gsm) (1x worn)1431001
1Icebreaker Elemental Zip Hoodie (330 gsm)590
1Ridge Merino Hyde Hoodie (275 gsm) (worn)482
1Arc’Teryx Atom LT Hoody358
2Libertad Merino Travel Shirt (130 gsm)230460
1prAna Brion Pants328
3Western Rise Evolution Pants (1x worn)316948
2NEW Lululemon ABC Slim-Fit 5-Pocket Pants (1x worn)398796
1Icebreaker Merino Oasis Leggings (200 gsm)168
2Outlier New Way Longs277554
2NEW Lululemon Commission Classic-Fit Short 9″234468
8Uniqlo AIRism Low Rise Boxer Briefs (1x worn)41328
8NEW Allbirds Trino Trunk (1x worn)64512
3Darn Tough Light Hiker Crew Socks (1x worn)60120
4Darn Tough Light Hiker Ankle Socks46184
3NEW Darn Tough Lightweight No Cushion Quarter Socks48144
2NEW Darn Tough Lightweight No Cushion Micro Crew Socks69138
2NEW Darn Tough Midweight Cushion Micro Crew Socks (1x worn)81162
1Icebreaker Merino Sierra Gloves (200 gsm)30
1Icebreaker Merino Pocket Beanie (200 gsm)40
1Buffwear Merino Buff (125 gsm)47
1Vivobarefoot Ra II Shoes510
1Adidas Ultraboost 22 Trainers (worn)660
1Adidas Adilette Aqua Slides Sandals278
1Plain Black Belt109
1Sunday Afternoons Aerial Cap48
41TOTAL CLOTHING7329

So that’s 1828g worn and 5501g carried – very similar to last year’s 1739g worn / 5583g carried / 7322g total, but if I end up buying a pair of Winter pants that’ll blow it. I might experiment with the Icebreaker leggings and Lululemon ABCs when the cold weather returns… another pair of leggings would be lighter and more flexible than a pair of winter only pants.

As for the rest:

BAG     
1Minaal 3.0 Carry On 35L Backpack 55x35x201555
1NEW Lowe Alpine Escape Flight 36L 55x33x23967
967
DOPP
1Sea To Summit Silnylon Traveling Light Washbag Small44
1Ritter 0-Cut Mini Trimmer (118g 6mm head 2g, 1mm head 2g) USB-C122
1Xiaomi H3 2-in-1 Personal Trimmer (60g, head 3g) USB-Micro63
1Xiaomi Mijia T100 Electronic toothbrush (40g, head 5g) USB-Micro45
1Xiaomi Mijia T100 Toothbrush Heads (x2)10
1Seki Edge Stainless Steel Nail Clippers32
1Zwilling J.A. Henckels Stainless Steel Tweezers10
1The Crystal Deodorant Ammonium Alum 40g64
1Shampoo 50ml (in Muji 12g poly tube) Replaced with Tilleys Soap70
1NEW Tilleys Soap Bar (100g) in Matador Soap Case (11g)111
1Sunscreen 30ml (in Muji 8g poly tube)42
1Hand Moisturiser 12ml (in Muji 3g poly tube)14
1Hair Muk 10ml (in Muji 20g plastic tub)37
1Toothpaste 20g24
1Hearos Earplugs (x5 pairs)4
1Interdental Flossers3
1Tablets (Antihistamine / Loperamide / Ibuprofen)20
1Sewing Kit (Needles & Thread, Buttons, Safety Pins)8
653
GEAR
1NEW Eagle Creek Isolate Quick Trip XS (Bought a 2nd for misc gear)47
1Hearos earplugs in case6
1Pocket Tissues24
1Relight My Fire Little Spork8
1Bic Mutifunction 4 Colour Ballpoint Pen12
1Uniball Micro Blue Rollerball Pen11
1Sharpie Permanent Marker8
1Spare Keys22
1Titanium Pocket Bit Screwdriver Keyring4
1Muji Double Zip Pouch (Small)15
1Sea to Summit Ultra-Sil Drybag Didn’t use this enough30
1Nite-Ize S-Biner Carabiner #27
164
DOCUMENTS
1Sea to Summit TPU Guide IPX8 Accessory Case (Small) Too fiddly18
1Passport AU38
1Passport UK34
1Documents, Mugshots & Spare Credit Cards Cancelled old cards43
72
OSK
1Lii Gear Black Hole Stash22
1Paracetamol12
1Plasters5
1Antiseptic Cream 12ml (in Muji 3g poly tube)18
1Hydrocortisone 12ml (in Muji 3g poly tube)18
1Sunscreen 12ml (in Muji 3g poly tube)18
1Zwilling J.A. Henckels Stainless Steel Tweezers10
1Zwilling J.A. Henckels Stainless Steel Nail Clippers Ultra Slim15
118
LAPTOP
1HP Spectre x360 – 13-ae003na (i7-8550U, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD)1238
1NEW Asus ExpertBook B9 KM0126X (i7-1355U, 32GB RAM, 2TB SSD)990
990
TECH
1Eagle Creek Isolate Quick Trip XS47
1Mopoint 65W 3-Port GaN charger w AU, UK & EU adapters163
1HP Tilt Stylus Pen No longer needed as new laptop is non touch14
1Anker Soundbuds Slim+ Bluetooth Headphones USB-Micro15
1Anker Soundcore Ace A0 Bluetooth Speaker Didn’t use this enough62
1K10 Bluetooth Headset USB-Micro19
1Anker Powercore+ Mini 3350mAh Battery Didn’t use this enough84
1Swiftpoint ProPoint 600 Bluetooth Mouse24
3Patriot Supersonic Rage Elite 1TB USB-A 3.0 Flashdrive1030
1Apple Charger USB-A 5W AU Replaced with Lencent28
1NEW Lencent 20W 2-Port Universal Travel Charger61
1Griffin Power Jolt Car Charger 2x USB-A 5W Didn’t use this enough12
1Anker Powerline II USB-C 2.0 to USB-C 200cm Cable54
1Mbeat USB-C 2.0 to USB-C 100cm Cable Lost this27
1Amzer USB-A 1.0 to USB-Micro 100cm Retractable Cable20
1TRVL USB-C 3.1 to Lightning 10cm Cable7
1TRVL USB-C 3.1 to USB-C 10cm Cable9
1TRVL USB-C 3.1 to USB-A 10cm Cable11
2Amazon Basics USB-C 3.1 to USB-Micro 10cm Cable612
1Eruw USB-A 2.0 to USB-Micro 10cm Cable7
1Apple USB-C to Lightning 100cm Cable19
1HDMI 4K female to USB-C male Adapter No longer needed10
1USB-A 3.0 female to USB-C male Adapter7
1USB-C female to USB-Micro male Adapter3
1USB-C female to USB-A 3.0 male Adapter4
1USB-C female to Lightning male Adapter2
1USB-Micro female to USB-C male Adapter1
1USB-Micro female to Lightning male Adapter Stopped working2
1USB-A Charger for SwiftPoint ProPoint 600 Adapter3
1Sony Anti-static Cloth14
1Ultimate Ears 600vi Wired Headphones (w Lightning Adapter)20
552
OTHER
1Montbell Travel Umbrella87
1Montbell Tachyon Parka Raincoat72
1Sea to Summit Airlite Towel Medium (100 x 50)47
1Sea To Summit Ultra Sil Nano Daypack30
1Khawy Cork Massage Ball43
1Maui Jim Sugar Beach Sunglasses14
1Maui Jim Sunglasses Case53
1Minaal Rain Cover64
410
EVERY DAY CARRY
1Apple iPhone 13 Pro 512GB (204g, case 30g)234
1Ice Watch The battery ran out and I didn’t miss it46
1Slimfold Micro Soft Shell RFID Wallet78
312
PACKING CUBES
1Eagle Creek Pack-It Specter Large Cube (pants, shorts & shirts)28
2Eagle Creek Pack-It Specter Medium Cube (boxers & socks / tees)1836
2Eagle Creek Pack-It Specter Small Cube (cold weather gear / other)1428
1Eagle Creek Pack-It Specter Tube Cube (shoes)19
111
82TOTAL4349

So my gear weight decreased from 5317g to just 4349g (mostly thanks to saving 524g on the bag and 346g on the laptop). This makes carried weight just 9850g; under the 10kg limit for the first time in almost 12 years of onebag travel!

Thanks for reading – I hope you found something useful.