The Backpack
Buckled together right out of the box |
For my upcoming trip to Iceland, I have chosen to only take a carryon and a personal item. I researched my choices using the dimensions the airlines have on their websites. I also thought about future trips and overall practicality. Therefore, I chose to go with a backpack over a rolling carryon.
Separated |
The last backpack I had was the one I used from
high school through college. It was a
standard LL Bean backpack that reliably carried all my books and other school
stuff for years. While that backpack was
still in decent condition all these years later, I needed one geared
towards travel.
Backs of both packs |
After extensive review reading, I ended up buying
a Thule Landmark 60L women’s backpack.
This is a two in one backpack, consisting of a 40L backpack and a 20L
daypack. The larger is the perfect size
for the carryon. The smaller will be my personal item. They snap together with buckles for different
ways of wearing.
40 L |
40L Backpack
It has padded shoulder straps and waist straps
that all tuck into a pocket behind the back padding, which could be useful if you
had to check it. There are handles on
the top and the side and it opens like a suitcase with compression straps
inside. The backpack has a hard top that
protects items like sunglasses from being crushed. It also has a whistle attached to the
shoulder strap.
20 L |
20L Backpack
This daypack opens from the top only. The padded straps cannot be tucked anywhere. Inside there is a padded laptop compartment
and zippered mesh pocket. On the
outside, both sides has a deep bottle holder.
The whistle could be placed on this pack.
The whistle |
I have used the daypack twice so far. Wearing it in lieu of a purse was super
comfortable. I was able to fit my
wallet, phone, glasses, sunglasses, water bottle, all my purchases from vendor
stalls, and my fleece jacket when I got too hot.
I think it will work well for me. I did buy packing cubes to use inside. I’ll talk about those in another post when I post about packing the bag.
Previous Iceland trip posts:
Sometimes, You Need a Recharge
Preparing for a Trip of a Lifetime
Comments
Post a Comment