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Hip Belt Pockets for Miniposa/Mariposa


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Home Forums Gear Forums Make Your Own Gear Hip Belt Pockets for Miniposa/Mariposa

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  • #1224182
    Nathan Moody
    BPL Member

    @atomick

    Locale: San Francisco Bay Area

    More of a hack/repurposing than MYOG, but I managed to add two pretty big hip belt pockets to my Miniposa for $14 and 1.2 ounces.

    I was lucky enough to get a Gossamer Gear Miniposa from a fellow BPLer, and I'm pretty excited about it. I'm coming from an Osprey Atmos 50, which carries with amazing comfort, but weighs nearly 3 pounds…but I completely adore the long hipbelt pockets on the Atmos, which the Miniposa (and the Mariposa) lacks. I wanted to add some, but I don't know how to sew, I didn't really want to do any permanent mods (yet), and the Simblissity UnSlack Pack didn't really fit the bill (overly complex).

    Somewhere online I saw a picture of someone using one of the lower rear tieout loops to string some cord along the hipbelt from which to hang things (sorry, can't find the link now)…the lightbulb went off and I went to REI. I searched around and finally spotted the Eagle Creek Pack-It Sak in extra-small. They are made of mesh with a transparent anti-spill coating inside. It exactly matched the length of the Miniposa's size medium hipbelt wings. I bought two for US$7.00 each.

    All I had to do to prepare them was to razor off the tags and hacksaw through the hard plastic clip. After this, each one weighed 0.6 ounces (17g). I'd estimate that each can hold about 75 cubic inches of stuff.

    I set up some rigging on each wing of the hipbelt using BMW AirCore 2 accessory cord, between the lowest rear tieout grosgrain loop and the start of the hip belt's webbing, and strung one of the Pack-It Saks on each side. It took a couple of times to get the rigging secure so the pockets wouldn't slide and wouldn't pinch the front belt webbing. I even tucked the rigging into the hook-and-loop closures for the hip belt padding pockets to make them even more secure. As long as the Spectra cord doesn't fray, they look good to go. The photo below shows them attached, each pocket holding three energy bars with a bit of room left over, which is certainly the most weight I'd possibly put in them.

    The same thing could easily be done with some self-adesive velcro towards the front of the pouch and a ziptie, Jason Klass style, between the rear pouch loop and the Miniposa's rear tieout loops. I may attempt such a slightly more permanent approach if this hack works well in the field (trip coming up next week).

    #1395827
    Michael Fogarty
    BPL Member

    @mfog1

    Locale: Midwest

    I use the same little Eagle Creek sack,but as a chest pack. I usually clip it to the D-rings on my shld. Straps. But, on my GG Whisper pack, being that there are no D-Rings, I rigged up 1/8 dia. Bungie cords and tied them off to the rear side, tie-off loops.
    I keep my compass, Aqua-Mira, lip balm, pinch-lites etc,etc… in this pouch, then the items are much easier to access, rather than digging in the pack.
    I'm also relying more on utilizing the pockets in my clothing as well.

    #1395912
    Mark
    BPL Member

    @mlarson

    Locale: SoCal

    Thanks, Nathan! That's pretty much the only thing my Miniposa needs. What a good find.
    -Mark

    #1395975
    Nathan Moody
    BPL Member

    @atomick

    Locale: San Francisco Bay Area

    Michael, using this model of pocket as a sternum pocket would indeed be awesome. I am currently close to figuring out how to hook up an old hip/fanny pack to the shoudler straps for a lightweight camera chest case (like a few others on this forum, I need a better way to carry a big DSLR in the field than a 1.5-pound overbuilt monster case), otherwise this would be my approach, too! My tests are solid enough that I cribbed your ideas for materials and easily made more permanent attachments, so thanks for your thoughts.

    Mark, glad this tip was of use to you!

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