Last week I posted a Gear List of what I plan to carry on the 2025 Black Hills Bounty bikepacking ride. Here's how I packed all that gear on my Jones 29+ mountain bike. Every bag has some extra space, providing easy and flexible packing during the ride.
As part of drafting my Gear List, I loaded the bike much like I have in the recent past and spun around town. Oh, no. My new, bigger sleeping bag did not fit right.
Since 2016, I have used a Brooks Range Mountaineering Alpini 30 sleeping bag for summer rides, supplemented in 2019 with a Sea To Summit Reactor Extreme Liner for rides into cooler temperatures and higher elevations. That flexible combination worked well over the years, but as the bag and my body aged, I more and more found myself wanting more warmth.
So, over the winter, I bought a much, much warmer sleeping bag - the Western Mountaineering VersaLite rated at 10 degrees. Although highly compressible 850+ down and just 2.0 pounds, the VersaLite is significantly bulkier than the old Alpini 30. It just squeezed into the handlebar bag, creating a much wider, much taller profile at the leading edge of the bike. Worse, the added bulk stretched the front derailleur shift cable enough to impair shifting.
So, I moved the sleeping bag out of the handlebar bag and onto the top of the Old Man Mountain rear rack. To maintain fore/aft weight balance, I moved all the clothes out of the right rear Nano Pannier bag into the handlebar bag. That leaves both Nano Pannier bags for water, food, kitchen, and hygiene bag.
More importantly, the front derailleur shifts fine and the front profile into the wind shrinks dramatically.
Here's a run-down of how I currently plan to pack for the 2025 Bounty. It may well change.
Truss Fork Bags (forks): In addition to being light and strong, the Jones truss fork provides a built-in structure to support a pair of bags. Recognizing this potential, Jeff Jones teamed with Revelate Designs to create these bags, each offering nearly the capacity of a seat post bag. For quick access in inclement weather, I pack the rain jacket in the left side bag, along with the pump and sleeping pad. I pack the tent and pillow in the right side bag.
Harness + Pronghorn bag (handle bar): On the left side, I pack arm warmers, leg warmers, and SmartWool stocking cap for easy access. Then, moving to the right side, I pack the down hoodie, camp clothes, and all the other clothes, except liner gloves and skull cap.
Loop Hole H-Bar bag (handle bar): This bag fits into the space between the lateral tubes of the Jones handle bar. It's bigger than you think, is a great use of space, and is on the bike full time. In it I carry chain lube, toilet paper, journal, pencils, and Bible.
Mountain Feed bag (handle bar/stem): In the left side bag, I carry a 26 ounce water bottle filled with water, with lip balm in the outside mesh pocket. In the right side bag, I carry a 26 ounce water bottle filled with trail mix (almonds, peanuts, M&M's, raisins). No bear spray on this ride.
Mag-Tank 2000 bag (top tube by the handle bar): This handy bag with a magnetic closure allows easy, one-handed access to 2,000 calories of on-the-fly snacks.
Jerry Can bag (top tube by the seat post): This sneaky little bag holds an entire tool kit, including a tubeless repair kit, patch kit, tire plugs, CO2 cartridges, valve cores, valve stem, extra chain links, quick links, spare derailleur hanger, multi-tool, tire irons, extra cleats, and LeatherMan tool.
Frame bag (main triangle): The frame bag is divided into top and bottom compartments. The right side of the top compartment holds a 38 ounce water bottle, peanut butter, honey, tortillas, and a spork for easy access for lunch. The left side of the top is a relatively thin sleeve that holds wallet, phone, battery, and cords. The bottom compartment holds a spare tube wrapped in duct tape, water filter, spare water bladder, liner gloves, and skull cap.
Down Tube Cage: Strapped to a Salsa Anything Cage on the bottom side of the down tube is a stuff sack containing my Jet Boil MiniMo stove, fuel, and cook pot.
Waterproof Stuff Sack (on top of Old Man Mountain Rack): The sleeping bag is stuffed into a waterproof stuff sack strapped to the top of the rear rack.
Nano Panniers (both sides of the Old Man Mountain Rack): On the left side, I pack a 38 ounce water bottle, a 26 ounce water bottle, a hygiene/first aid bag, a kitchen bag, and breakfast. On the right side, I pack a 38 ounce water bottle, a 26 ounce water bottle, food for snacks, lunch, and dinner.
In addition to the bags and their contents, I mounted on the handle bars a Garmin 530 GPS device, Lezyne 800 XL head light, CatEye cyclocomputer, Stem Captain compass, Timber bear bell, Kong Oi bell, Ergon GP3 grips, and some stubby bar ends near the levers.
That's the latest. And it's always open to change.