Minimum useful kit for half day ride

phutureproof

New Member
Jun 4, 2021
94
73
Oxford
What do you typically take with you on a half day ride? Nothing crazy - just normal trail riding. And if you run tubeless, what do you take?
 

Gary

Old Tartan Bollocks
Author
Subscriber
Mar 29, 2018
10,496
10,702
the internet
You're joking. Right?

Absolutely nothing other than myself a bike and the clothes I'm wearing (obviously)
 

Gyre

Well-known member
Jan 25, 2021
630
422
Pasadena, CA
Not sure how you define "half day", but for normal local trail riding, say up to 2-3 hours max, I'll use a hip pack.
Stuff to deal with flats: tire levers, small pump, spare tube, tubeless plugs, glueless patches
Misc trailside fix stuff: Topeak NTX+ tool kit, Leatherman PS mini tool
Sun protection: a few oz. of sunscreen, lip balm.
 

RustyIron

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Subscriber
Jun 5, 2021
1,814
2,789
La Habra, California
I suppose it depends on what "normal trail riding" means.

My bike is always rockin' a saddle bag that contains a multitool, plug kit, two CO2 cartridges, and a master link. I always ride with a tiny knife in one pocket and lip balm in the other.

For an easy ride, I'll throw a water bottle onto the bike and hit the trails.

For an intermediate ride, I'll bring a Camelbak with a 1-1.5 liters of water, a couple extra CO2 cartridges, Gu Gel, Gu Chews, maybe a Clif Bar, and a couple paper towels.

For when I'm soloing a bigger ride that has the potential to turn epic, I'll bring all of the above, a tube, tire pump, levers, bright flashlight, emergency bivy sack, first aid pouch, and a small pistol. I add a water bottle with nutrition drink if it's going to be hot or unusually strenuous.

If I'm riding with others, the amount of gear decreases. Every ride doesn't need everyone carrying a half dozen tubes, pumps, first aid kits, etc.
 

flash

E*POWAH Elite World Champion
Patreon
Nov 24, 2018
1,050
986
Wamberal, NSW Australia
You're joking. Right?

Absolutely nothing other than myself a bike and the clothes I'm wearing (obviously)

Clothes? Well, that explains a few of the weird looks......

*********************

For me, I carry a spare tube, multitool, quick link, CO2, tyre boot and some cable ties on the bike. I'd probably just carry more water until around the 40km mark.

Gordon
 

DtEW

Active member
Dec 8, 2020
206
190
Bay Area, California
I'll take the extreme end.
  • CO2 inflator + 2 cartridges
  • Pump
  • Shock pump
  • Tube
  • 110mL sealant (in a LDPE bottle)
  • Maximalist multi-tool (Topeak Alien) + Torx key (the multi-tool is ancient; this I do need to update)
  • Tire levers (3)
  • Zip ties + small wad of Gorilla tape
  • PLB
  • Headlamp
  • First aid kit + space blanket + tubes of assorted trail medicine (ibuprofen, Benadryl, Zrytec, Pepto Bismol)
  • Insect repellent
  • COVID masks
  • Energy bar + meat jerky stick
  • Windbreaker + hard-faced fleece
  • Folding knife
That's just my default kit. I might add clothing, more food, a Jetboil (and whatever I mean to rehydrate with it), or a pack chair (or two; they're only ~1.75lbs/800g each) if it suits the ride. Obviously luxuries, but why not?

I obviously could take less, but I've always regretted not having what was needed/wanted, and have never regretted taking more. The wants are whims I can manage, the others arose from hard lessons learned in the Southern Californian desert, some stories downright fantastical.
 
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The Hodge

Mystic Meg
Subscriber
Sep 9, 2020
3,933
8,359
North West Northumberland
The same as I would for a full day ride ..just less food & water ( in my camelbak ) ..because you never know ..
The list would be pretty similar to the one above ..minus the meat jerky !
After 20 odd years of carrying the equivalent of a small human on my back the weight doesn't bother me ..and gives more of a workout ??..
 
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Binhill1

🍊 Tango Man 🍊
Mar 7, 2019
3,188
4,911
Scotland
Flask of tea and something to eat if I am out over lunch time. Tin of Mackerel always in rucksack for emergency. Toolkit pump tube , a must for me is tool for splitting chain link I can't seem to remove the Sram link in 11 speed . First aid kit , camelback waterbag . Jacket of some sort , two carrier bags ìf I am crossing deep burns . Phone aftershox headphones.
 

JoeBlow

Active member
Jul 7, 2019
729
448
South West, UK
What I carry is not dictated by the amount of time I will be riding but rather the distance I am likely to have to walk if I get a puncture or develop a fault on the bike. Usually as a minimum I always carry a multi tool (this includes a quick link), pump, tubeless repair kit, a water bottle and a mobile phone.

Al
 
Last edited:

The Hodge

Mystic Meg
Subscriber
Sep 9, 2020
3,933
8,359
North West Northumberland
What I carry is not dictated by the amount of time I will be riding but rather the distance I am likely to have to walk if I get a puncture or develop a fault on the bike. Usually as a minimum I always carry a multi tool (this includes a quick link), pump, tubeless repair kit, a water bottle and a mobile phone.

Al
No tube ?
Im running tubeless ..but always carry a spare tube ..sometimes sealant & plugs just dont work..
 

JoeBlow

Active member
Jul 7, 2019
729
448
South West, UK
I would carry a tube on longer, more remote rides but I do most of my riding at the Forest of Dean so I'm never far from the car. But on longer rides I would also carry food and a waterproof top etc., etc. I have not had a flat ever since I went tubeless which is almost 2 years so I'm fairly relaxed about it.
 

phutureproof

New Member
Jun 4, 2021
94
73
Oxford
I've now built a mini kit that is strapped to the bike. A Dakine valcro attatched under the top tube in front of the shock, a couple of CO2 cartridges, a Lezyne CO2 pump, noodles with needle/punch thing and a mini bike tool. Reasonably neat. Will need to try it out on a trail to see if it stays in place.
 

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