Man purse ESEEized

could be a Glock in .357 Sig and not a .357 Magnum PLUS a Glock in an unnamed caliber.

Thought about that. But he says another holster for the .357. Implying one holster for the Glock, another for the .357.

Doesn't matter. To each his own. Like I said, I could just be envious. ;)
 
could be a Glock in .357 Sig and not a .357 Magnum PLUS a Glock in an unnamed caliber.

Or, it could be a full sized Glock 22C, and a bobbed hammer Ruger SP101 stainless.....................:thumbup::D.

Or, for really special occasions, it might be the Glock, and the 6 1/2 inch S&W model 66 .357 in stainless steel.



I don't really need more than one gun at a time. But that doesn't mean I don't occasionally do it. I do have a hot little wife who likes guns, and can shoot very well. If I have two, I can hand one to her and have built in back up!

In Grizzly country, I have been known to bring a Winchester defender loaded with a mix of buck and slugs in 3" mags strapped to the pack and a Revolver.

Normally only one gun and some reloads, but I have occasionally carried two. In fact, There may have been an occasion where I carried an AR pistol concealed in a bag. Nothing like a 40 round clip full of .223 ammo and a 7 1/2" barrel spitting huge fire balls to make a guy feel all warm and fuzzy.

When you put a full sized Glock with three mags, and a 32 ounce water bottle, and other junk it is a bit heavy.

The belt will take some weight off the shoulder too.

For a heavier load, I would definitely bring a back pack.
 
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I've been looking at getting a Mongo s-type. I already have a knock off of a jumbo that works well for short jaunts and goofing off in the pasture.
 
Actually those maxpedition sling bags look nice, a bit awkward maybe, I wonder why sling bags, and not lumbar packs. Nice packs though.

I have a maxpedition Proteus lumbar pack that i carry around a lot.

It's straps can adjust out very long so often find myself slinging it over a shoulder, especially if I'm only going a short distance.
Over the shoulder is quickly to pick up and put down, and the gear is easily accessible. I can see the appeal of a purpose built shoulder bag.

(also, side note, when it's buckled around my waste i often carry it in front not behind...it bounces less, and again, keeps the gear where i can get at it.)
 
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