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Best Practices: The Every Day Carry Bag aka EDC

Avatar for Gaye Levy Gaye Levy  |  Updated: November 24, 2020
Best Practices: The Every Day Carry Bag aka EDC

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When it comes to survival kits, there are a group of items that are traditionally found in all kits.  A flashlight, a knife, and some sort of fire-starting tool are ubiquitous and universal.  But beyond that there are so many variables that I really have to go with the cliché: one size never fits all.

Personally, I have a number of different kits.  Most are currently in a state of disarray as, over time, they are being reworked and broken down into additional separate and discrete kits.  You know the old saying, “if only I knew then what I know now”?  Most assuredly that applies to bug-out-bags, go-bags, survival kits, and every day carry bags!

Every Day Carry Bag - Backdoor Survival

Today I want to share the best practices of Karen Skoog, a long-time Backdoor Survival reader.  Like me, she has determined that for her purposes, it is more suitable to have a separate bags and kits serving different purposes.  When she offered to share the contents of her kits with me, I was thrilled.

We all can learn from the research and experience of others.  My opinion, after all, is just that, an opinion.  I still want to grow and still want to do things better and thus, the term “best practices”.

Today Karen writes about her personal EDC, or Every Day Carry Bag.  Like me, she relies  much of here gear but whether you choose to your gear online or locally, makes no matter.  Her gear and her insight in putting together this kit is fantastic!

The Every Day Carry Bag According to Karen

Have you ever noticed that over time, with more great posts on Backdoor Survival and more reading and searching on the internet, that the contents of your Bug Out Bag change or are updated?

That is what has happened to me recently. I noticed I was adding more items to my purse, such as a knife, fire starter, flashlight, and a big rain poncho. The navy blue poncho is sturdy enough to use as a tarp, and it really does fit in my purse.

Adding all these items led me to wonder if perhaps there was a way to carry more basic survival items on my person, without looking tactical or downright odd in the middle of the city.

At the same time I asked more “what if” questions about disruptive events.

What if I was somehow prevented from getting to my car?

Or, a question I read online: What if there was an earthquake and a slab of concrete fell on my car?

What if a sudden blizzard swirled to life while I was inside all day? Traffic would be at a standstill, no one could see, my car might not start, and AAA might be so backlogged with calls they could not help.

Perhaps the biggest disruptive event to which our minds turn is an EMP strike or electromagnetic pulse. It can be caused by nuclear detonation high above or by a solar flare. Much has been written about this event, although it is not an immediately likely crisis. In this situation I would not be able to drive my car home.

My goal is to be able to walk the long way home with nothing but what I can carry without calling attention to myself. And so I have outfitted several ways to carry supplies and equipment. I am also concerned about civil unrest, therefore I wanted my carry methods to be redundant. If one or two bags are lost or stolen, I may still have the others.

Getting the Right Gear – Finally

The big excitement today is that all the items arrived  so I can complete one of my small everyday carry bags.

This survival bag itself is actually a 32 ounce water bottle holder. It is large enough to hold a Nalgene bottle within a stainless steel cup, and has a handy side pocket. The cup has folding handles. The bag is  a Molle bag, so many items can be attached, or the bag itself can be attached to a belt or pack.

Although slightly tactical, this is a small over-the-shoulder bag. Many people carry water today, so I feel comfortable carrying this daily, each time I leave the car or house.

Karen’s Choices:  Rothco MOLLE Compatible Water Bottle Pouch, Nalgene Tritan Wide Mouth BPA-Free Water Bottle, and GSI Outdoors Glacier Stainless Bottle Cup/Pot

Speaking of redundancy, this bag includes several ways of obtaining and purifying water. The bandana can be held over the mouth of the water as a pre-filter. Then it can be boiled in the stainless cup, or a water purification tablet can be added.

Karen’s Choice:  Military Army Trainmen Paisley Bandana

From Gaye’s recent podcast on water, we learned that there are only three approved ways to sanitize water. Distilling, boiling, and bleach. Therefore I chose purification tablets that are essentially bleach. Please note that they require four hours to work once you have added a tablet to the bottle. The tablets purify 32 ounces.

Karen’s Choice:  Katadyn Micropur MP1 Purification Tablets:

Besides finding water in streams, I have included an urban way to find water. It’s called a Sillcock Key and will open faucets on the outside of commercial buildings. Perhaps it is not legal for an unauthorized person to do this, so it falls into the category of things we might do during a crisis that we might not otherwise do. A very personal decision.

My apartment building has several faucets without handles on the outside. Since learning about Sillcock keys, I have been seeing faucets everywhere. Of course this water, like all other water in a crisis, should be boiled or treated.

Karen’s Choice:  Cobra Products 4-Way Sillcock Key

The bag incudes two ways of making fire, a lighter and a Swedish fire steel. There are many great Bushcraft videos on You Tube that detail making a fire with a fire steel. Even with a lighter, I would still follow the guidelines of shredding fibers for tinder, then adding sticks starting with pencil lead size and increasingly larger. I also save drier lint and it is easy to cram a small bag of lint into any carry bag.

Karen’s Choice:  The Friendly Swede Magnesium Alloy Emergency Easy Grip Fire Starter (2 Pack)

Finally I’ve got a small flashlight clipped to the bag. And there is still room in the side pocket for a knife, the bandanna, socks and a granola bar.

Karen’s Choices:  Dorcy Waterproof LED Flashlight and MTECH USA MT-378 Tactical Folding Knife

One Week Later

It has now been a week since my gear arrived and I wanted to add a real-life update. I’ve been carrying the water bag over my shoulder every day. The strap is a bit narrow. So I’ve purchased a guitar shoulder pad which will be easy to fit around the shoulder strap.

Karen’s Choice:  Planet Waves Gel Guitar Strap Shoulder Pad

In addition, my food pouch arrived. This is a small zippered bag that is Molle compatible. That means it has many straps covering the surface and can be easily attached to other Molle bags. I have attached the food pouch to the water bag. It is large enough to hold ½ pound of almonds and many breakfast bars or protein bars.

Karen’s Choice:  5.11 Molle Padded Pouch

Note that my skills are rusty I could not insert photos of all of my items but these are the actual items I have chosen.  Thank you for reading and thank you for the opportunity to share my latest Every Day Carry bag with you.

I look forward to posting about 2 other small bags and a Paracord lanyard that complete my EDC.

The Final Word

As I said in the beginning, Karen has been following this website for quite some time and is a familiar voice in the comments section.  So who is Karen, really?  I asked her to tell us a little bit about herself:

I’m married with 3 pets and live in the Washington DC area. My introduction to homesteading and survival was the Foxfire series of books that I read in the 70’s. I also completed an Outward Bound wilderness skills course in 1979. I am interested in anything low tech and off grid.

Karen

Most recently I’m working on bush craft skills. I love Backdoor Survival because Gaye covers so many important topics but keeps the fear factor as low as possible. I appreciate that because the world is scary enough as it is.

I so love it when readers are willing to share their personal experience while coping during a disruptive event, learning a new skill, or, as in this case, researching the right gear to suit their practical needs.  If you have something to share, then by all means, do get in touch.

Enjoy your next adventure through common sense and thoughtful preparation!
Gaye

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For your convenience, here is a list of most of the items Karen as shared with us today.  A few are new to me so of course I plan to check them out.  I love the idea of the Rothco Water Bottle Pouch and “food bag”.

Rothco MOLLE Compatible Water Bottle Pouch:  I never would have considered using a water pouch as an EDC bag.  This one is a MOLLE compatible pouch so it can be easily attached to the rest of your MOLLE gear.  It features MOLLE loops around the entire pouch, two 6 inch straps on the back, and D-rings on each side. The straw hole on the top and a drain hole makes hydration simple. A perfect companion to my favorite Rothco Medium Transport Pack.  I own three of these packs – two in black and one in tan.

5.11 MOLLE Padded Pouch: When I read about the “food pouch”, I had one of those “why didn’t I think of that moments”!

Nalgene Tritan Wide Mouth BPA-Free Water Bottle:  This is the bottle that Karen chose and it is one that I have recommended in the past.

GSI Outdoors Glacier Stainless Bottle Cup/Pot:  Nice and something that I am adding to my own shopping cart.  It is designed to slip over standard 1-litre water bottle and holds up to 18 ounces.

Military Army Trainmen Paisley Bandanas: Speaking of bandanas, be sure to check out the article How to Use a Bandana to Save the Day.

Katadyn Micropur MP1 Purification Tablets:  Ultralight tablets provide fresh drinking water anywhere you go. Effective against viruses, bacteria, giardia and cryptosporidium. Fresh tasting water-no unpleasant taste. These easy-to-use tablets meet EPA purification guidelines. Purification method: Chlorine Dioxide tablets. 1 tablet treats 1 qt. of water.

Cobra Products 4-Way Sillcock Key:  This 4-way sillcock key has a 1/4″ , 9/32″, 5/16″ and 11/32″ stem to service most sillcocks in common use. It is durable, easy to use and has an attractive finish. Used to open and close sillcocks or spigots and made of durable steel construction.

The Friendly Swede Magnesium Alloy Emergency Easy Grip Fire Starter (2 Pack):  Firestarters are an essential piece of any survival/outdoor kit – waterproof, durable and easy to use as follows:

1. Scrape off black protective coating from firestarter rod
2. Prepare your tinder
3. Hold the striker at a 45° angle to the firestarter. Scrape striker hard and fast down the firestarter
4. Allow sparks to fall onto tinder

Dorcy Waterproof LED Flashlight with Carabineer Clip:  This is a floating waterproof flashlight that provides 55-lumens of light output and a 31-meter beam distance. I am a big fan of Dorcy products so this one is definitely going in my shopping cart as well.  Not that I need more flashlights!  Wait – you can never have too many!!

MTECH USA MT-378 Tactical Folding Knife 4.5 Closed: This folding knife features a 3 inch black finished 440 stainless steel tanto style blade with a quick opening thumb stud. The comfortably contoured black steel handle features a brushed metal finish, a heavy duty pivot pin and the liner lock blade locking design. It has a closed length of 4 1/2 inches and comes with a durable pocket clip.

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Aff | Tactical Pen

[DEAL] Ultimate Concealed Weapon

Tactical Pen / Multi-Tool (Flashlight, knife, etc)

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Aff | Tactical Pen
[DEAL] Ultimate Concealed Weapon Stay Protected

30 Responses to “Best Practices: The Every Day Carry Bag aka EDC”

  1. Hi Penrod, the Coast HP1 sounds like a good idea. I have standardized on AA batteries so I only have to buy one kind. They are rechargeable and I can put flashlights in every pouch, pocket, or bag.

    • Hi Karen, There has been a remarkable improvement in flashlights over the past 15 years or so. Lumen outputs which cost $250-500 a few years ago can now be found for $25 or less. Coast makes a lot of good ones, though they trend expensive. The upside for me is that they use high quality switches, and I have found that the cheap lights do not, so they don’t last as long.

      Standardizing batteries: I think that is a great idea.

      You might consider some electronics which use bigger batteries, and feed them with AA batteries inside adapters. Amazon sells them. If you haven’t seen them, they are simple battery sized plastic cases with metal contacts at the ends, into which you can insert one or more smaller size batteries. Amazon keywords: “Battery adapter”.

      Even if you keep your electronics standardized around AAs, you might run into someone who is out of whatever their’s runs on, and you could get a possibly important item working again with AAs in adapters. The other possibility is being able to use AAA in your AA items, and using AA batteries in something which runs on C or D cells. Of course, if you do that, you could still use the designated size batteries if that was all you could scrounge during an emergency.

  2. Hi Tony, in a twisted sense it’s good that your coworker knew enough about prepping to make jokes. I think knowing what prepping is, is a step on the path to buy that first extra can of food.

  3. Dear Jim G. Like your term of “offshoots” from your bug out bag. Sounds like you have really thought things through.

  4. mygrand kids and I made a solar oven a couple of years ago.. it works great the only thing I think the sun oven has over it is a better reflector system and it is small enough that you can turn it into the sun where the one we build it clunky.. I have thought about putting castors on the bottom of it to make it easier to turn though.. this years project is to make a solar grill with a fresnal lens above it and a reflector..similar to the one that MIT is making for third world countries

  5. I carry a “manbag” that is my edc kit. In a pinch I can outfit it with a small handgun but every day I carry a Leatherman Supertool 300, a swiss army knife, a folding knife with a 3 3/4 inch liner lock with a locking mechanism that locks the liner lock. I carry a magnifying glass, Bic lighter, waterproof safety matches, chlorine water purifying tablets and several sandwich size plastic bags. I carry this with me all the time. I have the complete BOB in the car with emergency rations and lots of other gear. That is my get home bag if I am on the road around town. If I am going out of town I add to the gear in the car. I try to make everything as inconspicuous as possible. I try to avoid military looking gear and cammo gear as much as possible. I usually have three different hats in the car in addition to the one I usually wear. This allows a change of costume without having to stop to change. The silcock key is a good suggestion. For lighting I prefer Princeton Tec lights and particularly the one with a clip that can be clipped to the brim of a hat. I like both white and red lights. For the most bang for the buck in handheld lights, check out Costco on line. I try to stay with lights that use standard, buy ’em everywhere batteries. The Princeton Tec lights are the only lights that use what I consider “non-standard” batteries, ie., D, C, AA, AAA size batteries. I probably have a couple other items that I considered important but can’t recall them off the top of my head without checking my bag. The car carried gear would be a whole article in itself. It is enough to keep my wife and I self-sustained for at least a week without having to supplement anything. My plan if having to evacuate is to start foraging immediately and keep the supplies as backup.

  6. My co-workers tease me about the size of my purse, it’s a purse that carries a small laptop (very chic if I may say so LOL) but I have it equipped with some things instead of a laptop. My “Key” ring is a carabiner clip with a small, sharp knife in it, eyeglass repair, sewing kit, matches and extra lighters just name a few things. I also have a GHB in the car. I have to go through and switch out some things in it now that(dare I say it) spring is here, I hope. Never thought of the sill-cock key, great idea

  7. Thanks Karen and Gaye,

    I’m realizing I really NEED to get an EDC kit together and this article was timely and helpful. My Amazon cart is filling up fast!

  8. Good article. I hadn’t thought of a sillcock key, but in an urban area it could a life saver under certain conditions. Thanks!

    Another flashlight which I like a great deal is the Coast HP1 Focusing LED Flashlight. All metal, 220 lumens, no dark ring or spot in the center when on wide beam, runs on a single AA battery. It’s easy to carry spare batteries. It has a pocket clip, and is dinky, so it fits in the watch pocket of jeans. Of course it is also easy to keep almost anywhere, including a purse. Currently $9.99 on Amazon, free shipping with Amazon Prime. We have given away several of them to friends, and they have been a real hit because they are so small and so bright.

    My wife keeps one in her purse, another in her GHB, I keep one in my pocket and another in my EDC bag (a 5.11 Bail Out Bag which I got second hand and recommend as well. It is rugged, not too big, not too small, can add pouches via the molle straps.) I like having a couple flashlights so that I have back up in case one goes down, or I need to share. The HP1s are so small and light they are easy to carry in multiples.

  9. Hey Gaye, have you looked into the “survival pucks”? //www.survivalpuck.com/ I was thinking on picking a few up but wanted to know if you had tested them before I buy. Thanks

    Tony

  10. OMG. Sometimes, you tend to think you are a little strange because you work at prepping and IF you do actually mention that fact in conversations with non-preppers, you get some very weird looks and laughs from most people out there. So it was great to read Karen’s article. By default, my original BoB has developed offshoots. They have been developed based on the amount of time I have to get out of Dodge or where I might be at when it hits the fan (work, traveling, etc.) from a small kit that is in a contractor’s cell phone case (expandable) w/what I would absolutely need if I had only seconds to get out to my EDC bag I carry to work to the additional gear in my truck to my full up BoB. The full BoB was my first real foray into prepping. Luckily, many of the items in it I already had around since my days in the Army (Airborne Infantry) and Guardsman/Reservist, so that saved me a bunch of money I could use elsewhere. I cannot carry a firearm in my EDC/Work bag because I work in a Federal workplace (they pretty much frown on that). I too would have to probably walk home in an EMP scenario so my bag is a capable commercial one that should not draw much attention. My full BoB pack is issue as is my bedroll, much of my cooking utensils, water storage, personal defense, light is all issue, saving a lot of money. My EDC /Work bag is used to carry work files, and my laptop but also includes some direct mission assistance gear. I could go on w/a lot of details but that may have to wait.

    • I know the strange looks Jim. Just yesterday I told a co-worker I was a prepper and she laughed and said “no, your a hoarder”. I said no, I have an inventory and everything is neatly stacked. She said, “then your an organized hoarder”. She was just poking fun so I dropped it. Some get it, some don’t. Oh well.

      Tony

    • My co-workers are just more polite, I’m sure some of them think I’m nuts, but as an IT guy I’m allowed more latitude than most. 😉

      I actually gave my office-mate a Berkey Sport bottle when our office water cooler broke (nasty bio-film that we couldn’t disinfect away), and he still keeps it on his desk and uses it when the tap water goes weird on us.

      As to the hoarder joke, I will admit I’m a borderline hoarder, but I’ve been able to throw away badly expired food (I do keep some as decoy food), old receipts, etc. Of course I have over a year’s supply of TP and of shelf-stable food, and enough dryer lint to start cooking fires for the rest of my life. Dryer lint is kept in freezer grade ziplock baggies, but still it’s a bit weird to the non-preppers. Basically, as long as you have things organized on shelves and aren’t storing old nail clippings I think you’re safe from showing up on one of those hoarder TV shows. 😛

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