Now, now. No need to feel guilty (unless you spent your kids lunch money to 
get the rack! Grin.) A practical bike has whatever you need to make it 
useful. And discovering what is useful takes experimentation. All part of 
the fun of figuring out how to help your bike help you.

I ride with a big rear rack and large saddlesack all the time. Sometimes 
the bag is mostly empty, but it usually has whatever I need for whatever 
the weather might be (in the mountains, that's usually a 40˚F temp swing). 
For you it means something different, but whatever works for you that helps 
you enjoy the ride!

With abandon,
Patrick

On Thursday, March 27, 2014 5:45:32 PM UTC-6, LeahFoy wrote:
>
> Got my Saddlesack. Good news: it looks pretty on my bike. Bad news: it's 
> touching my fender. I remembered Elton (from here) saying he had a rear 
> rack for sale, so I chatted with him and now I'll be the proud new owner of 
> the Nitto  R-14 rack. Pretty much no research; hoping it doesn't interfere 
> when I have the trail a bike hooked up. 
>
> Now I'm a shameless bag hound of the worst kind AND a rear rack floozie.
>
> Sigh.
>
>

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