Practice makes perfect. Will be in Dallas next month for the big event. Look at the sunspots!
Equipment: Canon 7D, 400mm f5.6 lens, 1.4x teleconverter, with a NiSi PRO Nano ND100000 neutral density filter. That provides the equivalent of a ~900mm lens with the APS-C sensor crop factor. I used an external HDMI monitor for positioning and focus since I really love having healthy retinas…
I have a handful of irrational obsessions. Great bags and backpacks are definitely one of them. For travel, I try hard to one-bag it. This involves picking a single bag, usually a backpack, to carry all the things you need for a trip. Once you get the hang of optimizing it can be a lot of fun. I did a three day to New York last December with a 26 liter Goruck GR1. That included a spare pair of shoes and my running gear. Sometimes you need a bit more flexibility though, and a recent trip to Australia screamed for something new.
This trip required three bags since we would be gone for most of a month. First, the checked luggage, carrying all the day-to-day items that will be needed throughout the trip. This included things like clothes, snorkeling gear, and cycling gear. On my back, I had the same Grouck GR1 that I took to New York. It had three days worth of clothes and toiletries in case the checked luggage was late or lost. That left all the tech, which went into the Mystery Ranch shoulder bag and lived behind my legs against my seat during the flight.
This bag is for 13” and smaller laptops. You can fit a 15” laptop in the main area of the bag, but it is a tight fit and it gets no foam protection from knocks and bangs. I wouldn’t recommend it unless you are in a pinch, which I have been and I have used the bag for a 15” MacBook Pro.
Check it out. I think it is worth your time if you want a small-ish over the shoulder bag that fits most of your tech things and stows easily under an airline seat.