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P.S. Craig, I would love to see that picture to see how you handle your gear for mobility and on-location shots.
Tks
How I haul gear on location:
Here are a few photo I took after my last session today showing what I take and I how move it:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/92211832@N04/sets/72157636737389606/A minivan or the like would be needed to use this particular wagon (it does not fold down), and this approach is not for everyone. This one has a bed that is 48" long and 24" wide; they do also make smaller ones. Before I bought mine several years ago I measured everything out - from the size of bags to the size of my van's bed.
The bag on the front left holds two Einsteins, two PCB MVL batteries, two speedlights, and an assortment of grip items like smaller modifiers, grids, and triggers.
Behind that bag is my body/lens backpack.
The bag on the right is a 48" lightstand bag, which hold larger modifiers as well as 3 to 4 lightstands.
A step ladder and reflectors fit upright nicely down the middle of the wagon between those bags.
What are those on the ground to the right? Ten pound disc weights in reflector bags for appearance sake. They clip on to my light stands via carabiners on breezy days.
I can get into the top of each bag and to almost anything in the wagon without taking any bag out of the wagon. Because of the tires, the wagon rolls easily - even over rougher ground. Even if you are not in great shape, you could pull it up a hill with some effort. I've never weighed or added it up, but I am guessing that as seen the total weight is around 200 pounds.
Do I always take this much? No, I can and do break down into a smaller kit when I need or want to. I never groan at the thought of taking more, though, because this wagon means it's not physically taxing.
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