Marshfly
WKR
None of this precludes carrying a lightweight bag, which is what the original post was implying. People that can't figure stuff out will ALWAYS fail under pressure.Not sure about novelty...more being prepared if things aren't exactly right. I've seen people forget stuff too many times to rely on 1 specific piece of equipment to be there when it is needed. I've had clients forget/lose shooting sticks or bi-pods and fiddle F around trying to get steady when there was a tree, fence post, rock etc 2ft away.
Say a guy carries a light weight rear bag, buckle breaks or he forgets to reattach it after setting up for a shot opportunity that doesn't work out...never shot or practiced any other way...big buck steps out and he can't find his rear bag. Should he dig through his whole pack, walk back to the previous spot to try and find it or maybe a light bulb goes off and says "I know what I can use my binos/bino harness. Or my range finger...or medical kit."
I agree that there isn't much difference. But that shouldn't mean, "don't bring a bag."The point wasn’t that rear bags shouldn’t be used. The point is that it really doesn’t make that much of a difference, and people shouldn’t be emotionally and mentally tied to a certain bag.
Also, lots of people think they can do lots of things, right up until they are asked to do it “right now” on demand. All of a sudden those “only a second or two” turns into 3 minutes to get a shot off.
There's no "think they can" here. We do this with a dedicated bag multiple times a year. It's just not that hard. And most shot opportunities are NOT gone in seconds. Some are, sure, but most are not. Regardless, anyone that practices with a bag as much as they should with all this other paraphernalia will not take an exorbitant amount of time to get a shot off.
Using what you have on hand to do the job if something is missing or breaks is pretty basic life/woodsmanship skills IMHO. If you lack that, good luck in the woods, as demonstrated by what WCB said above.
To play devils advocate...if time is of the essence, why are we wasting time taking off a bino harness? Learn to shoot with it on.