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Part 1 from this series: • Transitioning to a Frameless Ultralight Ba... Thanks for watching and if you enjoyed this video, please like and subscribe and leave a comment if you have any questions. Time stamps and description below. In this video, I continue my journey into using a frameless ultralight backpack for backpacking by discussing my trip in August 2021 to Baxter State Park in Maine. I took plenty of photos and some videos during the trip, but mostly photos, so this ended up being a slideshow more than a video trip report. I used the Yar.gear Mountain Drifter 38L for the trip and it was my first multi-day trip with the backpack. The backpack I'm using for this ah hoc series is a YAR.gear Mountain Drifter 38L in X-Pac VX21 fabric. I got this particular backpack because it had most of the features I was looking for in a frameless backpack, the price was right, and it was in-stock rather than made to order. Rather than hem and haw over endless custom options and then wait a few months, I felt this YAR.gear backpack would be "good enough" as I experiment with a frameless backpack. This video is more a documentation of my frameless transition rather than a backpack review, but I do touch on some features of the backpack that were important to me (vest style straps, removable hipbelt, available pockets, etc.). I have always preferred a framed pack for backpacking due to the capability to distribute and shift the weight between my shoulders and my hips, but recently decided to try out a frameless backpack for lighter trips. The frameless backpack will also force me to seriously consider the weight, size, and amount of items that I'm packing for hikes and trips. I'm hoping my shoulders can handle the increased weight load. Anyways, I hope to make this a multi-part series as I get more comfortable with using a frameless ultralight backpack. Perhaps this video series is helpful to others that are thinking about transitioning to a frameless backpack after using framed backpacks for many years.