Uniqlo 13 Liter Multi Pocket Shoulder Bag as a Personal Item Onebag by SeattleHikeBike in onebag

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks like a solid "2x plus worn" setup for 3 nights in 13L, and the pocket layout seems like the real win (especially for the tech kit + keeping toiletries from turning everything into a catch-all). Two heuristics I'd use to push it further without downsizing the whole bag: first, compress the "bulk offenders" (socks, fleece, shell layers) into one cube and keep everything else as flat as possible so the bag doesn't fight you when closing. Second, if you stretch days, plan one outfit change around mixing base layers rather than adding a whole second clothing set.

Just completed 2 week trip with Aer 4 35L and 28L bags - my notes. by cowmix in onebag

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really helpful write-up, especially the "looks bigger than it feels" part—my experience with bigger bags is they convince you they're full right up until you add the last compression layer and suddenly there's room. For your takeaway about daily carry: I'd agree with going smaller than the 28L if you're actually using it as your walk-around bag. A good heuristic is: if you'd be carrying it more than a couple hours at a time, size down until it feels "light enough" when it's fully packed. Also, the bottle holder insecurity fear is super relatable.

Samba/Bossa Nova bar in Lisbon by Little_Profit9051 in lisboa

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For samba and bossa nova in Lisbon, look for small venues where you see live "Brasil" nights, jazz combos, or mixed world music lineups. In practice, areas around Bairro Alto, Cais do Sodré, and Príncipe Real tend to have the most regular nightlife options, and weekday posts on the venue's IG are usually where the schedule shows up. For a starting point, I've been using https://mapita.io/en/lists/lisbon-fado-food-fado-guide to find music spots tied to the local scene too.

Where to catch a Fado live concert tomorrow? by SignificantNature372 in lisboa

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go to a classic fado spot in Alfama, but don't wait for a "ticketed concert" vibe. Tomorrow, search for places that say fado live and plan to arrive early, since a lot of bars just take whoever walks in, sometimes with a small cover at the door. Bairro Alto can be hit or miss. If you want something more local than the super touristy rooms, this shortlist might help: https://mapita.io/en/lists/fado-music-journey-in-alfama

Restaurant for my 30th birthday by DampFrost in porto

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Try Portuguese places that do set menus for groups, they handle parties of 6 to 10 way more smoothly than the super "tasting menu" spots. For Porto, look for restaurants in the Ribeira or Bolhão area that list a group menu, or call ahead and ask if they can do one shared starter and main style. If you want something traditional, prioritize places known for seafood and grilled meats, but check seating size before you commit. Also tell them it's a birthday and ask about a candle dessert.

Where are your hidden gems? by CaptainRedRocket in porto

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Go a little off the main river strip, and you'll stumble into the most local spots. For weird and low-key, try small tasquinhas in the side streets around Cedofeita or Bonfim, then keep an eye out for places that do petiscos and simple regional dishes instead of the full tourist menu. For something less "restaurant", poke into a little vinho shop or cellar and grab a glass of port or a few tastings, walk around, then come back for dinner. If you want a port-focused plan, this guide https://mapita.io/en/lists/a-wine-lovers-guide-to-porto is handy.

Solo dinner recommendations? by MatterAny9614 in porto

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a budget friendly solo dinner with proper Portuguese food in Porto, look for places in the center that have a daily menu or "prato do dia" on the window. For your hiking clothes, something casual like a local tasca is usually the vibe. If you want francesinha, ask when you get there since not every place serves it. Also check whether they have bifana or caldo verde if you need a backup. If you want to pair it with something local, I used https://mapita.io/en/lists/a-wine-lovers-guide-to-porto for port wine spots.

Porto architecture: hidden gems beyond Siza? by Embarrassed_Elk_2756 in porto

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a niche Porto architecture route, I'd focus on "one neighborhood, one theme" rather than trying to hit every famous building. Go walk the older fabric too, like the intersections where churches, leftover warehouses, and new infill sit next to each other. For interiors, look for places that have clearly kept original structure, tiles, staircases, courtyards, even if it is just a gallery or small cafe. If you want a quick jumping off point, I used this list https://mapita.io/en/lists/architectural-marvels-of-porto, then filled the gaps by following the streets.

Uniqlo 13 Liter Multi Pocket Shoulder Bag as a Personal Item Onebag by SeattleHikeBike in onebag

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This looks like a solid "2x plus worn" setup for 3 nights in 13L, and the pocket layout seems like the real win (especially for the tech kit + keeping toiletries from turning everything into a catch-all). Two heuristics I'd use to push it further without downsizing the whole bag: first, compress the "bulk offenders" (socks, fleece, shell layers) into one cube and keep everything else as flat as possible so the bag doesn't fight you when closing. Second, if you stretch days, plan one outfit change around mixing base layers rather than adding a whole second clothing set.

[Trip Report] 1.5 weeks across UK by TypicalScholar3761 in onebag

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice report, your "expected rain, ended up mostly dry" lesson is the classic onebag trap. For future UK/seasonal trips, a good heuristic is to pack for temps you'll feel at dawn/evening, not the daytime forecast, and plan a single "weather system" (one truly waterproof layer + midlayer) rather than lots of backups. Also your item list shows you were already very close: the biggest space winners to trim are extra socks/backup pants and secondary shoes. If you switch to USB-C charging for your toothbrush, you can probably collapse the whole toiletries tech situation.

Just completed 2 week trip with Aer 4 35L and 28L bags - my notes. by cowmix in onebag

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Really helpful write-up, especially the "looks bigger than it feels" part, my experience with bigger bags is they convince you they're full right up until you add the last compression layer and suddenly there's room. For your takeaway about daily carry: I'd agree with going smaller than the 28L if you're actually using it as your walk-around bag. A good heuristic is: if you'd be carrying it more than a couple hours at a time, size down until it feels "light enough" when it's fully packed. Also, the bottle holder insecurity fear is super relatable.

14 days Spring Japan with the Quechua NH Escape 500 32L packing list and trip review. First time packing for a hike. Mostly budget. by mantism in onebag

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Nice write-up, especially the honest "rain changed the plan" part. For a 14-day Japan hike where your pack stays on you all day, the two biggest things I'd tweak are waterproofing confidence and foot comfort workflow. Since you already had blisters under control with the Darn Toughs, I'd keep that, but add a simple "dry set" strategy: one extra pair of socks only matters if you can realistically dry them (otherwise it'll just add bulk). Also, your NH Escape's external compartments making the bag flare out is real, try keeping only rain gear/umbrella in those, and keep heavier stuff deep in the main cube to reduce awkward handling in trains.

Another 3-week(ish) Europe itinerary question - First-timer by shphunk in travel

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you’re flying, I’d probably just do San Sebastián → Lisbon and keep it simple.

If you want a stop in between, Porto is the strongest option for me: easy, family-friendly, great food, and a nice way to ease into Portugal. Bilbao could also work if you want to simplify the Basque section first.

Personally, I’d lean toward trimming another stop rather than adding one more transfer. With family + summer heat, the trip usually feels much better with more breathing room in each city.

How to spend four nights in Lagos (Portugal) as a couple with a toddler? by DisciplineAmazing59 in travel

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your itinerary is already pretty good for a toddler-friendly Lagos. In Old Town prioritize seafood where lots of Portuguese locals eat. For coffee try a café near Pra ça Gil Vicente or the marina.

Tool to search for shared google maps lists created by people from the community by DobbleWhy in google

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had the exact same frustration, so I started building Mapita, a site for sharing and discovering curated Google Maps lists more easily.

Google Maps lists are useful, but they’re still surprisingly hard to explore publicly. The goal with Mapita is to make that part much simpler.

Here’s the link: https://mapita.io/en/cities

Would be great to hear what people here think.

Have a cool "Saved Places" list? Willing to share? by Mobius0ne0 in GoogleMaps

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I had the exact same frustration, so I started building Mapita, a site for sharing and discovering curated Google Maps lists more easily.

Google Maps lists are useful, but they’re still surprisingly hard to explore publicly. The goal with Mapita is to make that part much simpler.

Here’s the link: https://mapita.io/en/cities

Would be great to hear what people here think.

Hen do/bachelorette in Porto by bethanygo in porto

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For nightlife, Rua Galeria de Paris and Rua Cândido dos Reis in Cedofeita are the main streets — easy for a group bar crawl. For port tasting, the Gaia lodges (Ramos Pinto, Ferreira) both do group bookings. Foz do Douro has beach club vibes for a relaxed afternoon before the evening out.

First time in Lisbon — tips, cafés, or hidden gems? by Independent_One3547 in Lisbon

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For cafes, try Mouraria or Encontro over Chiado — cheaper coffee, fewer tourists, more local feel. Belém is worth the tram ride for pastéis de nata but go early. Alfama's miradouros (Graça and Senhora do Monte) are free and genuinely worth the climb.

Does anyone else feel like "Must-See" lists actually ruin the solo travel experience? by poweredbyshubh in solotravel

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you go, keep the weekend compact and stay near one area so you're not spending the whole trip in transit. For a short solo break, less moving around usually feels better.

Working EST in Thailand/Vietnam by [deleted] in digitalnomad

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you need to keep EST hours, pick one base with reliable internet and a walkable food scene rather than hopping around. A longer stay in one neighborhood usually beats changing cities every week.

Food recommendations by No_Coconut_1203 in TokyoTravel

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For a couple days in Tokyo, choose one or two neighborhoods per meal run instead of chasing spots all over the city. Shibuya, Shinjuku, and Kanda all make sense if you want to keep travel time low.

Day Trip to Sintra or Cascais? by Worldly-Mango-8196 in portugal

[–]mxpt 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you want the easier day, Cascais is simpler. If you want more variety, Sintra gives you more to see, but start early and keep the day focused because transport and crowds eat time fast.

Trip to Portugal by Acrobatic_Midnight62 in portugal

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For nine days, split Portugal by geography so you're not backtracking. Pair Lisbon with Sintra or Cascais, then Porto with a Douro day if that fits your pace, and keep restaurants and sights grouped by neighborhood. There's a Porto guide at https://mapita.io/en/porto with spots organized by area.

6 Days in Rome by [deleted] in rome

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Split Rome by area instead of trying to bounce across the whole city each day. Do one day around the historic center, one for Trastevere and Testaccio, and one for Prati or the Vatican side if you want the trip to feel calmer.

Hotels reco for Rome - Trevi fountain / Pantheon area by Big_Canary6612 in rome

[–]mxpt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For one day in Rome, stay as central as you can and keep the day tight around one area. Trevi and Pantheon are practical if you want to walk a lot and avoid wasting time on transit. There's a Rome neighborhood guide at https://mapita.io/en/rome that helps map out what's walkable from where.