Thursday, October 17, 2024
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The Saddleback Leather Satchel will bring out the cowboy in you

I live in Nashville, Tennessee, and the stereotype of guys here is that we’re burly dudes with cowboy hats and boots who drive pick-ups with gun racks. I’m 160 pounds, go hatless and prefer tennis shoes to boots. I also drive an Escort (gun not included).

But I can ride a horse and — yippee ki yay — if the Saddleback Leather Satchel from Saddleback doesn’t bring out the cowboy in me. And it may bring out the cowgirl in you ladies.

Saddleback Leather specializes in bags made of real saddle leather. The Saddleback Leather Satchel is a full quarter-inch thick, meticulously cut and hand-stitched, and simply jaw-dropping. You’ll have to pony up $308 to $520 for this baby. That’s a lot of loot, but I doubt there’s a more durable briefcase in existence. And, unlike most of its ilk, this will only look better (more authentic, perhaps) as it experiences wear and tear.

Saddleback Leather’s bags are constructed of 4-5 ounce full grain leather, which comes from the top layer of the cow hide (the toughest part). They comewith only three major seams, no breakable parts and are reinforced with hidden nylon straps. They come with a 100-year guarantee. But I suspect they’ll last longer than that.

I can cram a 15-inch MacBook Pro, my iPad, a digital camera, a lot of accessories and two second cousins into the Saddleback Leather Satchel and — with its spacious pockets and stiff leather — it does change shape. Of course, I’m exaggerating a bit. I didn’t place a camera in it.

A nice touch: you can convert the bag to wear like a backpack. Disconnect the shoulder strap completely. Attach the end of the shoulder strap that is closest to the buckle of the shoulder strap to a rear bottom d-ring. Run the shoulder strap through the d-ring beneath the handle along with one shoulder pad and then attach the other end of the shoulder strap to the opposing rear bottom d-ring. The shoulder strap is adjustable from 36 to 59 inches. 

The Saddleback has absolutely no froufrou in its looks or design. Want lots of weenie pockets? Not here, bucko. There are two Texas-sized compartments, one of which contains four smaller compartments, and a rear pocket for magazines or an iPad. There’s also a fake bottom compartment good for hiding valuables such as — if you want to live dangerously — cash, a wallet, passport, etc. 

You buckle this baby closed. You want a satchel you can Velcro shut or zip shut? Look elsewhere.

An interesting aside: a chunk of the amount that you sent to Saddleback goes directly to one of those aid organizations on the company’s web page.

Still another interesting aside: the removable side straps double as a belt for a size 34-36 inch waist — or as a tie-down in a pinch.

The Saddleback is comfortable, but a bit on the heavy side (six pounds, 11 ounces when empty) so you mamby pamby types should avoid it. This is a briefcase that John Wayne would have carried. So if you’ve got 300-plus smackers and need a satchel that’s tougher than a love child between Clint Eastwood and Michelle Rodriguez, well, man up! (Or woman up, as the case may be.)

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.