After purchasing, and receiving the aforementioned EDC Rescue Bag, I found it to be exactly the type of bag I didn't know I needed! I've made various purchases from this company, to include several perimeter camp alarms, with the various adapters (209 primers/12ga blanks/.22's/308's/etc) and a flare launcher set with accompanying flares and animal deterrence noise makers (Not your typical deterrent) that can be used in a variety of manner. The flare launcher with several flares (or animal deterrence flashbangs) fit easily into this bag with elasticised webbing designed around the diameter of the flares, holding them in place. There are a couple of interior zippered pouches that can hold a variety of items (think mounts, adapters, or trip wire). Overall, it's a very well made, affordable product of American pride (no tarriff tax) that I've found can be improvised for various mission sets. I can carry this bag in my pedal driven kayak when fishing on the ocean, or out in the wilderness camping, and if needed, retrieved easily out of a pack. Everything will be organized and in one place making it easier to deploy.
A tough padded 500 denier nylon surrounds the bag inside and out, with molle mounts on the front for whatever you decide to mount on the front (I added a Faraday dry bag for a small comms radio and a multi band receiver with a small solar panel to charge the necessary batteries for both) and back to mount to a pack or a SAR rig. Fith Ops also provides you with a well sized hook and loop field on the front for mounting their patch (which was given as part of the product) or your own identification/morale patch. Personally, I went with their Fith Ops patch to make identification easier as I have purchased several of these bags for various mission sets such as a medication/antibiotics/medical accessory bag holding a Tenz machine and it's patches, a glucose meter with accessories, an O² sensor, all attached to another molle pouch with blood pressure cuff and stethoscope. I also carry a small spiral bound medical reference/notepad in the back pocket. Another setup is for land nav materials with various comfort items like energy snacks, hydration packets, LEP flashlight/headlamp/spare 18650 batteries/spare powerbanks and needed chargers/cables, and another setup for locksmithing accompanied by various other rescue tools. This bag fits multiple disciplines, is well laid out, and adaptable to your mission profile. I highly recommend the EDC Rescue Bag as part of your load out!