Skip to Content
Rapid Access Field Medic EMT Pouch - Coyote Brown

Price:

21.99


Rapid Access Field Med Organizer Pouch - Black
Rapid Access Field Med Organizer Pouch - Black
21.99 21.99
Rapid Access Field Medic EMT Pouch - Ranger Green
Rapid Access Field Medic EMT Pouch - Ranger Green
21.99 21.99

Range-Ready Rapid-Access EMT Pouch - Coyote

https://www.texasotfknives.com/web/image/product.template/9034/image_1920?unique=ebeba5b

6 sold in last 24 hours

South of Abilene or outside Amarillo, when something goes sideways on a dusty lease road, this EMT pouch rides where you can reach it. The tri-fold layout opens clean to mesh, pockets, and elastic that keep gauze, shears, and tape exactly where you expect. MOLLE backing locks onto a vest, belt, or seat panel, then rips free with hook-and-loop when seconds matter. Texans who spend real miles in pasture or pipeline country carry gear like this, not just a glove box bandage roll.

21.99 21.99 USD 21.99

CVEMT2970T

Not Available For Sale

8 people are viewing this right now

This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

You May Also Like These

Range-Ready EMT Pouch Built for Long Texas Miles

Out past the last caliche drive, when the only light is your truck’s headlights and the nearest clinic is an hour away, an EMT pouch either works or it doesn’t. This tri-fold MOLLE EMT pouch in coyote was built for those stretches of Texas highway and ranch road where you handle problems yourself.

It rides quiet on a plate carrier, belt, or seat-back panel, then comes off in one clean pull when you need it. No fumbling, no digging in a glove box. Just a compact, organized kit you can run by feel while the wind whips dust through the door.

Why This EMT Pouch Fits Real Texas Carry Culture

Texans who live outside the loop lines don’t carry first aid as an afterthought. They keep it where it can be reached with one hand while the other is bracing a busted arm, slowing a bleed, or steadying the wheel.

This MOLLE EMT pouch folds out into three distinct panels. One flips into view with a zippered mesh compartment, where you can stash gloves, flat-packed dressings, and meds you need to see at a glance. The other two carry layered pockets and elastic straps sized right for shears, tape rolls, tourniquets, and small tools you’d want on a calf table, a job site, or a range day.

Hook-and-loop on the base lets you rip the pouch off a vest, belt, or bag in one hard pull, then slap it down on a tailgate or truck hood. The 1-inch webbing strap and quick-connect buckle cinch everything tight so it doesn’t roll open when the road turns from asphalt to washboard.

MOLLE EMT Pouch Texas Buyers Trust in the Field

Across Texas, from oilfield service yards in Midland to game leases outside Junction, most serious hands have moved past loose first aid tossed in a plastic box. A MOLLE EMT pouch like this lets you stage gear where you actually work: on a range bag, on the side of a backpack, on the passenger-seat headrest, or threaded through a duty belt.

The two PAL straps on the back weave into any standard MOLLE grid: plate carriers, battle belts, modern packs, or aftermarket seat organizers. Once mounted, the detachable base stays locked until you deliberately tear it loose. That means it can take a door slam, a fence crossing, or a rough ride down a sendero without dropping into the floorboard.

At about eight inches tall, six and a half across, and three and a half deep, it’s big enough to build out a real trauma and minor injury kit, but compact enough that it doesn’t snag in a truck cab or crowd a belt line. It’s the kind of footprint that works as well on a Hill Country hog hunt as it does on a weekend match outside College Station.

Built for Texas Heat, Dust, and Hard Use

This isn’t a fashion pouch. The coyote synthetic fabric shrugs off dust, light rain, and that fine powder every West Texas road throws at your gear. Reinforced stitching at the webbing, handle, and stress points means it holds up when you drag it out by the top grab handle or torque it free from a loaded vest.

The dual zipper pulls are easy to find with numb or gloved fingers, so if you’re working a casualty on the side of I-35 in a winter front or patching someone up in August heat, you’re not fighting tiny hardware. Once open, the tri-fold layout lays flat enough on a tailgate or ground tarp that nothing goes hiding in a dark corner.

On the outside, the MOLLE webbing lets you clip a tourniquet or small light. The loop field up front takes a medical cross, blood type, department patch, or simple ID, so the right pouch gets grabbed when time is short and adrenaline is high.

Texas EMT Pouch Use Cases: From Lease Roads to School Runs

Running Ranch Roads and Pipeline Right-of-Way

If your workday takes you through mesquite, over cattle guards, and under low gates, you already know it’s not a matter of if someone gets cut, pinned, or burned — just when. This EMT pouch carries enough to handle fence cuts, smashed knuckles, and the kind of punctures that come from old wire and rusted metal. Mounted to a truck seat-back with the MOLLE base, it’s close enough for the driver or passenger to reach without climbing out, even when the truck’s sitting crooked in a washout.

Range Days and Matches Across the State

At a multi-gun match outside San Antonio or a private range near Lubbock, medical is supposed to be on site — but every responsible shooter keeps their own kit. This pouch rides on a battle belt with almost no bulk, staying out of the way of rifle mags and holsters. Inside, the elastic and pockets keep chest seals, gauze, and shears staged for one-handed access. When someone shouts for a medic, you don’t bring a half-empty bandage box; you bring this.

Questions Texas Buyers Ask About MOLLE EMT Pouches

Are OTF knives legal to carry in Texas?

Yes. Under current Texas law, automatic knives — including OTF knives and traditional switchblades — are legal to own and carry for adults in most everyday situations, as long as you’re not in a location-restricted area like certain schools, secure government buildings, or similar prohibited zones. A lot of Texans pair a legal OTF knife with an EMT pouch like this, keeping both staged on a belt or pack for work, ranch, or range use. Always check the latest local rules and any specific restrictions tied to where you live or work.

How should I load this EMT pouch for Texas conditions?

Think about the problems you actually see in your part of the state. Panhandle and West Texas hands often build kits around lacerations, vehicle mishaps, and industrial cuts: pressure dressings, gauze, tape, tourniquet, shears, and gloves. Along the Gulf Coast and in Central Texas, where humidity and heat hit harder, many add burn dressings and electrolyte packets. The mesh panel is ideal for items you need visible and flat; the elastic suits tourniquets, pens, and tools; the pockets hold dressings, bandages, and meds. Pack it so you can work by feel at night on a dim county road.

Should I mount this EMT pouch on my belt, vest, or truck?

Mount it where your hands naturally go when something goes wrong. If you’re LE or security in Houston, a duty belt or outer carrier keeps it on your body when you step away from the vehicle. If you’re a rancher outside Uvalde or a guide in the Hill Country, a truck seat-back or range bag may make more sense, since the truck is your base. The MOLLE base and PAL straps give you options: weave it into any grid, then trust the hook-and-loop base to let you rip it free and carry it to the problem.

Ready When a Texas Day Turns Sideways

Picture a late summer evening on a gravel county road. A trailer gate slips, a hand takes a bad cut, and suddenly everyone’s looking for gauze and tape. With this coyote MOLLE EMT pouch riding on your seat-back or belt, you’re not guessing which box the gear ended up in. You grab the handle, rip it free, and have three open panels of organized supplies laid out on the tailgate in seconds. In a state where help can be far and the work doesn’t stop, this is the kind of quiet, organized kit Texans come to rely on.

No Specifications