You people are a bad influence. We'll be spending the summer on our boat in the Pacific Northwest... I was thinking of something
really small, like a Traveler Escape Mk-ll (looks like a miniature Les Paul, with the tuning keys in the body and no head stock). I couldn't find one of those in the Phoenix area (where we are right now), but played a couple Travelers with humbucker pickups... a bit too metal-sounding for my tastes, and the neck felt odd with no headstock. I couldn't get comfortable sitting with that thing - like trying to play a breadboard. Still, it felt pretty indestructible. I already have a really small Roland Cube Street amp that is small enough to tuck in any compartment in the boat, but I couldn't make myself like that Traveler.
Yeah, I tried a couple GSminis... just because. At the last place we checked, I was about to give up. Then I picked up a GSmini that felt and sounded better than the others I had tried. Or maybe it was a "closing time" scenerio, since we are heading out of "the big city" in the morning?

My wife said, "Um, weren't you looking for a travel guitar when you bought that Tayor last month?"
"Yeah. But, with the hard case and the size and the weight..."
"If you get this one, we're done looking - agreed?" She loves it when I play, not so much when we guitar shop. So, a GSmini came home with us today.
I like the idea of the ES-GO pickup, but it has gotten a buttload of less than favorable reviews when I did a search. Has Taylor (or whoever the 3rd party is who makes them for Taylor) worked out the grounding buzz? Can you EQ the pickup for decent tone?
This thing weighs almost nothing in the gig bag (never had one of those before, always had hard cases).
Captain Jim