If I take 30 minutes or more to expose a sheet of film, I am not futzy around, I am creating, exploring possibilities, learning, or something along those lines.
I did manage to get myself messed up a few times this summer. I went on a few backpack trips with the old Gowland PocketView (light-weight metal rail 4x5, 1100 grams w/ lens). Since I've not taken it out much in the past couple decades (usually take the wood 5x7), and being a very simple rail camera with a non-rotating back and no indents for zeroing movements, I did stupid things like forget to check for swing when turning the camera on its side to do a horizontal. To save weight I took a too-short tripod -- what a hassle. But by the third backpack trip I finally got everything sorted out.
Both the 4x5 and my 5x7 are easy to carry for most of the day on the tripod, with film holders and meter in a shoulder bag. I put the darkcloth over the camera and then a stuff sack (for rain protection and also from branches, etc). Nothing except the tripod legs and one's own legs need to touch the ground and the camera is ready to use if fleeting light is encountered.
Both cameras are light enough and both are a design type that carries well on a pod. My cameras and lenses are not of the highest quality (that is, very costly), so as a photo-friend of mine looked at it...there is risk walking in the landscape with the camera on the pod, but it is worth the risk if one comes across a 'money shot' that requires a very speedy set up. His idea of a money shot was one that will sell for more money than it would cost to repair/replace the camera.