Do You Buy Bottled Water?

Lon

Well-known Member
I don't get it. Seems like everyone in my area buys it despite the city saying the water is good and tastes OK. I have purchased a bottle or two and can't taste any difference from the domestic tap water. This has got to be one big money making racket.
 

The real test is the condition of your kettle after a few months of use. My daughter moved to Scotland 9 years ago. The kettle she bought then still looks like brand new straight out of the box. The water is that pure, around here. No point in buying bottled water up here
 
Like you, occasionally. But we have a filter system for storing drinking water.
However, I do regularly buy distilled water to use in my bipap machine.
 

No, Never buy it. I have an aluminum water bottle that I fill from my filtered water in the fridge door
if I want to take it with me. It stays cold for quite awhile.

Have you noticed that "Evian" spelled backwards is "naïve" ?
 
It is a big money-making racket. And hard on the environment -- all that plastic!

I buy it only when traveling, or at a horse barn (most don't have water fountains; some have questionable tap water.)

Usually when traveling I will fill an old water or soft-drink bottle with tap water and drink it.

I went to the beach with a friend last summer. Within 24 hours he was buying big gallon jugs of water "because the tap water tasted funny." It did taste funny. Duh -- we were at the beach, in a different state. Of course it tasted funny. It also tasted fine, and I drank it all week and felt fine. I don't know whether he used the bottled water to make his coffee too each morning -- I used tap to make mine.

Men. What are you gonna do? ;)
 
We don't buy it. The water in our city is very good, and I then filter it through a separate drinking water faucet. No need for bottled water.
 
Never have bought it. Seems silly to me. I've used old plastic coke bottles to carry tap water around with me while working. Some people complain about chlorine in our city water.:shrug:
 
I think it's silly as well, spending money to buy water when you can turn on a tap. I mean I do understand when the tap water is declared unsafe repeatedly. My brother lives in Toms River, NJ. Whole reports and books have been written about that areas history as a giant industrial dumping site. Yes then you buy bottled water even for cooking and brushing your teeth.

But here no...I carry an empty Arizona bottle. Any water fountain and I fill it up again.
 
I keep a few cases around for emergencies. Got a case down in the storm shelter, I do not buy it to drink regularly however you do have to use it so your stock rotates properly. So actually yes, I do buy it. ahahahahahahahha that is funny.
 
Never buy it........our refrigerator has a built in changeable filter and I added a additional separate inline filter, the water gets filtered twice.
 
I think bottled water is more of a fad, than a necessity in most locales...I guess some people think it looks "cool" to walk around with their water bottle. It's probably a good idea to keep some in the house in case of a water main break, etc., but unless the local water is heavily treated with chemicals to combat pollutants, it is a waste of money and resources. I would really like to see a national "deposit" of at least 10 cents placed on every water bottle...perhaps the users would begin to recycle instead of dumping their plastic waste all over the landscape.
 
Most... MOST tap drinking water is safe. There are incidents such as the Flint, Michigan lead which render the water unfit for drinking. Those are the exceptions.

If people complain of chlorine, the water supply probably is still simply chlorinating and not going to chloramines. Many systems feed some ammonia after the chlorine. Without the ammonia, chloramines, the chlorine off-gasses and will lose its residual as it moves out into the distribution network. Hence, those living closer to the treatment plants will taste/smell chlorine because it's stronger there than further out in the system. With the ammonia binding with the chlorine, water can leave the plant with a slightly lower residual and a more even taste/odor throughout the system.

As far as water tasting different from one place to another... Different source water can certainly have an effect on the taste/odor of the finished water. Well water will usually have some minerals in it, mainly iron and manganese. Surface water... is it a lake or is it a river/stream. Lakes turn over and the source water changes season to season. Rivers/streams are affected by runoff so can go from fairly clean to muddy in a moment's notice during hard rains. The changes can be anticipated, but no one can outthink Mother Nature.

Building water treatment plants over the years, I have been extremely particular that walls are straight... piping connections are aligned... paint and coating systems are applied evenly... blue is blue and green is green. A new plant will go on line and user will never know until a local newspaper publishes the news. Immediately, the plant will get calls saying "Our water tastes different!". The best thing the supplier can do is invite those customers to the new facility. If it is dirty, paint doesn't match, concrete not finished to flat texture, etc. the water will never taste good. OTOH, if a customer comes into the plant and leaves swearing they had been in a hospital, library, or new school due to the professional workmanship... they will leave telling everyone how great the "new" water tastes.

Nothing more rewarding than seeing muddy, dirty water coming into a treatment plant and leaving as excellent drinking water. That accomplishment is a combination of science, hard work, experience, and a staff dedicated to providing only the best quality product for their valued customers.
 
Yes, we do. My husband drinks it all the time, despite a filter on our water dispenser on our fridge and excellent tasting water. Me, on the other hand is not picky, I drink from the tap or from the fridge. I do have bottled water in my car to drink.
 
I never buy bottled water and I still can't get over people lugging around a bottle of water. In the 50's and 60's if you got thirsty you found a water fountain or went to the kitchen sink and got a drink of tap water. When I was growing up my Grandfather had an old green granite ware cup on a long wooden handle.It had a hole in the handle, and he tied it to the faucet outside. In the summer anybody who came along had a drink from that old cup. I wouldn't go that far today but nothing wrong with tap water.
 
I don't buy bottled water except for very occasionally. Yesterday I bought a bottle of water because I was out running errands and had failed to bring water with me. It was awfully hot and I was dying of thirst.
 
Here on the Big Island a lot of folks rely on "catchment water" - basically rain water they capture in a 10,000 (average) gallon above ground tank. The water is treated in various ways. But a lot of folks do buy bottled water for drinking and cooking.

Luckily I'm in the small part of the Island that has county water. And, the county has a place about 3 miles away that is spring water on tap. Take your own bottles and fill with spring water. I take two 5 gallon jugs and fill, then pour into 1 liter bottles at home. I've seen folks filling 50 gallon containers in the back of pickup trucks.
 
We don't buy water but we do put ours through a Brita filter because there's so much chlorine in the tap water that you can smell it when you run it.
 


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