posted
Boiling and straining through at least a coffee filter.In the Marines we used Iodine tablets, not recomended in this day and age.
-------------------- Some people live an entire lifetime and wonder if they have ever made a difference in the world, but the Marines don’t have that problem. —President Ronald Reagan Posts: 7953 | From: NJ to GA back to NJ =Lost ;) | Registered: Sep 2009
| IP: Logged |
posted
Charcoal & sand filtration, followed by a brief boil.. Only cost there may be containers, but a plastic bottle and a tin can will do
Downside is, this takes time..
-------------------- ~Those who believe in telekinetics, raise my hand~ Kurt Vonnegut
~Have you ever noticed? Anybody going slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac~ George Carlin Posts: 1251 | From: Norway | Registered: Oct 2009
| IP: Logged |
posted
I used the tablets from Wal-mart for a diy pack in hunt last year. The water was always very clear. I also carried a filter bottle in case of rain caused turbidity... but never got any appreciable rain the whole trip.
The tabs I used included tabs to kill the chemical taste after treatment. I also usually added lemon-lime gatorade mix (in the straws) or tang for some flavor/electrolytes.
The fancy filter systems are nice, but VERY expensive. Boiling works if you are not in a hurry... and UV will disinfect it for you if you have some clear 2 liter soda bottles. Just fill the bottles and leave them in the sun for 6 or so hours. Put 'em back in the stream to chill.
-------------------- 64" Toelke Whip 54@28 1 John 3:1 Posts: 769 | From: Rockport West Virginia | Registered: Jan 2009
| IP: Logged |
-------------------- Learn, practice and pass on "leave no trace" ethics, no matter where you hunt. Posts: 1105 | From: colorado | Registered: May 2009
| IP: Logged |
posted
If the water sources are basically clear, rather than cloudy or muddy, a Steripen is the best system out there. It is very light, kills everything and is easy to use. Filters are great, but are much heavier. And using them in cloudy water will clog them too, so its not a given they will work either. All systems should be backed up with tabs or the means to boil(fuel and stove).
Google Steripen and read all the reviews from the last year or two. They have been improved. I have used mine a lot this last year and am very impressed. Where I hunt, filters are extra weight you don't need to carry. A lot of the West is like this in the mountains. Clear water in seeps and small streams/creeks that are perhaps laden with giardia etc, but clear running. You can find them for under 70.00 sometimes.
Joshua
-------------------- Learn, practice and pass on "leave no trace" ethics, no matter where you hunt. Posts: 1105 | From: colorado | Registered: May 2009
| IP: Logged |
posted
I don't know how much "breaking the bank" would be, but I love my MSR Sweetwater Microfilter. They're not cheap at about $90.00, but they do a super job. I just got back this weekend from an elk hunt in Colorado and used it every day. I'd get another one quick if this one ever fails.
posted
I use an MSR filter and a steripen combined. The filters don't catch some of the nasties but the steripen will. The steripen won't take out suspended particles but the steripen will. A filter sometimes will be covered in slime after filtering even some pretty clean looking water. This is one place you should break the bank if you possible can.
Posts: 813 | From: canada | Registered: May 2007
| IP: Logged |
posted
i quote from a cyber friend (who's into serious, remote mexican roosterfishing in the surf), todd "high plains drifter" ...
"... the cheapest and most convenient method of water purification is the way the hardcore mountaineers, explorers, and adventurers do it. Many of them use Betadine. It is a povidone-iodine 10% solution that can be cheaply bought at virtually all drug stores as a wound antiseptic. Four drops in one liter of tap water (sixteen drops to a gallon) will kill the nasties in a half hour. Now here is the secret. Crushing and dissolving a tablet of vitamin C (ascorbic acid) into the Betadine treated water (after the half hour rest) will completely neutralize the taste of the Betadine. It will taste like spring water! Betadine will render even pond, puddle, and river water safe to drink in an emergency. Additionally, it is a very effective wound antiseptic in its undiluted form."
-------------------- "Molon Labe" (Come and Get Them) ~ Instinctive Archer Magazine ~ TGMM Family of the Bow ~ NRA Life Member Posts: 8858 | From: NJ | Registered: Mar 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
X2 on the Katadyn filter. We use the basecamp model for canoe camping.
It is hard to beat iodine tablets, and the Vitamin C trick will kill the taste. Another option that works on the same principal is the MIOX device sold by MSR. Ive used it in the boundary waters many times and carried it for a month in peru with no problems.
-------------------- “In the end we will conserve only what we love. We will love only what we understand. We will understand only what we are taught." -- Baba Dioum Posts: 575 | From: Rogersville, Missouri | Registered: Jan 2004
| IP: Logged |
posted
Katadyne filter pump here too. Packed it in on 2 backpack hunts to Colorado now. I always keep iodine in my survival kit just in case.
-------------------- Make the most of all that comes and the least of all that goes! TGMM Family of the Bow Posts: 10081 | From: Brevard, NC. | Registered: Apr 2003
| IP: Logged |
posted
i would say iodine purification pills or a good quality filter water pump. if u decide to go with the pump, wen you buy one watch how many liters per min it will pump some are very SLOW.
-------------------- Kevin Day Posts: 460 | From: kansas | Registered: Sep 2010
| IP: Logged |
posted
Used the Katadyne this summer. Not the pump, the gavity bag style. Awful convenient. Fill it up, 30 minutes later you have a lot of filtered water, no pumping. I like the tablets when saving weight though.
-------------------- TGMM Family of the Bow "The earth has its music for those who will listen." - Santayana Posts: 722 | From: Fairfax Station, Virginia | Registered: Jul 2010
| IP: Logged |