Stark wrote:Themightytom wrote:ah. Like a soda can. I understand completely.
What the hell? A drinking bottle is not a soda can. How the christ is a soda can relevant to a discussion of reusable water storage?
This whole thing is amusing to me because I grew up in a cold climate with an outdoor lifestyle, so everyone had lightweight aluminum cups, drinking containers, etc. Now people just re-use shitty plastic ones full of precious plastic denaturing byproducts. It's sad.
The soda can was a tongue in cheek reference to your "metal water bottle" because they do in fact sell canned water in some places. I was always stuck with the metal water bottle when I was a boy scout and only WISHED I could have the awesome plastic ones, specifically because you can't see inside a canteen and after a while the canteen would taste suspicious no matter how often you washed it. You can't really tell how good the water is before you drink it unless you poured it out.
Nonetheless a disposable plastic water bottle is apparently not as hygenic as a metal one, I am not ready to switch back, I really should just leave the nalgene bottle in the gym bag and stop fforgeting it. it does no good as a $10 paperweight.
Stark wrote:You mean, how reusing cheap plastic is a bad idea and the bottled water industry is a giant waste of resources? What kind of place doesn't have public water sources, anyway?
Actually there are no public water sources downtown here, except for a shitty public bathroom behind city hall that is LITERALLY hidden behind a bush. I refill my bottles off of a water bubbler smack in the middle of a park that is a mile and a half away from anything. I doubt your average pedestrian will take a detour. its becoming faux paux to go to a restauraunt and order just water which is free, I should ask my clients where they get water when tehy need it.