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Date Posted: 14:46:50 02/25/07 Sun
Author: Dennis
Author Host/IP: unio-cas1-cs-6.dial.bright.net / 209.143.16.136
Subject: Re: Water sources for you flyer(s)
In reply to: S. Patterson 's message, "Water sources for you flyer(s)" on 11:03:05 02/25/07 Sun

Being a well driller's son I've always read about
water. One brand of bottled water is city water ran
through a filter. From everything I've read on the
bottled water, plain tap water is as safe or better
on the average but still may not be good for animals
if it is treated water. My guys always get well water
straight from the well with no filtering or treatment.


>Excellent point/topic Dennis - something that needs
>discussion.
>
>Any brand of drinking water for humans sold in North
>America is deemed "safe" to drink. Safe for a 150lb
>person, or a 45lb person, over a lifetime - not ALL of
>the bottled water craze is due to marketing and "cool
>factor" - its popularity is also because some tap
>water quality is truly awful in some jurisdictions
>(way to much chlorine, flouride for example) and
>passable at best in other jurisdictions.
>
>Which begs the question: What are tap water's
>long-term effects with regard to an 80 gram mammals'
>organs?
>
>Use distilled water (cheap and totally pure), Brita
>water (better than tap water), rain water. For bottled
>water, check the label. Some bottled "spring" water
>can contain high levels of sodium, potassium,
>magnesium, phosphorus, sulfates and "trace elements".
>Some contain high amounts of dissolved solids.
>And, off course, Dasani bottled water is tap water
>that has gone through revers-osmosis and then minerals
>and salts are added. Note - About 1/4 of all bottled
>water produced in the world is tap water that has been
>processed and repackaged, according to industry
>estimates. Another little-known fact is bottled-water
>companies aren't required to disinfect or test for
>parasites such as Cryptosporidium or Giardia - a
>requirement for city tap water in the USA.
>
>Another problem is large urns of bottle water contain
>endocrine disrupters, which leach from polycarbonate
>plastics.
>
>I personally would reccommend distilled or
>reverse-osmosis water that has not been altered by
>adding minerals or dissolved solids, to be sure about
>what you are putting into your flyer(s).
>
>Comments and discussion invited.
>
>>What kind of water are you giving her? They should
>>not get softened water and some city water has too
>>many additives like chlorine. You can let chlorinated
>>water set in an open picture to let the chlorine
>>evaporate out. Or buy a filtered untreated bottled
>>water.

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