Archive for the ‘Pure Water to Go’ Category

New Water Filter Bottles Great for Travel

Friday, December 8th, 2006

On a tip from a friend last month, I purchased four Biological water filter bottles from PureWater2Go for my family’s trip to Mexico.  These bottles are great!  They work exactly as promised, and are actually less expensive than drinking bottled water.

These special Bio bottles filter out all kinds of bacteria and organisms from any water source, so it’s actually save to drink the water in foreign countries.  I’ve gotten Montezuma’s revenge before from traveling in Mexico, and I can assure you that you don’t want it! 

It’s so easy to just fill the water filter bottle with tap water, put the cap back on, and drink away.  There is no waiting, or shaking, or adding chemicals or anything.  It really is fantastic, and I recommend these bottles to everyone who is traveling out of the country.

We had a great time on our trip, took the bottles with us on tours and field trips, and were able to re-fill them from faucets and hoses.  For several hours during a tour of distant ruins, there was no place to buy bottled water, and my family were the only people on the tour bus that were not dying of thirst.

Taking a filtered bottle to sporting events

Thursday, December 7th, 2006

How many of us go to games with our kid’s and constantly tell them, “Don’t put your mouth on the water fountain spout.” Germs, bacteria and all sorts of things live there.

My two sons are active in sports, and with the filtered bottle this not only keeps them from drinking directly from the fountain, but it also gives me peace of mind knowing that their water is safe.

Thanks PureWater2Go for giving us the choice!

 

Landfill Nightmare: Disposable Water Bottles

Tuesday, December 5th, 2006

I happened to be in the office of the Secretary of State of Missouri on corporate business, and I took note of a placard they had posted on the wall listing the amounts of time it takes for various types of materials to decompose and be returned to nature.  There was a range of 2 years to 1000 years listed for products from paper to wood to different metals, and I don’t remember the exact times.  I found it interesting that some glass takes about 1,000,000 years to decompose, but I found it frightening that plastic bottles were listed as “indefinite.” 

I don’t know about you, but even a million years seems pretty indefinite to me, based on my rate of aging, which seems to accelerate every year.  But if plastic bottles are so much worse, maybe we should not be so casual about filling our landfills up with them.  On researching landfills and their plastic content, I discovered that the percentage of total landfill space occupied by plastic water bottles is the fasting growing segment. 

While I hate the taste of tap water, I vowed to quit buying bottled water in disposable plastic bottles.  Now, you can have water that tastes good without filling up our landfills. And it’s much less expensive than drinking bottled water.  Use a personal water filter bottle.  It has a filter build right in the cap of the bottle, and it makes regular tap water taste like bottled water.  The bottle is re-usable indefinitely, and replacement filters are readily available and last 3 months.

These water filter bottles save me over $2,000 per year for my family of 4, and nothing goes in the landfill.  I would recommend these water filter bottles to everyone, not only because they save our landfills, but because they are economical and very convenient. 

Portable Water Filter Blog

Wednesday, November 1st, 2006

Welcome to our Portable Water Filter Blog