Water. Bottled or tap?

3:28
Added over a year ago
Barbara Margaret Hay
July 11, 2008 at 9:12am
Tavis Reid
Tavis Reid
feels like a Mcdonlalds comercial! still not good for you
July 15, 2008 at 1:53am
Jeff Richards
Jeff Richards
Hurray for tap water!
July 17, 2008 at 5:54pm
Sandy Lopez
Sandy Lopez
Why are so people happy to give Coke more money? Water....Water drink it from the tap!!
July 25, 2008 at 4:25pm
Gerry
Gerry
Everyone should see this!!!!
August 23, 2008 at 1:21pm
Jochen Stoll
Jochen Stoll
Contrary to what is said in the film, you don't need to avoid bottles with a number 7 recycling sign on the bottom. 7 is a miscellaneous category that contains many different types of plastics. Poeple who say "avoid #7 bottles" are usually trying to avoid Polycarbonate plastics which are made with BPA (a chemical generally thought to be nasty).

... See MoreThe recent replacement for Polycarbonate is Copolyester, which contains no BPA, but is still in the #7 recycling category (along with a schwack of other plastics).
September 25, 2008 at 7:37pm
Brigitte
Brigitte
"Let your tap run for a few minutes if you have old pipes..." ok, fine, but please use that water for your plants, because wasting tap water is not good either!
February 3, 2009 at 4:35am
Jon'Nathon
Jon'Nathon
Yes bottled water is tap water.
K...
1.
If bottled water is tap water. and tap water is more regulated than bottled water.... ??? Who's writing this?
... See More
2.
6 weeks at room temperature? 6? Who's drinking that?

3.
Buying bottled water is CONVENIENT when you're out and about. that's why we buy it.

And no, water is not free. there's a price for everything.
Especially when you let it run for a few minutes, every time you want one glass of it.

"Knowledge is power...."
Cheers.
March 27, 2009 at 10:01am
Connie
Connie
my big fat Russian blue cat values cold tap water more
than his food,even nice cold toilet water.
April 14, 2009 at 11:36am
Ashley
Ashley
Those are some really good questions Jon'Nathon.

I think the issue is that beyond initial regulations in treatment plants, our pipe lines, water mains, and storage facilities are also regulated. Bottled water is usually bottled at the same treatment plant that cures your tap water, but is then left without chlorine in a warm bottle on pallets, in... See More stores, trucks.. wherever it is stored until it is consumed. It is bacteria-laden and unclean when you open the cap. Tap water, however, remains in a regulated system and is still clean when you open your tap (your tap may not be clean, but that is another issue).

Some cases of bottled water sit for 6 months before they are sold, never mind 6 weeks. Truckloads are shipped across country, even across continents, and there are no refer regulations on that water so the entire shipping time could be spent in a hot truck.
April 24, 2009 at 6:59am
Ashley
Ashley
It is definitely convenient, I agree. I have been known to buy it when I forget to fill my bottle too. But I don't buy cases to keep in my home.. and I usually remember to fill up from my own resource for a few pennies, not a few dollars.

The cost of a few minutes of running water vs a few water bottles is exponentially less, but you are right, it isn't actually free.

Knowledge is definitely power! I hope this helps.
April 24, 2009 at 7:00am
Ashley
Ashley
oh, and re: chlorine:

Fill up a pitcher and leave it in the fridge/counter for 18 hours. Chlorine will have dissipated and your water is now not 'full of bleach' as people like to say.

Also, it is true that running your tap for a minute or two at the start of the day can clear your pipes of sedentary rust. If you work all day, doing it again when you get home is a good idea. There are simple tests you can get, though, to see if you need to even do this.
April 24, 2009 at 7:03am