Jump to content
Barms

Creek water

Recommended Posts

Click the link I posted ...  I'm not talking about a home wood burning stove.

 

 

granted that is a very efficient wood stove, your initial statement of a few twigs for 10 gallons of water was just a bit misleading... Looks like an open flame with firebrick.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Household bleach has a rather short shelf life --  

Not really.

 

And if you smell bleach in the water after the maximum anticipated contact time is complete, you are good whether the bleach degraded or not. If you don't, add more bleach and repeat.

 

I drank critter infested water for over a year with no filtration. Sometimes puddles, sometimes mud squeezed through something. Disinfected with Iodine or chlorine. Problem is that doesn't always work on certain cysts or recalcitrant bacteria, but I never got bit and never knew anybody that got bit. Boiling won't help those, either. You are either going to have to pressure cook or run through micro-filters. Or use some serious sterilization cycle.

 

The best bet medium term is to find a good source with no mustilids upstream and no suspicion of abuse with biological waste. As far as pollution is concerned, not really a big concern in our country for short-term use. You can shake up your canteen to aerate the water (stripping) and open and quickly sniff. Even safe levels of VOs (gasoline, dry cleaning, etc.) will be immediately apparant as well as SVOs (fuel oils, BPA, etc.) Unfortunately, you can't determine the presence of metals but serious levels for short term use are unlikey and most water purification filters will address all of them if necessary.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

I meant to say you need as much energy to heat one gallon of water to boiling, regardless of how you do it. How much fuel you need depends on the efficiencies of combustion and heat transfer. Can you really boil a gallon of water with "a few twigs in 10 minutes"? That would be amazing.

Look up the bucket stove (made from steel bucket). I don't know about a gallon in 10 minutes with a few twiggs, but a quart in 20 minutes with a few ounces and constant attention is doable.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    No registered users viewing this page.



  • olight.jpg

    Use Promo Code "NJGF10" for 10% Off Regular Items

  • Supporting Vendors

  • Latest Topics

  • Posts

    • We never let then inside.  Last re-evaluation was 6-7 years ago, wife politely told him that he was welcome to look around the property and he could look in the windows. He saw two white resin chairs in the basement and told her that this constituted a finished basement. And everything in the basement is bare concrete/ cinder block, and mechanical systems. Nothing finished about it. Ultimately he relented and I'm sure that was a ploy to coerce us to allow him in
    • I use an Alien Gear cloak tuck (IWB) with my Shield.  Neoprene back - in the summer it does feel warm but doesn't rub or chafe.   https://aliengearholsters.com/ruger-lcp-iwb-holster.html Could also go with the shapeshift as it has multiple options - OWB/IWB, Appendix... https://aliengearholsters.com/ruger-lcp-shapeshift-modular-holster-system.html
    • The  12-1 compression ratio L88 is long gone. This is GM's updated version. it might be  pump gas 10-1 engine The L88 was a aluminum head  cast iron block engine with a nasty solid lifter cam. the  ZL1 was a all aluminum  12 or 13-1 compression ratio engine with the best forged internal parts at the time and had a even nastier solid lifter cam 
    • I like my regular carry holster.  OWB leather with belt slots.  I've been carrying for over a year and it was comfortable and I hardly even noticed it.  I carry (usually) a Ruger LCP .380 - light, convenient, tiny. But...today I ended up taking it off an leaving it home after a few hours. I cut down a big maple tree a few days ago and I spent 3/4 of today loading and unloading firewood into the back of my truck and a trailer.  It was a warm day, I was dirty, tired, sweaty, and my holster was rubbing against my side.  The leather and exposed metal snap was no longer comfortable. I'm thinking about adding a layer of something to that part of the holster to soften the contact.  Anything insulating will make it worse.  I don't want a sweaty, hotter holster against my skin.  I'm imagining something thin, breathable, that won't absorb sweat, and softer than leather, metal snaps, and rivets.   But I have no idea what would work. I'm hoping somebody else has already figured this out and I can just do what they did. Any suggestions appreciated.
    • Check the primers on the ammo you didn't shoot yet. Are they fully seated? If the primer is not just below flush with the back of the case, the first hit can seat it better then the second hit ignites it. 
×
×
  • Create New...