JoshT wrote:Lots of good information in this thread, but a few red herrings too. A few points to consider:
- Surface water in streams is naturally low in salts, chemicals, metals, petrochemicals etc. Any presence of these comes from human interaction.
Heavy metals and chemicals will settle to the bottom of a stream bed and usually embed in the sand but can be disturbed with increased flow or people walking in the stream. Water below old or current mines would be suspect for this.
JoshT wrote:- There is almost no useful way of measuring water safety - identifying risks and treating appropriately is the only way to ensure safety.
There is
no way to measure water safety in the field. Treat all water as suspect and treat all water if you are concerned. While it may be obvious that some streams are suspect, making an assumption any stream is OK is really a matter of chance. It may be lotto winning number chances but even our so called pristine mountain streams carry protozoa, bacteria and parasites. e.g. Wild dogs carry tape worm.
JoshT wrote: - Any water downstream of humans should be treated with caution.
Which means most of the Sydney basin.
JoshT wrote:- Anecdotal evidence that 'I didn't get sick' doesn't mean water is safe. Every gut is different. Around 40% of people are susceptible to certain gastro bugs, others aren't.
Those who are less affected like to tell others which water is safe to drink.
JoshT wrote:- After heavy rainfall, any water source near humans should be considered unsafe. Sewerage systems are designed to overflow into creeks and rivers during heavy rain.
Urban runoff is just as bad as sewerage overflow. Heavy rain without overflow will increase the risk.
JoshT wrote:- Metals and chemicals are usually only toxic in very high concentrations which are highly unlikely. You need long term exposure for any health impact.
This is true but some stay in your body for life so long term exposure is possible if you are a frequent drinker of this water.
JoshT wrote:- A TDS meter (actually an electrical conductivity meter) will measure one thing - electrical conductivity. This is basically a measure of saltiness and isn't that useful on it's own.
Partly true. A TDS meter does measure electrical conductivity as I mentioned previously but it not just measure saltiness. It is a measure of the positive and negative ions. It does not give any indication of what these ions may be but not all are salts. To say it measures saltiness is misleading.
JoshT wrote: - Elevated EC in stream water (anything above about 400) indicates water has an additional source; either mine discharge, tidal seawater influence, urban runoff, etc. Indicates higher risk.
For those concerned this could be helpful. I don't carry a TDS meter with me while walking but if people are concerned and do not have information about the area then it could be of benefit and as you say it will indicate a higher risk but cannot identify the risk.
JoshT wrote:On treatment
- Boiling kills anything microbiological. Rolling boil is all that's needed, not for 1 minute or 5 or anything.
- Filters remove bacteria and dirt, but don't remove viruses
- Viruses are killed very quickly by chlorine and other chemicals
- UV kills anything microbiological but only if the water is clear - dirty water needs physical filtration first
- Chlorine (and most other chems) kills everything except cryptosporidium (watch out for humans or cows). Also needs clear water.
- Activated carbon removes tastes and smells, and some organic chemicals, but you can't tell if it's effective or not, or when it has exhausted its treatment capacity.
I use a Sawyer squeeze, and add half a chlorine tablet where there is a risk of viruses.
Happy to discuss / be challenged on any of this.
- Josh
- A rolling boil for 1 minute is all that is required unless above 2000m. That is because water will boil at a lower temperature as air pressure drops. see
http://www.health.gov.au/internet/main/ ... i2209j.htm- Filters also remove protozoa such as giardia and crypto. Membrane filters can remove viruses but this is not practical in the field.
- Not keen on drinking muddy or turbid water so filtration would be a must anyway.
- Chlorine and iodine are considered safe for humans in small doses but you will be able to taste it. A couple of drops of the iodine carried in your first aid kit (5% tincture) would treat a litre of clear water but double that for cloudy. Add a sachet of ice tea for flavour. Humans, cows, deer, possums, kangaroos and most native animals can transmit protozoa. It has been accepted that only two variants of the crypto protozoa will effect humans. A new type of crypto has been found in pigs which may also affect humans. Wild pigs are prevalent in many areas now.
Some info from MSR
https://thesummitregister.com/water-fil ... urifier-2/Good input Josh.