75% of the Earth’s surface is covered with water, and 2/3rds
of your body is composed of water, but go 3 days or so without any, and you’ll
be joining the ranks of the ex-persons club.
Unfortunately, most of what’s out there isn’t in a form you
can consume without accelerating your demise. Neither blood, sweat, tears,
urine, nor seawater are what you need, and will dehydrate you even faster if
you foolishly try them as a substitute. Parasites, bacteria, viruses, cysts,
and all manner of invisible nasties await you if you do find relatively fresh
water that hasn’t been purified first.
Getting your hands on a military canteen, or simply a 1L
plastic water bottle empty is a great start. If you can set up a series of
three successive filters – say, three buckets or bowls with a drain hole in the
bottom, with water going from one to the next in order – and fill the top one with pea gravel, the
next one with sand, and the last with activated charcoal (wood charcoal from a
campfire, and not wood that’s from a toxic plant!), you can filter out quite a
bit of the crud, sediment, and discoloration and let it drip into what’s
serving as your canteen. But it’s still not ready to drink yet.
Under the heading of Primitive Purification Method #1, a 1L clear
bottle of such clarified water, sealed, and set out in the sun from dawn to
dusk, will use the sun’s natural UV rays to neutralize the beasties still
present in your clarified water. Bottles much larger than 1L diminish the sun’s
efficacy though, and you also need multiple bottles to supply your daily needs,
all sun-baked appropriately, as well as a convenient sun-exposed spot to lay
them. And your water will have to wait until it cools to be drinkable. But for
thousands in temperate and tropical climates without other resources, it’ll do.
Obviously, this isn’t going to work at the Arctic circle in the shortened days
of most of the year. And sunlight eventually breaks down plastic bottles. Glass
lasts a lot longer, but it’s heavy. *
A good deal quicker, if you have plain, unscented household
bleach and a medicine dropper, is to put 2 drops of it per liter(quart) into
that same clear but unpurifed water, shake it, and wait 30 minutes. If the
water is unclarified (muddy, cruddy, etc.) double the amount of bleach per
quart. If the water’s cold, rather than somewhere warmer than 60 degrees,
double the wait time as well. You can drink pure water this way as long as the
sodium hypochlorite (that’s the bleach part) holds out. Putting these
instructions on a laminated card with an eyedropper attached, punching a hole
through the corner, and banding it to the bottle of emergency unscented
household bleach you buy annually for emergencies would be a splendid plan. At
15 drops per mL, and needing 1 gallon of water a day, a liter of bleach should last two people something like 500 days, or nearly year and a half.
Which is probably about as long as a bottle of household
bleach will retain its potency, which is why you should rotate yours into the
laundry supply and replace the freshest bottle into your designated
purification system every year. But there are varieties of Pool Shock, from
pool supply stores, that would enable you to use your brain and a little
chemistry math to recreate endless batches of household strength bleach from
concentrated chemical, with due diligence. (Warning: The raw powder stuff is
corrosive, and requires careful and proper storage and handling. But the
chemical form lasts years longer than the dilute liquid variety.)
You can perform the same purification miracles with iodine,
or potassium permagnate. The problems are that some people are deathly allergic
to iodine, and potassium permagnate is rather hard to come by. If you have a
source for those chemicals, and no one in your party has issues, there’s
nothing wrong with using them. And with all of the above, your water will
taste…crappy. If at all possible, after
your water’s been safely made pure, put it someplace where it can breathe,
uncapped, and/or pour it back and forth from a couple of very clean containers,
to let some of your chemicals dissipate, and aerate the water, so that it
tastes better. Powdered drink mixes in quantity for sheltering emergencies
wouldn’t be a bad idea either. I’m partial to lemonade, but there are any
number of flavors and varieties, some of which include a decent supply of
electrolyte boosters as well. Just beware of the added sugar content in some.
Then there’s the Cadillac systems: physical purification by
filtration. Lifeboats and such use reverse osmosis and sunlight to draw the sea
salt out of seawater. Slow, but flawless. You’ll need a lot of seawater,
sunlight, and time, or a number of such units. Several companies, like Katadyn,
make any number of small filters that use ceramic elements to achieve
phenomenal purity, and the filter elements are the size of a water bottle or
small flashlight, and last for something >10,000 liters. The small version
uses a small hand pump. They make an expedition multi-filter size that look
like a large bicycle pump, and turns out gallons instead of liters in a minute
or two. And the Berkey folks make great stainless steel tubs which you simply
fill and walk away from, and over time, the internal filters drip a day or
more’s supply to the lower tank ready to draw off. The only drawback with any
of these is price, usually currently somewhere around $250-350 and up, and the
need, eventually, for replacement filters, because the old ones clog up over
time internally, and spare anything is always good to have.
Lastly, of course, there’s the brute force method, assuming
you have endless loads of fuel, a large
pot, and someone to tend it. One makes pure water the same way nuns make holy
water: you simply boil the hell out of it.
For a person afoot, a small hiker’s filter and a small
bottle of bleach and dropper would provide months of water availability,
assuming one has access to water to purify.
For a base or homestead, a variety of methods of
purification would be prudent, along with provision of rain collection barrels,
springs, ponds, streams, cisterns, etc. and/or a well or three, to get and
store as much of the stuff as you and yours might require. Imagine in your head
that there’s no government to help you and no water company to pump yours, and
start to think up how you and your devices and ingenuity would fill the gap
left by their absence. For planning purposes, you drink and cook with about a
gallon a day. Add sanitation, washing, bathing, and clothes cleaning, and you
need to supply >100 gallons/person/day. Double that for watering crops.
Calculate well, make appropriate provision, and plan prudently, folks.
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