Wondering about wilderness water.
Confession: in my LT day-hikes, I’ve not bothered with water
purification. Worked on the assumption that if it was high-elevation, clear and
running it was probably alright. But after day-hikes, I return to my
bathroom-furnished, drinking-water-supplied abode. Hoping for the best is a
high-stakes policy on a thru-hike.
few and far between. |
It seems that either iodine or chlorine dioxide are
the most compact, reliable and cheap options. I’ll order one of each -- iodine-based
and ClO2-based – and test them. Daily iodine seems unlikely to cause problems under 6 weeks of continuous use?
I’m also wondering about caffeine. I don’t want caffeine
headaches/withdrawal migraines on the trail, but I think limited caffeine could
certainly help my focus/endurance. Seems I have two options -- find a way to caffeinate on the LT, or go caffeine-free before the trip. Typically, I have 2-3 cups of coffee in the
morning and black tea throughout afternoon practice sessions. If I have a
tricky bit of music to work on, a cuppa in my mug from The Drum Exchange is my
purposeful-power beverage of choice (yes, I attach emotional meaning to mugs).
I’m thinking I’ll compromise – stop drinking coffee
tomorrow, taper to tea only, then down to 1-2 teas a day pre-trail. Then I’ll
take some low-caffeine powdered drinks on the trail in case I badly want them.
Question for you all: is there anything similar to the caffeinated versions of
Crystal Light that does not contain aspartame?
Aspartame sucks. |
Talking of wild water, here’s a trailer for a new “wild swimming” chamber opera by lovely composer/singer Kerry Andrew. Looks great. Check
it out, UK friends.
I don't do caffeine anymore, partly because I'm also prone to migraine-head. But given that I tend to boil any river water I drink (even if I am using those tablet thingers), tossing a teabag has always been an easy answer to making it taste less crappy.
ReplyDeleteAnd I've never had Crystal Light because I distrust anything with "light" in it, but I have drunk piping-hot Country Time Pink Lemonade on a few snowy mountaintops... lol.
Thanks AdSlipper! Hot pink lemonade and suitably British river-tea both sound great. I am sincerely hoping for no snow in September.
ReplyDelete