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#1
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"Roger Long" wrote:
"Wayne.B" wrote Perhaps Roger Long could cast some light on the question? Another reason though for using bottled water, despite confidence in your tanks, is all the funky stuff that can get into marina hoses and piping. It doesn't take much getting in when the pipes and hoses sit out there warm in the sun. Even though we don't drink the water from our tank, I like to fill it on a weekend when lots of people have been hosing off their boats and filling their tanks just in case a guest pours themselves a glass. We do both. We carry 400 gallons of water in two tanks. We wash our boat before we fill the tanks. I have no hesitation about drinking water from the tanks. We also freeze water in bottles at home and put the frozen bottles in the frig and freezer on the boat to help it keep cold. The ones in the refrigerator we periodically put in the head for drinking or taking pills. We also use those bottles to make sunshine tea. But when we are living aboard, we keep the water fresh enough to drink provided we don't fill the tanks with bad water to begin with. grandma Rosalie |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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I used to love sunshine tea and never had a problem drinking it but
someone (can't remember who but I do remember that they were credible on such subjects) told me that you can get very, very sick from it. The tea leaves grow in far a way places, often are spread out on tarps in the sun to dry, birds fly over, etc. You put this highly organic stuff in a bottle and let it heat up to just about the optimum temperature range for bacterial growth and then drink it. I'd like to know just how much of a concern this really is. The person who told me explained it as one of those things you'll get away with for years but can get life threateningly sick. BTW I'd have no hesitation about drinking the water out of our tank either except that it tastes like essence of old boat. -- Roger Long |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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I just remembered that my sunshine tea paranoia predates Google where
you can get an answer to anything. (I once typed in "What is the meaning of life?" and got an answer.) A search for sunshine tea turns up no hint of a reported problem even when the words "sick" and "danger" are added in. Given how the world loves problems, I'm sure someone out there would have heard about it. Enjoy (But keep that teapot on board in case I ever visit ![]() -- Roger Long |
#4
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Roger Long wrote:
I just remembered that my sunshine tea paranoia predates Google where you can get an answer to anything. (I once typed in "What is the meaning of life?" and got an answer.) C'mon, don't keep us in suspense. A search for sunshine tea turns up no hint of a reported problem even when the words "sick" and "danger" are added in. Given how the world loves problems, I'm sure someone out there would have heard about it. Microbiology isn't my strong suit, but I think the tannic acid kills most of the harmful bugs. That's one reason why people got in the habit of drinking tea all those centuries ago. DSK |
#5
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DSK wrote:
Roger Long wrote: I just remembered that my sunshine tea paranoia predates Google where you can get an answer to anything. (I once typed in "What is the meaning of life?" and got an answer.) C'mon, don't keep us in suspense. A search for sunshine tea turns up no hint of a reported problem even when the words "sick" and "danger" are added in. Given how the world loves problems, I'm sure someone out there would have heard about it. Possibly the problem would be with contaminated water where the microbes would have been killed by boiling the water, which isn't usually done when you make sunshine tea. I'd think if you could drink regular water, you could drink any water made into tea. I don't think the tea leaves would be a source of contamination. I would think all those filters that people use would have a much greater chance of contamination as they are damp dark places ideal for growing stuff. Microbiology isn't my strong suit, but I think the tannic acid kills most of the harmful bugs. That's one reason why people got in the habit of drinking tea all those centuries ago. Sunshine tea doesn't even have to be in the light. It can be 'brewed' even in the dark or at night or when it is cold. It IS quicker in the sunlight. The only problem we have ever had was when Bob accidentally filled the water tanks in Nassau without checking, and subsequent tea made from it turned green and tasted terrible. Nassau water is brought in by tanker from Andros, and it tastes like swimming pool water and is slightly brackish. Makes terrible coffee too, I'm told (we don't drink coffee). That's why he now fills a bottle up with whatever water he is thinking of putting into the tanks, and lets it sit out to see if anything settles out, and then makes a bottle of tea with it to test it before he fills the tanks at any new place. When I say that I just go ahead and drink water without filtering it, I think it is only fair to mention that I'm not at all picky about my water. With Bob being in the Navy and all, we've had water in many places that I'd regard as less than ideal. In the Pensacola area we had a well point and the water that came up was so turbid that I couldn't see my hands in the bottom of the dishpan. Then in Jeanerette LA, the water tasted faintly oily. Later when we moved to RI, we had well water with a high iron content which stained all the wash if you should accidentally use chlorine bleach. We drank the water at those houses anyway. grandma Rosalie |
#6
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Rosalie B. wrote in
: We drank the water at those houses anyway. Yecch....After reading this thread, I'm going to the kitchen to hug my water distiller. Water comes out of it so pure it doesn't even conduct electricity! I drink it because it's MUCH better than the kidney stones the calcium deposits in the city water supply gave me....OUCH! Excuse me.....My stomach is turning, again.... |
#7
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Larry wrote:
Rosalie B. wrote in : We drank the water at those houses anyway. Yecch....After reading this thread, I'm going to the kitchen to hug my water distiller. Water comes out of it so pure it doesn't even conduct electricity! I didn't WANT to drink water that tasted funny. But in those days - at least for the first two incidents - I didn't have the money to buy water that I could get for free. And we eventually put a water softener unit on the water in RI that had a high iron content, although I'm generally opposed to that. But it was just so hard to do the laundry otherwise. I drink it because it's MUCH better than the kidney stones the calcium deposits in the city water supply gave me....OUCH! I had a gall stone, but not kidney stones (at least so far). YMMV Excuse me.....My stomach is turning, again.... Some people won't drink reverse osmosis water because it has no 'taste' and they think that they will lack 'nutrients' or electrolytes if they drink it. grandma Rosalie |
#8
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I find I can make tea just fine using room temp water and allowing a
soak time. Advantage I find over heat brewing is less of an acidic taste. |
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