Water Filtration For The Hunter And Backpacker

BY Herschel Smith
1 year, 3 months ago

American Hunter.

What was supposed to be a short walk last fall turned into a lot more. Lost or misdirected depends on which one of us you ask, but either way it was a long slog through a thick swamp. It was below zero earlier that morning in Maine but had warmed up, and I was overdressed. I had pounded through my one bottle of water pretty fast. I had no trouble finding more, but remembered that the stream I was following originated in an active beaver dam. Beavers carry giardia. I’ve had it before and I never want it again. I was very thirsty by the time I got back to the truck and more interested in water than hunting. You can be sure I had a way to make water safe in my backpack the next day.

Hunters have two concerns: camp water and field water. Camp water must be safe to drink, wash dishes, brush your teeth and even make coffee. Hunters in the field also need an easy and lightweight way to make water safe to drink day to day. No water supply, no matter how remote, is safe to drink.

Be cautious about water that guides or other people insist is “safe.” They may have developed an immunity to the impurities in the water.

This is certainly true.  I once worked at a Christian camp in the mountains of S.C., and our water was fed from a spring but stored in a concrete block house that had to be contaminated with various sorts of microorganisms.  Working the entire summer there brought immunity to whatever contaminants were in the water.  By contrast, campers sometimes had stomach illnesses for the first few days of their stay, and sometimes the entire week.

I also passed an AT through-hiker on the trail once and asked him what he does for water.  He said, “When I see water I face-plant in it and drink as much as I can.”  He hadn’t had any problems, and this encounter happened in Virginia.

It’s always best to pre-filter any water to remove the chunks and debris. Coffee filters work great for this. T-shirts are okay, but dirty underwear is a poor choice.

Large debris and turbidity must be removed.

In Camp
• Boiling: Perhaps the best known and easiest way to deal with contaminated water is boiling the water. Boiling will kill bacteria and other disease-causing microorganisms. At high elevations, though, the boiling point of water drops. To be 100 percent sure, boil for at least 10 minutes at sea level and add 10 more minutes for every 1,000 feet of elevation.

• Chemicals: Water purification chemicals are usually either iodine- or chlorine-based. But most are not 100 percent effective against giardia and cryptosporidium. They are best used in conjunction with a filter.

One of the best and least expensive chemicals you can use to purify drinking water is regular, unscented 5 percent to 8.25 percent household bleach. Mix one-half teaspoon of bleach per 5 gallons of clear water. If the water is cloudy, double the bleach. A slightly stronger mix, 1 tablespoon of bleach per 1 gallon of water, is great to disinfect dishes and cooking areas.

Aquatabs tablets are used all over the world to kill off waterborne germs, but they are chlorine-based and alone may not be effective against giardia.

Potable Aqua iodine tablets are the iodine-based treatment. Because iodine tastes awful, the kit comes with two bottles of tablets; the second has ascorbic acid to remove the taste. It’s not a good idea to ingest this much iodine in your water long-term, but for a few days or weeks it’s fine.

• Filters: Filters are the best choice for safe drinking water for hunters. A gravity fed, high-capacity filter will work at making safe water all day if it is tended well. These work well for a camp-based operation where water can be filtered into a large holding tank or a clean 5-gallon jug.

In the Field
The key here is to carry something lightweight and portable in a backpack or pocket to treat the water you find as you hunt. There are three choices:

• Chemicals: The two-part system used by Aquamira Water Treatment Drops uses chlorine dioxide, which is what municipal water systems have used for years. The company says it will kill off giardia and cryptosporidium, making this a good choice for hunters. As with any chemical treatment, it takes time to work. I once used Aquamira Water Treatment Drops while packing out a sheep in the mountains of Yukon. I was thirsty and my companions were impatient, so I drank it too soon, before it had time to act, and wound up with a stomach bug.

• Ultraviolet Purification: Ultraviolet (UV) light works on DNA and prevents microbes from reproducing. (I wonder if we can use it on Congress?) Without reproduction, the microbes become far less dangerous.

Water treated with UV still contains microbes. They remain present in the water, but their means for reproduction are turned off, so the water is safe to drink.

UV works best with clear water so pre-filtering is a good idea. The UV light must be able to penetrate the water. The upside is UV adds nothing to the water for you to ingest. Also, the amount of water it can handle is almost limitless because as long as the unit remains working you will never run out.

Steripen is the best-known company for consumer UV water treatment. I carry one of the company’s rechargeable units in my backpack when hunting as it weighs almost nothing. It’s also a good choice for travel in Third World situations where I sterilize the hotel water before drinking it.

• Filtration: Portable filters are designed for backpackers, hunters and other people on the move. They are relatively light and fit easily in a backpack and are available at most outdoor stores. If you are in a North American wilderness situation or even in most rural locations, water that is filtered is pretty safe to drink.

I have three water filters.  One is a larger pump filter for quantity, the next size down is a Sawyer squeeze, and the smallest one is a Life Straw.

Do the Life Straws actually work?  Yes, they do.


Comments

  1. On August 1, 2023 at 5:32 am, jrg said:

    I’ve also heard of a pre-filter water treatment bag named the Millbank Bag. A heavy canvas bag that was filled with ‘wild water’ and allowed to be strained through to remove course debris that wasn’t microscopic. (Not to be confused with the burlap ‘desert water bag’ that old timers may remember from way back when).

    There is also another solar disinfection (SODIS) water treatment but that is beyond the scope of this article. Too time consuming and dependence on full sun light requirements. Still – worth studying in case of longer term emergency occurs. You can’t have too much drinking water.

  2. On August 1, 2023 at 6:06 am, The Old Freedom Fighter said:

    Thanks for the review. I really appreciate any information on prepping & survival. It’s eventually going to be needed & will appear on the final exam.

  3. On August 1, 2023 at 7:18 am, Bibsuruncle said:

    Ahaaa, ive been through four SERE schools, some advanced beatings as we called it, not just survival, escape, resistance and evasion. The first one, i had to drink out of a fetted pond filled with scum and other nastys. Only water source available. I only had a hanky and iodine pills. I ended up with intestinal parasites. May have contributed to what i have now as far as a completely wrecked gut sack. Hard to tell with all the chemical, and biological weapons i was exposed to at a formerly classified russian base.
    Filter you water, i used to do a lot of hiking, pre-filter and use a good ceramic for portable needs. At home, the best is distillation, expensive but the best. Gravity with berkey filters is second.

  4. On August 1, 2023 at 7:19 am, Bobsuruncle said:

    Its Bobsuruncle dang gummit

  5. On August 2, 2023 at 12:20 pm, Latigo Morgan said:

    I recently went with a Katadyn BeFree filter, replacing the Katadyn Hiker in my pack for weight savings. The Hiker didn’t get trashed, but is more of a base camp filter now. The BeFree is similar to your Sawyer Squeeze, except maybe a little faster.

    I’ve had a Lifestraw since they first came out, and never got sick using one. Wife keeps one in her pack, now. I just prefer to have a container of clean, filtered water vs. carrying dirty water with me and filtering it as I drink.

    I’ll often drop a purification tab in my container of filtered water – just in case.

    The one I can’t wrap my mind around are the UV purifiers like the Steripen and such. I just don’t trust them, plus, they kill the bugs – they don’t filter them out. Same with chemical disinfectant. You are still drinking the bugs, even if they are dead.

    As for boiling, the 10 minutes thing is old advice. It has been found that as soon as the water temp hits 180F, anything alive is killed off. Bringing the water to a boil is so you have a visual that it has gotten hot enough.

  6. On August 2, 2023 at 12:31 pm, Latigo Morgan said:

    Re: Chemical purification

    If you are planning on chemical purification as part of long-term disaster preparedness, remember chemicals generally have a shelf life and can degrade over time. Liquid bleach does not have a very good shelf life. If you are going with chlorine, then get the powdered stuff from a pool supply or well supply store. Just store it in a cool, dry place away from any chemicals that can react with it if mixed.

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You are currently reading "Water Filtration For The Hunter And Backpacker", entry #35515 on The Captain's Journal.

This article is filed under the category(s) Survival and was published July 31st, 2023 by Herschel Smith.

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