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Are you planning on drinking water from rivers rather than taps?
I think the Sawyer is an excellant choice for the Camino. It's small, light, effective and easy to use. It's not something I'd take on a major expedition but perfect in this application. I might suggest adding a larger platypus. The threds match up and the larger platypus is a little more sturdy and more efficient.I use the Sawyer Mini water filter when backpacking. It is lighter, cheaper, smaller and versatile. The review of the Sawyer at the link above has, at the bottom of the page, links to reviews of other filters (including the Katadyn.)
I think the Sawyer is an excellant choice for the Camino. It's small, light, effective and easy to use.
Where I live the waters in the desert and surrounding areas are really turbid, and most of the small lightweight filters we have tried seemed to get clogged constantly. Requiring cleaning etc. Have you had any experience recommendations? I am new to Backcountry back packing...I use the Sawyer Mini water filter when backpacking. It is lighter, cheaper, smaller and versatile. The review of the Sawyer at the link above has, at the bottom of the page, links to reviews of other filters (including the Katadyn.)
What you can try is the following. Have a scoop and tumbler with you that you only use for the dirty, impure water and some pre-filters like coffee filters, sections of old nylons, etc. Scoop the water onto the filters so that it drains into the tumbler. Then use the water in the tumbler as the source for your fancy filter. You want to make sure that you never use the scoop or tumbler to drink from. I suggest the the scoop be made out of a half liter cardboard box that some wine comes in. Cut off the bottom of the box. Leave the top and cap on as that will add to versatility of the tool. The flat sides of the box will allow you to collect more water out of shallow pools and the box stands out as something you don't want to drink from. For the tumbler I would try a 20 ounce soda bottle with the top cut off. Here you want stability of the tumbler more than the versatility of the top. A coffee filter could be rubber-banded onto the top of the tumbler with maybe something stronger underneath to keep the coffee filter from tearing. I haven't needed to do this (well I have for clean water from shallow pools but I didn't need to use a pre-filter.) Bring enough coffee filters. You can use them to start fires too. Experiment with various tools and filters. Maybe you can find things that nest or do double or triple duty. Good luck.Where I live the waters in the desert and surrounding areas are really turbid, and most of the small lightweight filters we have tried seemed to get clogged constantly. Requiring cleaning etc. Have you had any experience recommendations? I am new to Backcountry back packing...
Where I live the waters in the desert and surrounding areas are really turbid, and most of the small lightweight filters we have tried seemed to get clogged constantly. Requiring cleaning etc. Have you had any experience recommendations? I am new to Backcountry back packing...
I agree with the pre-filtration idea. Back in the day, I used a First Need filter on my backcountry wanderings through the Deep South. It was so efficient, and the waters sufficiently muddy/silty, that the filter clogged very quickly. To counter this I used coffee filters rubber-banded to the top of a canteen cup, leaving just enough "droop" in the filter that the water would pour through instead of running off the edges. It took awhile to fill my canteens, but it worked quite well.What you can try is the following. Have a scoop and tumbler with you that you only use for the dirty, impure water and some pre-filters like coffee filters, sections of old nylons, etc. Scoop the water onto the filters so that it drains into the tumbler. Then use the water in the tumbler as the source for your fancy filter. You want to make sure that you never use the scoop or tumbler to drink from. I suggest the the scoop be made out of a half liter cardboard box that some wine comes in. Cut off the bottom of the box. Leave the top and cap on as that will add to versatility of the tool. The flat sides of the box will allow you to collect more water out of shallow pools and the box stands out as something you don't want to drink from. For the tumbler I would try a 20 ounce soda bottle with the top cut off. Here you want stability of the tumbler more than the versatility of the top. A coffee filter could be rubber-banded onto the top of the tumbler with maybe something stronger underneath to keep the coffee filter from tearing. I haven't needed to do this (well I have for clean water from shallow pools but I didn't need to use a pre-filter.) Bring enough coffee filters. You can use them to start fires too. Experiment with various tools and filters. Maybe you can find things that nest or do double or triple duty. Good luck.
Edit: I'm not a coffee drinker so this didn't come to mind as fast as the wine box scoop but you could use a foil bag that coffee comes in as a scoop. That will be lighter and smaller.
Amazing! Spain has better water quality than most of the the US, and people are talking about bringing filters
I know, Spanish tap water is reputed to be safe. And it seems like every time I risk it in another country, I pay a trip-disrupting price.
That said, we each decide our own risks and set our own priorities; an additional 2 oz is a small price for peace of mind.
Nekodemus said:We all walk our own way. What's good for me, may be bad for you - and vice versa.
Well, I'd just like to repeat that people with normal immune systems need not fear the water - unless marked "No potable"
Nope, but what I didn't miss either, is that threads like these can easily lead others to believe that you cannot do a camino without a water filter. Seen it come and go before. Pareos, bandanas, shemaghs, immersion heaters, tomato knives (totally indispensable ), etc.etc.Guess you missed that.
Where I live the waters in the desert and surrounding areas are really turbid, and most of the small lightweight filters we have tried seemed to get clogged constantly. Requiring cleaning etc. Have you had any experience recommendations?