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Thread: platypus

  1. #1

    Default platypus

    I was wondering how you guys dry out your soft water bottles ?

    I just hung mine upside down but it still seems damp ...

  2. #2

    Default

    Hang upside down with a paper towel rolled up and stuffed inside the hole. It helps prop open the inside and absorbs some moisture.

  3. #3
    Registered User Wise Old Owl's Avatar
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    cheap ass kit at Walmart complete with brushes and adjustable hanger to keep it open and dry.. worth every penny.
    Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.

    Woo

  4. #4
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    Default

    you could try a hair dryer, but I never get mine completely dry either. Just keep them clean, disinfect the interior for long storage with some kind of cleanser tablets and rinse them out well.

  5. #5
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    Default

    I never dry mine. I clean it good, shake as much water out as possible and put it in the freezer until the next use.

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  6. #6

    Default

    I hang my 2.4 L Platys rightside up with the cap off fully enlarged/inflated - not all rolled up like I store them in my pack while hiking or after they dried out after a hike. After a hike, and even about every two wks on trail, I rinse my platys out with cap full of unscented bleach or H2O2 mixed in with the Platy full w/ H20. I make sure to clean the cap and all male/female threads. Likewise, I do the same with other water bottles and cookware(pot, cup, pot lid, wind screen, cozy, spork, etc. Between these cleanings, while on trail, I occasionally rinse all the same with some fully disinfected w/ Aqua Mira H20. I'll also regularly disinfect my cut off tooth brush, etc. I'm always careful about what I put in my mouth while hiking including my fingers or scratching or picking at my skin(scratches, cuts, pimples, scabs, blisters, etc) or rubbing my eyes(mucus membranes) w/disinfected fingers as well. Good trail hygiene, without getting super anal about it like Felix Unger, can pay BIG dividends like not getting sidelined or sent home on a long distance hike.

  7. #7

    Default

    I assume that freezing it empty is fine for the plastic ?

    I am using one as a hot water bottle at night ( love it ) I think I will keep it separate from my drinking ones..

    Great great product ....

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    Default

    I would personally go with the stuffing a paper towel inside to keep it open and absorbing some of the moisture and humidity. The freezer method sounds like a good idea but it's just an opinion, however, keep in mind that freezing temps only slow down the growth of bacteria, the process doesn't eliminate it. And freezing tends to dry things out and plastic does contain moisture and may become brittle after a time of the freezing and unfreezing process. But then again, I don't know, it's just a theory. But you may strike it down if you wish. Just don't threaten me with a good time.

  9. #9

    Default

    good question. personally i don't put full strength anything in my Platys other than full strength pure trail water(little AM in there though). I also am not in the habit of putting boiling water or letting my Platys freeze solid if I can, harshly throwing them around, sitting on them, dropping them on the ground, and am ever mindful of them on the outside of my pack. ALL, especially when close to being full. I'm not in the habit of filling them up to the very tippy top either. I usually leave a couple of inches of air at the very top NOT FULLY stressing the seams! I've had two 2.4 Platys fail w/ small pin prick holes on desert hikes(easily duct taped until I could better fix them) and one the seam around the hard cap insert failed in 20K + trail miles of using Platys. So much for being so fragile!

  10. #10

    Default

    If you want more exact usage advice I would go directly to the Cascade Designs site which is the company that I think now owns the rights to/ makes Platypus Reservoirs.

  11. #11
    Registered User HeartFire's Avatar
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    Default

    I've been storing mine in the freezer between hikes for over 6 yrs. Never had a problem with it.

  12. #12

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Wise Old Owl View Post
    cheap ass kit at Walmart complete with brushes and adjustable hanger to keep it open and dry.. worth every penny.
    This^

    the brushes is what I was after, and the hanger thing that came with it was a bonus in my book, it's just so easy...and cheap.

  13. #13
    Registered User Drybones's Avatar
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    I don't. If I used it to drink from I'd store it in the freezer and purify it occassionally with bleach.

  14. #14

    Default

    I like that freezer trick.

  15. #15

    Default

    I hang mine upside-down on the clothesline for as many dry days as it takes. Generally several, as the clothesline is mostly in the shade.

  16. #16
    Registered User theinfamousj's Avatar
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    At home, I fill it with water and toss in a denture tab. After giving it 24 hours of denture soak, I stick my incredibly long handled wooden cooking spoon in a cup and prop the platy upside down over the spoon's handle (works a treat to keep the bag open). Then I forget about it for a week. When I remember, it is dry.

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  17. #17

    Default

    If you really want to get the inside dry, you can do what I do occasionally:

    Get a cheap ass aquarium pump from Wal-Mart, and a length of polyethylene tubing. (DO NOT get a pump and tubing that's been used in a fish tank!) Put the tubing into the mouth of the platy; plug the pump in; and let it run overnight. Works best if you do it in a relatively dry location.

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    A lot of paranoia about a tiny fraction of a gram of moisture here.

  19. #19
    Registered User Drybones's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by MuddyWaters View Post
    A lot of paranoia about a tiny fraction of a gram of moisture here.
    That's what I was thinking, but then I rarely treat water either.

  20. #20
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    Only have water in mine but still clean them after a hike. Use about 2 tbs. bleach and about 1/2 fill with water. Rinse good and then leave off cap and let air dry on there side.

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