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Thread: Hydration...

  1. #1
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    Default Hydration...

    What is your preference: 1.) Some type of water bottle
    2.) Bladder system

  2. #2
    Registered User sonic's Avatar
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    I prefer a water bottle. Bladder systems are nice, however I can never really tell when it is getting empty and run out at the most inopportune times. Also,they can be a bear to refile in a stream.

  3. #3

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    who says you have to choose.

    I like a hydration 'bladder' for the convienence of walking and sipping, and i usually take an empty dasani or other type of water bottle, around the 16 oz. range. I do this so i can mix drinks like tang or propel, and i have a bottle to help fill the hydration bladder if the stream is 'technical'

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    Registered User Phreak's Avatar
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    I carry a 2 or 3 liter bladder (depending on where I'm hiking) and a 16oz Nalgene. I sip out of the bladder when hiking and use the nalgene as a backup if I run out of water. I also drink alot of Gatorade, so it's easier to make it in the Nalgene.

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    3L bladder.

  6. #6
    Registered User Tennessee Viking's Avatar
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    I usually carry a 2 liter bladder, a powerade for meals, and an extra bottle of water for emergencies.
    ''Tennessee Viking'
    Mountains to Sea Trail Hiker & Maintainer
    Former TEHCC (AT) Maintainer

  7. #7
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    Default

    liter bottles

  8. #8
    Donating Member/AT Class of 2003 - The WET year
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    Quote Originally Posted by brotheral View Post
    What is your preference: 1.) Some type of water bottle
    2.) Bladder system
    =========================================

    I use a combination of the two. I carry a 1.8 Liter Platy w/drinking tube in my pack and a 20 oz gatorade bottle on my shoulder strap (secured with shock cord). That is for during the day when I'm hiking. If there is a chance that water sources will be scarce I also carry an empty 1 Liter Platy and fill it accordingly.

    At night I fill a 4 Liter Platy and use that for dinner, breakfast and my starting water supply the next morning.

    'Slogger
    The more I learn ...the more I realize I don't know.

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    Your comments have been very helpful. Thank you !!

  10. #10
    hansome, rich, intelligent, cancer survivor Crazy_Al's Avatar
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    Default 1 liter bottle

    1 liter nalgene water bottle. No bladder.
    You are supposed to drink water, not carry it.
    Drink a lot, carry little. Springs are usually closer than 2 liters away on the AT. Water is very heavy.
    Crazy Al

  11. #11
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    3 liter bladder for water

    Platy bottle for water/drink-mix

  12. #12
    Registered User Littlest Hobo's Avatar
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    Agreed with other respondents here – I use a 2 litre bladder and a Nalgene as backup/help fill the bladder. I had preferred bottles, but my current pack (Atmos 50) doesn’t really lend itself well to bottles (to difficult to access while wearing it).
    </O
    The good thing about the Atmos is that the bladder can be carried within the mesh backpanel, so it’s actually visible when you take off your pack – don’t have to guesstimate how much you have.

  13. #13
    Getting out as much as I can..which is never enough. :) Mags's Avatar
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    2 Gatorade type bottles.

    A Nalgene Cantene for dry camping and/or additional water carrying capacity.

    I
    Paul "Mags" Magnanti
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  14. #14
    1000+ miles down, 1000+ miles to go
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    Default Both

    Quote Originally Posted by brotheral View Post
    What is your preference: 1.) Some type of water bottle
    2.) Bladder system
    While hiking I have two 20oz soda pop bottles of water flavored with whatever (iced tea, gatorade, powerade, crystal light, etc.). When I get to camp I refill the bottles and also fill my empty 2 liter platypus for making dinner and the following morning's breakfast.

    T Minus 17.5 months and counting
    "When a man sits with a pretty girl for an hour, it seems like a minute.
    But let him sit on a hot stove for a minute--and it's longer than any hour.
    That's relativity." --Albert Einstein--

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    Hiker bigcranky's Avatar
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    I tried a bladder for a while, went back to bottles. A 1-liter Aqua Fina Bottle and a 1-liter Nalgene Cantene. The bladder is fine for drinking, but I could never keep the hose clean long-term.
    Ken B
    'Big Cranky'
    Our Long Trail journal

  16. #16
    Super Moderator Marta's Avatar
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    Gatorade/Powerade bottles. I usually carry two of them.

    For camp water, in case I want to dry camp, or in case the water source is one of those way-down-the-hill ones, I carry a flexible 2-liter pouch, empty and rolled up.
    If not NOW, then WHEN?

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  17. #17
    There's no wrong way to eat a Rhesus! Monkeyboy's Avatar
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    Two liter bladder in backpack because the water stays cooler and easier to sip while hiking.

    Also have 32 oz nalgene for measuring while cooking and to keep from having to remove bladder from bag in camp.

    Also have small water bottle to make gatorade, lemonade, etc...because they tend to make your bladder/nalgene sticky and taste funny.

  18. #18
    There's no wrong way to eat a Rhesus! Monkeyboy's Avatar
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    Also, side note.....

    Make sure you blow air into your bladder when bedding down for the night to release water siphon in tube. I occasionally forget and toss over in my tent to bump the mouthpeice, causing it to siphon out slightly onto my sleeping bag......

    Totally sucks, but if you backflow the water, it won't happen.

  19. #19
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    I use a 2 L bladder, and take along both a 1 L nalgene and a collapsible, nylon water bag. The water bag weighs nothing, lets me get water from a source, take it back to camp and use it as I need (or share with others), thus saving another trip to the spring.

  20. #20
    AT 4000+, LT, FHT, ALT Blissful's Avatar
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    Both. You can make up drink mixes in the bottle (like a soda bottle), which I had for lunch or when I first arrived at camp. Great pick-me-up.







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