tomsakai wrote:I tried a Seychelles straw for a couple of weeks and returned it. There were two drawbacks to it. First, I had to bend so far down to submerge the tip of the straw that it was a pain to use it. Secondly, I found that I liked a bottle of water for those hikes to or from the stream. Seychelles was great about it and gave me full credit toward a filter bottle.
John Harper wrote:tomsakai wrote:I tried a Seychelles straw for a couple of weeks and returned it. There were two drawbacks to it. First, I had to bend so far down to submerge the tip of the straw that it was a pain to use it. Secondly, I found that I liked a bottle of water for those hikes to or from the stream. Seychelles was great about it and gave me full credit toward a filter bottle.
Good points, I wondered about the first issue, we'll see. Especially with the low water this season.
I've already got a Bota filter bottle too, which is pretty handy.
John
NorcalBob wrote:Looks like a pretty cool product. Please report back when you get a chance to use it. I'm interested in how much "sucking" power is required to get a good drink of water!
DrCreek wrote:Good pick, John.
I have the Seychelle filter straw placed permanently in my lumbar pack in case I ever (again) lose my regular filter bottle. The straw thing is a great idea for emergency matters or just because you might want to save some extra room inside or outside your pack.
Papasequoia wrote:NorcalBob wrote:Looks like a pretty cool product. Please report back when you get a chance to use it. I'm interested in how much "sucking" power is required to get a good drink of water!
That shouldn't be a problem for you though, right Bob?
Ba da BOOM! Sorry, Bob, I couldn't resist. But you did kind of leave yourself open for that one.
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