

Drinking
Water Absurdities
We’ve often
said, in our pool classes, that pool water is lousy to drink
and drinking water is lousy for pools. But what makes the
two waters so different? When tap water is thrown in the
mix, we are even more confused.
On ABC’s show 20/20, in May, 2005,
we find that John Stossel is at it again doing his give-me-a-break!”
series. This time he’s reporting on research regarding the
difference between bottled water and tap water. After explaining
that water in our culture is virtually cost free, he laments
about this phenomenon called “bottled drinking water”. These
shiny-clear bottles are routinely purchased by most of us
at more than double today’s crazy price of gasoline – as
we help this multi-billion-dollar water business grow bigger
every day! It just tastes better, some say, while others
succumb to the claim “it’s better for you; it’s more healthy”.
Even “crisp, like natural” and “pure and pristeen” were
phrases used during the interviews. Tap water, on the other
hand, is claimed by the packaged-water companies and their
customers to be “flat”, “dull”, and even “full of germs”!
One young lady said tap water tastes to her like “sewer”!
So the crew at 20/20 got busy creating
a blind taste test, where New York City tap water was compared
to five popular (and expensive) bottled-water samples. Folks
off the street were asked to compare, and to attempt identifying
the tap water among the un-labeled paper cups mostly full
of the fancy bottled aqua fina. Even the bottled-water companies
themselves were asked to participate; they all refused,
as you might imagine.
Needless to say, the test was a flop.
Or was it a great success? It’s all in the viewpoint. No
one could correctly identify the tap water samples, and
all but one were unable to spot any bottled brand from another.
The dozen or so volunteers had all lost the psych factor
of the label, the bottle style, or the temperature. They
had to go on taste alone, and that sense failed them across
the board.
Microbiologist Dr Aaron Margolin, of
the University of New Hampshire, stated flatly that typical
tap water, much like that sampled from a grubby public fountain
in the middle of New York City, was bacteriologically no
different at all from the many samples of bottled water
in the test. Imagine – people pay 500 times more for that
fancy water, with only a psychological difference between
them! ‘Wouldn’t be you, would it?
BUT here’s the catch: No matter how
the samples were compared, H2O ain’t H2O across our country.
You pool pros know quite a bit more about water than any
of the producers, sales guys or consumers of bottled water.
Hardness, alkalinity, Sodium, TDS, pH and chlorine/chloramine
residuals vary ten- to one-hundred fold from tap to tap
so, no matter how reassuring this elaborate television test
appeared to be, it is scientifically invalid in the broader
sense. Pool water, from pool to pool, varies much, much
less than the make-up water in the garden hose at the very
same pools!
And here’s another catch. A big one. You guys who deal with
old, old pools fitted with sand-and-gravel “slow-rate” filters
remember alum, added by pool guys routinely to floc the
suspended particulate for better entrapment. Aluminum sulfate.
Aluminum. Aluminum = Alzheimer’s, some say… Well, that’s
not a big deal in pool water as we swallow very little,
but a heck of a big deal in the output of drinking-water
filtration plants. Using aluminum compounds to help filter
the finest particulate will leave behind even finer ions
which can affect taste, maybe, and healthfulness, plenty.
Check with your local treatment plant. If they still use
alum, maybe those five-gallon water jugs aren’t so expensive
after all…
Now back to pools. Pool water – say at a low 7s pH, with
a total alkalinity of 100ish, calcium hardness at multiple
hundreds of ppm, a swimmable temperature and with a TDS
of a couple thousand ppm – tastes pretty much the same around
the world. Sensitive folks can tell if there’s a fair amount
of chloramine present, but almost no one can spot a sanitary
trace of free chlorine. Much matured or “old” water with
a high TDS (mostly sodium chloride, common salt) is easier
to identify by your swimmers – probably the only factor
routinely identified by the swim team as funny tasting or
salty tasting water. All of this, while tap water varies,
chemically, to an extreme from town to town… Yes, and all
of that, while tap-water’s taste actually changes very,
very little at all.
John Stossel’s barely scientific test
remains valid none the less, if only because of the above
asserted lack of significant variation between most all
water types. So love your tap water and skip the expensive
stuff. John says you’re just buying the hype… But in your
pool, with your fancy test kit and your reasonable chemicals,
you are buying good oxidation, great sanitation, your pool’s
longevity, and – yes – some pretty good taste too.
~ kw
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