We began our
teaching in an Athabaskan Indian village north of Fairbanks Alaska. When we first arrived, we were met by the
Chief and told not to drink the water in the housing, because it was polluted
with fuel oil. The village had electricity
supplied by four massive generators. Two
would run for 24 hours and then the other two would be switched on line. There was a massive fuel oil storage area,
and someone in their questionable wisdom had placed the village well in the oil
farm.
We were told
to haul water from the Lodge for drinking.
The Lodge was a large building with a kitchen, dining room, first aid
room and six rooms to rent to hunters and fishermen that could be guided by the
local Natives. The problem was, that the
men in the village were so hostile to outsiders, non-native sportsmen were
afraid to enter the village.
Two weeks
after we had arrived, the Chief came over and told us the water from the lodge
was found to be polluted. We were told
not to drink the water without boiling.
There were approximately one-hundred and
twenty-five people in the village and probably over two-hundred sled dogs. There were at least five big dog yards, and
almost everyone had from three to five dogs tied in their yard, so it seemed
likely that the well was probably polluted from dog feces.
The nearest
clean water was supposedly in the next village about twenty-five miles away,
via one land dirt road with some harrowing drop-offs – about an hour trip by
truck each way.
My wife had
seen an advertisement for a water distiller from a company called Water Wise, located
in Florida. We immediately sent off for
one. This was in 1985. For
the rest of our time in the villages we distilled our water.
There were high cancer rates in the villages
and I am convinced that was probably due to water impurities.
Since that
time, we have distilled all our drinking water. The electricity cost appears to be about
fifty-cents per gallon. We are now on
our third Water Wise distiller in thirty-six years.
We moved to
a new house last year, and this is the first time in our married life that we
weren’t on well water. I don’t care for the taste of the city water, often
there is a chlorine taste, so we are still distilling our drinking water.
Water Wise
distillers cost about three-hundred and fifty dollars; but if you shop on line you can find them for as little as two-fifty.
And before
you ask; a friend of mine borrowed one of our old distillers and made whiskey
(white lightning.) We both drank it and
didn’t go blind. I am not sure how
alcohol interacts with the aluminum tubing, so I wouldn’t recommend it.
Besides, if
you are looking for rot-gut whiskey, it is cheap enough to buy without taking
chances with alcohol poisoning.
The Ol’Buzzard
Bad water and "boil water advisories" are still unfortunately a common feature of northern First Nation reserves in Canada too. The Liberal government vowed to fix all of them, but have only managed to achieve about 50% so far. It's unconscionable.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was a student/science lab tech in El Paso. We had a distiller running in the lab prep room. It put out 3 to 5 gallons a day. We would have to check it for purity by swabbing the water samples onto petri dishes from it once every three days and incubating them for any growth. Nothing ever grew. It was the purist water I ever drank. I don't trust and I sure as hell hate the taste of city water. David buys distilled water at the local HEB grocery at $.59 for 2 half gallon jugs apiece. We buy two a week and have a water dispenser in the fridge that we pour the jugs into. It's just us so we have plenty of water even with my constant hot tea drinking and I keep a 1000ml water jug with a straw with me during the day that I drink from(the kind of water jugs you would get when staying in the hospital) and also filling the dog's water dish and the stray cat water dish outside. I've been trying to find a distiller for a good price. Thank you for telling us about this, I appreciate this very much.
ReplyDeleteAnother device that has stood the test of time! The only distilled water I saw growing up was in my dad's classroom (chemistry teacher). But I do remember that pure, delicious spring water I used to gather with my grandfather, since his house didn't have a well or any plumbing.
ReplyDeletewater kills.....that's pretty basic.
ReplyDelete