Instructions
- Step 1: Pick your water carefully Even if you’re intending to purify it, pick water carefully—ideally, from a running stream. Avoid standing water, and/or water that is dark, smelly, or filled with debris.
- Step 2: Boil it Boil water for about five minutes on a camp stove or over a campfire, removing anything that floats to the top as it bubbles.
- Step 3: Use a purifier If you do a lot of camping, invest in a water purifier that uses a chemical-free system. Look for one with an absolute pore size of 0.2 micron.
- Step 4: Use chlorine dioxide tablets If you don’t want to lug a camp stove or invest in a pricey purifier, take chlorine dioxide tablets along on your camping trip. Just drop them into water, wait a few hours, and the water is safe to drink.
- : Avoid iodine purification tablets, which while still sold, have lost favor with campers because of their danger to people with thyroid conditions.
- Step 5: Collect condensation If you are lost & have no means of starting a fire to boil water, collect condensation. Dig a hole in the ground, put a container inside (fashion one from bark if you must), and cover it with plastic or cloth secured with rocks & with a stone in the center, so it hangs lower than the sides.
- FACT: Seventy-nine percent of campers bring bottled water with them, according to a survey.
You Will Need
- A camp stove or campfire
- A water purifier
- Water purification tablets
- A container to collect water




































