Emily, that sounds like no fun at all. I think campylobacter can turn up in pigeon poop -- that's one of the reasons I wondered about the safety of park fountains.
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That, I think, is the big advantage with the valve on the Camelbak podium bottles over the conventional valve found on a lot of bottles. I still think the Polar bottles are better insulated, but it turns out that the lids from the big Podium bottles fit the 24oz Polar bottles. :D
I'm sure I've seen water bottles with a flip-off cap over the valve somewhere. Can't remember who makes them, though.
I can't believe this thread is still going.
I had this bottle with a cover, but I dropped it and the cover broke off. Thanks to this thread, I'm ordering a new one.
http://www.campmor.com/outdoor/gear/Product___80942
Also on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Nalgene-ATB-Al.../dp/B002PLUEVC
I drink from public fountains all the time. I fill water bottles from them as well (except in FL where the water tastes awful to me!). Somehow, outdoors fountains seem safer to me than indoors ones...maybe because fresh air seems better than stale, recycled air? Who knows.
There was more than once that I accidentally got sprayed in the face with chicken crap laced water when cleaning out our coops and I never got sick. Of course, our birds were healthy but you never know. I also make my own mayo with raw eggs. I can my own stuff and eat it two years later. I put things in the crock pot in the morning but don't turn it on until noon. I leave my lunch on my desk instead of putting in the fridge (it is insulated). Oh the horror!
I also travel a lot for work. I touch a lot of stuff around a lot of people...many of whom are sick and oblivious as to how to keep their germs to themselves. Eh. I don't get sick often and when I do, it's mild.
I think I have a pretty awesome immune system and it's probably a good thing since clearly, I'm kind of the opposite of a germaphobe! :o
I'm like GLC, in that I don't routinely think about germs. I used to get sick all of the time, but since I started spending more time outdoors, it's decreased immensely. So while I have some chronic things, I just don't worry about stuff like this.
I rode through a lot of farm country on my recent Vermont tour, but with no ill effects. When I told DH about the chicken poop issue based on this thread, he said it traumatized him and couldn't get it out of his head!
I work at a university and use the public water fountains all day, refill my water bottle at least three times a days from one as well. I don't seem to get sick very often (except the endless belly issues left over from the Mexico trip), I wonder if it's related to being around 40,000 college kids who seem to be sick A LOT; maybe I've gained a better immune system from it?
Oh gosh, I am so sorry! My DH was on the same ride as me and drank from his water bottle with nary a problem. I guess just a small % of folks on the ride were affected by the bacteria. I still use water bottles and don't worry about it, and my immune system tends to be pretty good in that I rarely get colds, etc. I think what happened on that ill-fated Bike Virginia is very rare, so I hope your DH won't let it worry him unduly.
I flew out of LGA my last trip, and they now have no-touch water bottle refilling stations at the drinking fountains. A slot with an optical switch (and no soap to gum it up like the optical switches in the handwashing sinks), a high-flow vertical spout, zip zam zoom. I would love to see more of these!
Scary mention of campylobacter in this month's Discover magazine. In the Vital Signs feature was a man who turned out to have Guillain-Barre syndrome. Apparently one of the things that can trigger it is this bacteria. It has a lipid profile similar to the fatty myelin sheathing on nerves.