This is a topic of interest to me. As a veteran of giardia I got in the Sierra, I am back to treating all water. Personally, I usually use Aqua Mira drops.
mrchad9 wrote:...It might also interest her to know that every camper in Tuolume Meadows campground plus all the lodges up there and the ranger station use unfiltered water from the Dana Fork of the Tuolumne River...
Are you sure about that?
The Tuolumne Meadows Water Treatment Facility is located in the Tuolumne Meadows District of the Park. The water plant is a National Park Service (NPS) owned facility and permitted to produce domestic water by the California Department of Health. asmrz wrote:...After you get it the first time, you will look into this (I guarantee it).
Isn't that the truth!
mrchad9 wrote:...I just haven't seen a single study that shows an unacceptable level of pathogens in any water anywhere in the Sierra, much less the backcountry...
Now, after 10 years of fieldwork and 4,500 miles of backpacking, Derlet knows for sure. What he has learned, after analyzing hundreds of samples dipped from backcountry lakes and streams, is that parts of the high Sierra are not nearly as pristine as they look. Nowhere is the water dirtier, he discovered, than on U.S. Forest Service land, including wilderness areas, where beef cattle and commercial pack stock — horses and mules — graze during the summer. There, bacterial contamination was easily high enough to sicken hikers with Giardia, E. coli and other diseases.Read more here:
http://www.modbee.com/2010/05/08/115893 ... rylink=cpy (I think that's how I got giardia in the High Sierra, drinking from a beautiful brook that had no sign of cattle in the area until I walked farther.)
fedak wrote:There was a study at one point that found that there was less Giardia per volume of water in the top foot of high altitude lakes than there was in the SF tap water..
Sounds like you are paraphrasing the Rockwell paper. San Francisco water is run through a modern treatment plant using UV, chlorine and chloramine and is at least a thousand times safer than mountain water (in regards to waterborne diseases) because of it.
This Rockwell chart is extremely misleading:
~1000 Typical swimming pool contamination Swimming pools are heavily chlorinated at a level that quickly kills giardia. Plus I'm not chugging swimming pool water.
~100 Giardiasis is plausible Plausible? 100% of people got giardia at that level when tested.
~10 Minimum needed to contract giardiasis False.
Ingestion of one or more cysts may cause disease http://www.fda.gov/food/foodsafety/food ... 070716.htm~1 Some wilderness water outside California Yes, and some sources have 20 or more.
0.12 Some San Francisco water The most recent report is 0 to .07 BEFORE it enters the water treatment plant. It would be less than .00007 in tap water.
0.108 Worst Sierra Nevada water. False. That may have been the worst water they tested in the relatively few samples they did 30 years ago, but giardia is commonly found in the Sierra and as such there will always be some pulse contamination where there are spikes in cyst concentrations.
"
Several backpackers appear weekly at Centinela Mammoth Hospital in Mammoth Lakes sick enough with giardiasis to need urgent care," said Dr. Jack Bertman, an emergency physician, who noted, "
We publicize it a great deal more in Mammoth."
http://articles.latimes.com/1988-07-26/ ... re-programPeople should make their own risk assessments, of course, but there is a lot of misinformation out there from both sides.