LifeStraw Personal Water Filter for Hiking, Camping, and Travel, American Red Cross Edition (Pack of 3)

March 15, 2020 - Comment

LifeStraw is ideal for hiking, backpacking, camping, travel, and emergency preparedness. The straw-style filter design lets you turn up to 1,000 liters of contaminated water into safe drinking water. Product Features Each Life Straw filters up to 4, 000 liters (1, 000 gallons) of water (pack of 3 will filter 3, 000 gallons) Removes 99.9999%

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(as of April 19, 2020 7:55 pm GMT-0500 - Details)

LifeStraw is ideal for hiking, backpacking, camping, travel, and emergency preparedness. The straw-style filter design lets you turn up to 1,000 liters of contaminated water into safe drinking water.

Product Features

  • Each Life Straw filters up to 4, 000 liters (1, 000 gallons) of water (pack of 3 will filter 3, 000 gallons)
  • Removes 99.9999% of bacteria including Escherichia coli (e-coli), campylobacter, vibrio cholera, pseudomonas aeruginosa, shigella, salmonella
  • Removes 99.9% of protozoa including giardia lamblia (beaver fever), cryptosporidium parvum, entamoeba histolytic
  • Perfect for your family and friends to use during camping, hiking and backpacking or for your emergency kits at your home, car and office
  • This special edition Life Straw go bottle partners with the American red cross, helping to ensure that people across the Country are prepared for everyday disasters

Comments

Anonymous says:

Better alternatives on the market. Get a Sawyer-Mini. Seriously, I have used Both on camping trips. You need jaws of steel to suck water through a Lifestraw. With a Sawyer or other filters with pump/squeeze action, you won’t rip out your fillings trying to get water. Also, you have to lie on the ground, whereas other filters come with collapsible pouches AND a straw if the pouch breaks.Before everyone down-votes this post, you Really need to watch actual videos of people who use these routinely. Everyone…

Anonymous says:

Exactly as amazing as people told you. This thing is no joke! I took it backpacking on Maine’s Bigelow range. When I ran out of the water I brought, I was A-ok with this. Just bring a wide mouth bottle to fill with water you find. On top of one of the lower peaks, I drank from the most disgusting looking crevice filled with brown scum (see photo). I thought, this is going to be safe, but taste horrid. WRONG. TASTED LIKE THE FRESHEST SPRING WATER. Better than any tap. I’m from Maine, and I’ve tasted plenty of water right from…

Anonymous says:

Good luck Difficult to get meaningful amounts of water out of these and they seize up if you don’t clear the water shortly after each use. I’ve had two break in the last couple months and I didn’t even run a gallon through either one.

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