Umsaskis
New member
I realize that this is the wrong season for this question, but it's on my mind. First, I'll give some background:
Some of you may have read my thread on atrial fibrillation. After 2 cardiology visits and a lot of internet research, I have discovered that my type of a-fib can indeed be triggered by drinking or eating cold foods and liquids too fast (as I have been suspicious of from my own past experience). So, I am trying to drink slowly, and to not drink cold things. This becomes a problem not only when drinking a freshly-filtered bottle out of a cold stream in the summer, but especially when drinking in the winter. I have to take little sips, warm them in my mouth, and then swallow, to be safe. I can't stop hiking long enough to do this and still sufficiently hydrate myself in winter or I will obviously run into other problems with the cold. Nor can I safely get water out of an open stream in winter (too cold), or allow a bottle of water to get too cold after a long day if it has been sitting in my pack. Until now, I've always just filled my Lexan bottles with semi-hot water (not too hot because of leachates from the plastic), and wrapped them in a towel and buried them deep in my pack. I never purchased a water bottle parka or any other contraption. And yes, I have fibrillated on winter hikes (now that I know what it was), but thankfully the episodes have been of short duration. So now I need to know:
A) what is the safest water bottle available for holding super hot liquid without worrying about bisphenol-A or other leachates (do they make some metal ones now)?:
B) what is the best water bottle parka or other contraption for keeping said liquid warm for the longest period of time, or any combination of parka plus other techniques that you have discovered to accomplish this?
Some of you may have read my thread on atrial fibrillation. After 2 cardiology visits and a lot of internet research, I have discovered that my type of a-fib can indeed be triggered by drinking or eating cold foods and liquids too fast (as I have been suspicious of from my own past experience). So, I am trying to drink slowly, and to not drink cold things. This becomes a problem not only when drinking a freshly-filtered bottle out of a cold stream in the summer, but especially when drinking in the winter. I have to take little sips, warm them in my mouth, and then swallow, to be safe. I can't stop hiking long enough to do this and still sufficiently hydrate myself in winter or I will obviously run into other problems with the cold. Nor can I safely get water out of an open stream in winter (too cold), or allow a bottle of water to get too cold after a long day if it has been sitting in my pack. Until now, I've always just filled my Lexan bottles with semi-hot water (not too hot because of leachates from the plastic), and wrapped them in a towel and buried them deep in my pack. I never purchased a water bottle parka or any other contraption. And yes, I have fibrillated on winter hikes (now that I know what it was), but thankfully the episodes have been of short duration. So now I need to know:
A) what is the safest water bottle available for holding super hot liquid without worrying about bisphenol-A or other leachates (do they make some metal ones now)?:
B) what is the best water bottle parka or other contraption for keeping said liquid warm for the longest period of time, or any combination of parka plus other techniques that you have discovered to accomplish this?