Monday, January 19, 2009

Vessels, old and new

I've had a trusty pair of Nalgene water bottles for many years. One of the things I do is collect stickers when I travel, and then slap them on the outside of these water bottles. Here, for example, is one side of the two bottles:
bottle1

Here's the other side:
bottle2

The full record of stickers is:

Recreation and Parks program at NOVA
Wilderness Medical Associates (the group that trained me in WFA last May)
Northern Arizona University Department of Geography, Planning, and Recreation
Yellowstone National Park
Sport Rock, a climbing gym in Alexandria, Virginia
Mammoth Cave National Park
Rocky Mountain National Park
Gimme! Coffee, Ithaca, New York
Apple computer
Red Cross' "Give Blood" campaign (I cut up this sticker & distributed its bits across the bottles)
Alaska flag (from the ferry through the Inside Passage)
Pickle Barrel sandwich shop, Bozeman, Montana
Vieques, Puerto Rico
"Certified Organic" from a bunch of bananas
The Red Hand of Ulster (from my time in Northern Ireland)
Puri Saron, a resort in Lombok, Indonesia (I didn't actually go to this one; my friend Kenny did.)
British flag
State Farm Insurance (reflective!)
Mauna Kea observatories (Hawai'i)
KZMU public radio in Moab, Utah
Thyangboche Monastery, Nepal (I didn't go to this one, either. Thanks Kenny!)
"MtP" in an oval: Mt. Pleasant, a DC neighborhood I used to live in, just north of my current digs

There's a lot of personal history there, a sort of visual record of the places I've been. Trouble is, apparently the water bottles themselves were poisoning me. At least that's what they started saying last year; specifically that water bottles containing a substance called Bisphenol A (commonly referred to as "BPA") were not to be trusted. Though I haven't read the studies, they are reported to have found a significant correlation between high levels of BPA and heart disease, diabetes, and high levels of some liver enzymes. Plus, people keep nagging me about giving up my old water bottles, and I'm getting tired of inventing excuses for continuing to drink out of them. So yesterday, I officially retired my old sticker-covered bottles, and bought two new (BPA-free) Nalgenes instead:
bottle3

You'll notice that I switched color schemes and mouth types (the new bottles have a narrow mouth). And you'll also notice that I've put my first sticker in place on the new bottles: from the Tambopaxi Lodge in Cotopaxi National Park in Ecuador, where I stayed for two nights the week before last. (If you're ever in Cotopaxi, you must stay there: It's really excellent.)

Background fabric for all images is a new tablecloth I bought at a craft market in Quito (for $2).

The old bottles will be hung above the mantle of the library hearth at the Bentley Estate, in commemoration of their usefulness and long history.

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3 Comments:

Blogger Silver Fox said...

Nicely decorated historical water bottles.

During the Nalgene BPA crisis, I was always figuring that no one knew what my RDA should be for the various types of plastic - and I hate switching bottles once I've found a good one.

I've probably licked way too many rocks with mercury, arsenic, and antimony in them - oh, and probably lead too - so my thinking may already be shot on this subject and should be ignored. (Be careful about licking any rocks in the California Coast Ranges where mercury abounds and looks like nice, bright iron oxide!).

January 19, 2009 9:06 AM  
Blogger Jason Von-Kundra said...

I also heard about BPAs leeching into the water and had to upgrade as well. I bought one of the Klean Kanteen that I saw at Green Fest. No stickers on it though, lol

January 19, 2009 3:06 PM  
Anonymous Adventure Traveler said...

Those originals look great - the new ones will be looking as well traveled before long I am sure. Hope you have found a great place to display the originals! It's a bit like when you get a new passport - looks so empty and inexperienced!

April 11, 2009 12:55 PM  

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