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my neighbor is the most level-headed woman on our street. this spring she showed me the one thing she keeps for her grandkids.

When the power goes out, the water goes with it. Here's the simple, one-time fix I wish I'd known about years ago.

Melanie Grace

Let me tell you something, and I'm only telling you because I wish somebody had told me sooner.

 

I'm not a worrier.

 

Ask my kids. I don't chase the news. I don't stockpile. I have never once in my life called myself a "prepper."

Lord, I don't even care for the word.

 

So when I tell you about the one little thing I got for my grandbabies this spring, please hear me the way I mean it.

 

This isn't me being scared. It's just plain old common sense I came to a little late.

 

It started with Carol next door.

 

Carol and I have shared this fence for 11 years. She's the calm one. The steady one. In all that time I've never seen that woman get worked up over a single thing.

 

This past winter, her daughter's whole town lost power for four days after a storm.

 

No heat. No lights. And the part nobody thinks to warn you about.

 

No clean water.

the part i never knew

Carol explained it to me right there over the fence, the two of us holding our coffee.

 

When the power goes out, the water goes with it.

 

Turns out the pumps that push water to your house run on electricity. So do the plants that clean it before it ever reaches your kitchen sink.

 

Take the power away, and that whole system slows right down.

 

Then it stops.

 

Her daughter turned on her tap that week, and what came out wasn't fit to drink. They were boiling every drop for weeks after. Those poor babies.

 

And it isn't some once-in-a-lifetime thing, either. Carol looked it up and showed me. Texas, back in 2021. The power went out for three days, and around 14 million people couldn't safely drink their own tap water. Folks got sick right there in their own kitchens.

 

Three days. And that was only the weather.

i thought i had this handled. then i did the math.

My first thought was probably the same as yours.

 

Oh, I'll just keep some water out in the garage.

 

So for once in my life I sat down and worked it out on paper.

 

They say a body needs about a gallon of clean water a day. For drinking, cooking, cleaning, brushing your teeth.

 

Well, when the whole family's at my house, that's nine people counting the grandbabies.

 

Nine gallons a day.

 

A case of bottled water is about three gallons.

 

So three whole cases won't even carry us through a single day.

 

To cover everybody for a few weeks, I'd be stacking 50-some cases in that garage.

 

And the day the last one's empty, that's the end of it. You can't fill an empty case back up from the creek.

 

I'm no good with numbers, and even I could see it plain as day.

 

Keeping water isn't a plan. It's a clock ticking down.

what carol did instead

Carol didn't stack water in her garage. She did something a whole lot smarter.

 

Instead of keeping years of water, she keeps the little thing that makes water safe to drink.

 

You put one end down into any fresh water. A creek. A pond. A rain barrel. The bathtub, if you had the sense to fill it first.

 

And you drink clean water right out the other end.

 

No power. No batteries. No boiling on the stove.

 

And it doesn't run dry the way a case of water does. As long as there's fresh water somewhere you can walk to, you've got clean water.

 

That's not a clock ticking down. That's just having it.

the one she uses

It's called PureFlow.

 

A few things won me over.

 

First, it's not just a straw. You can also use it to filter from bottles, too.

 

You can sip straight from the source. Or you can fill a water bottle full of dirty water and filter it from that, so you don’t have to be crouched down at a puddle or a stream if you want to get a drink. 

 

It lets you take that dirty water with you and drink it clean whenever or wherever you want.

 

That last one matters at my age, I'll be honest with you. No getting down on these knees at a creek. I just fill a water bottle and filter it from there.

 

Second, Carol says it strains the water finer than most anything out there. Down to 0.01 microns, whatever that means exactly. The young fella at the company explained it to me. 

 

Here's what I took away from it: it takes out 99.99% of the bacteria and the parasites, the little things that make you sick, and catches tiny bits of plastic too.

 

Now here's the part that made me trust it, and it's the same thing Carol told me straight.

It's a filter. It's not a miracle.

 

PureFlow won't take out viruses, and it won't take out chemicals. But when the power's out, it's the bacteria and the parasites that get folks, and that's exactly what this handles. If you want more than that, you add a few purifying tablets.

 

Anybody who tells you one little straw does everything is selling you a lie.

 

I trust PureFlow more because they were honest with me about what it doesn't do.

the part that sealed it for me

The straw is third-party lab-verified, and they get pressure-tested to make sure they actually work.

And possibly the most important part… They don’t expire.

 

That was my real fear. Not that I didn't own something.

 

That it wouldn't work when it counted.

 

This is built so it does. 

what one little straw actually gives you

They say one PureFlow is good for up to 1,800 gallons.

 

Let me put that the way it landed for me.

 

That's more than four years of drinking water for one person. Out of whatever creek or pond you can get to.

Now picture those 50-some cases in the garage again. Two whole pallets of them.

 

This does the same job for years. And it's the size of a marker.

 

You don't have to be good with numbers to see which one makes more sense.

 

And it's so simple that anybody can use it. My littlest grandbaby figured it out in about ten seconds, then wanted to filter every puddle in the yard.

 

No power. No batteries. Nothing to plug in.

 

And it'll sit in your drawer for years without going bad, as long as you keep it dry the way they tell you. Don't let it freeze, and let it dry out before you put it away. Do that, and it just waits there. Ready. No expiration date to fuss over.

here's what i actually bought

I didn't get one.

 

I got one for each of the grandbabies, one for my daughter, one for her husband, one for my son, and one for each of their cars.

 

Then I got a few extra for the people I love who I know would never get around to it themselves. You know the type.

 

It's cheap enough that seeing to your whole family is a real thing, not some big splurge.

 

And handing one to your daughter or your grandbaby isn't a doom-and-gloom gift. It's a little peace of mind she can tuck in a drawer and forget all about, right up until the day she needs it.

 

My son-in-law rolled his eyes at me when I put his in his hand. Let him. It's in his glovebox now, and one of these days he'll be glad his mother-in-law is a nag.

one honest word about timing

The only good time to see to this is before you need it.

 

You know how it goes. The second there's a storm coming on the news, the water shelf at the store is bare by supper

 

Everybody driving all over creation looking for cases that are already gone.

 

I've stood in enough lines in my life. I'd just as soon not stand in that one with a thirsty grandbaby on my hip.

So this isn't about getting scared today. It's the opposite of that.
 

It's about seeing to it this weekend, tucking a few in the drawer, and never giving your family's water another worried thought.
 

It's backed by a 30-day money-back guarantee.

where to get it

If you'd like to get PureFlow Emergency Water Filter Straws for you and your family, click the button below and it'll take you right over to the PureFlow website.

 

Last I checked, they were running a sale, where you can get PureFlow for up to 67% off

Get PureFlow For Up To 67% OFF Now!

you've got two ways to go

You can keep meaning to see to the water thing. The way most of us do. Right up until the power's out, the tap's not safe, and it's too late to do a thing about it.

 

Or you can see to it this weekend. Tuck a few in the drawer. And know your kids and your grandbabies are covered, no matter what.

 

I know which one lets me sleep at night.

Get PureFlow For Up To 67% OFF Now!

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P.S. If you don't remember another word I said, remember the pencil and paper. A few weeks of water for a big family is a garage full of cases that still runs out on you. Or it's a few little filters the size of a marker that don't. Same job. One of them fits in a drawer.

 

P.P.S. You can get through a cold night. You can get through a dark one. But you cannot go three days without clean water, and neither can a five-year-old. That's the one I saw to first. Do the same for your people, and you can put it out of your mind.

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