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i did 14 years in the marines. this is the one thing i tell every family to keep in a kitchen drawer.

When the power goes out, the water goes with it. Here's the simple, one-time fix I wish more people knew about. Before they need it, not after.

Mike Labonte

14 Year Marine Veteran

I don't scare easy.

 

Fourteen years in the Marines takes that out of you.

 

So when I tell you the thing most families forget, I'm not trying to spook you. I'm telling you what I wish somebody had told me sooner.

 

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

 

Most people have never had to think about it. You turn the tap, and water comes out. End of story.

 

But the pumps that push that water through the pipes run on electricity. The plants that clean it before it reaches your sink run on electricity, too.

 

Take the power away, and the whole system between the river and your kitchen slows down. 

 

Then it stops.

 

It's not a maybe. It's how the system is built.

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

I always figured I'd just store water. Stack some cases in the garage and call it done.

 

So one afternoon, I actually sat down and did the math.

 

A person needs about a gallon of clean water a day. For drinking, cooking, cleaning, and brushing teeth. My family is four people. That's four gallons a day.

 

A case of bottled water is about three gallons.

 

So one case doesn't even get my family through a single day.

 

To cover us for six weeks, I'd need around 56 cases.

 

That's two full pallets sitting in the garage.

 

And the second it runs out, it's gone. There's no refilling a case of Aquafina from the creek out back.

 

That's when it hit me. Storing water isn't a plan. It's a countdown.

so i went looking for the other way

There's a different approach the prepared folks use.

 

Instead of storing years of water, you keep the thing that makes water drinkable.

 

You put one end into a fresh source. A creek. A pond. A rain barrel. Whatever's in the bathtub if you filled it before the pumps quit.

 

You drink through the other end.

 

No power. No batteries. No boiling. No waiting.

 

The good ones strain the water down so fine that the bacteria and the parasites can't get through.

 

I looked at a bunch of them. Most are built for weekend hikers. Thinner, coarser, made to toss in a daypack a few times a year.

 

I didn't want a hiking toy. I wanted the one built for the day the tap's actually down. 

the one i keep in the drawer

It's called PureFlow.

 

A few things sold me.

 

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 allows you to take that dirty water with you and drink it clean whenever/wherever you want.

 

Second, it filters down to 0.01 microns. That's finer than most straws you'll find on a shelf.

 

It removes 99.99% of the bacteria and protozoa that make water dangerous. The stuff that puts people in the hospital. E. coli. Giardia. Cryptosporidium. It catches microplastics too.

 

Now I'll be straight with you, the way I wish more of these brands were.

 

A filter is not a purifier.

 

PureFlow does not remove viruses. It doesn't pull out chemicals or heavy metals either.

 

For most grid-down situations, bacteria and parasites are the real threat, and that's exactly what this handles. If you want virus coverage on top of it, you pair it with purification tablets or a UV pen. 

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

 

I trust PureFlow more because they told me what it doesn't do.

the part that actually matters to me

Here's the one that closed it.

 

The PureFlow filtration technology is third-party lab-verified for bacteria and protozoa removal, and they get pressure-tested for membrane integrity, seal strength, and leak resistance. 

 

It’s also made with FDA food-contact-compliantBPA-free materials, the same material standard used in IV filters and infant feeding equipment.

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

 

Think about what people are really afraid of with stored gear.

 

It's not that they don't own it. It's that they're scared it won't work on the one day they finally reach for it.

 

This is built so it does. 

what one straw actually gives you

One PureFlow Emergency Water Filter Straw is rated for up to 1,800 gallons.

 

Let me put that in plain terms.

 

That's close to five years of drinking water for one person. Pulled from whatever fresh source you can reach.

 

Go back to those two pallets of bottled water in the garage.

 

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

 

That's not a sales pitch. That's just math.

 

And it's simple enough that anybody can use it.

 

No power. No batteries. Nothing to charge or plug in.

 

One more thing, and I need to say it again because it's really important.

It's got no expiration date when you store it dry the way the guide says. Don't let it freeze, and let it dry out before you put it away. Do that, and it just sits in the drawer. Ready. Year after year.

here's what i actually bought

I didn't buy one.

 

I bought enough for everyone I'd lie awake worrying about.

 

One for the house. One for each vehicle. One in each of the kids' bags.

 

Then I grabbed a few extra for the people I love. My parents. My daughter's apartment. A buddy who'd never get around to buying one himself.

 

It's cheap enough that covering your whole circle is a real thing, not a splurge.

 

And handing one to your mom or your grown kid isn't some doomsday gift. It's peace of mind they can drop in a drawer and forget about until the day it matters.

one honest word about timing

The only smart time to sort this out is before you need it.

 

You already know how this goes.

 

A storm shows up on the forecast, and the water aisle is stripped bare by that afternoon. People drive from store to store looking for cases that aren't on the shelf anymore.

 

The whole point of a filter is to never be in that line.

 

So this isn't about panicking today. It's the opposite.

 

It's about handling it this weekend, putting a few in the drawer, and never thinking about your family's water again.

 

Most people I know get the Family Pack. It’s enough for the house, the cars, and a couple to give away.

 

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

 

If you want to get PureFlow Emergency Water Filter Straws for you and your family, click the button below to go to the PureFlow website. 

 

If I remember correctly, they're having a special sale right now 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 get to the water thing. The way most people do. Right up until the tap stops, and it's too late to do anything about it.

 

Or you can handle it this weekend. Put a few in the drawer. And know your family's covered, no matter what the grid does.

 

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 forget everything else, remember the math. Six weeks of water for a family of four is 56 cases and two pallets in your garage. Or it's a few filters the size of a marker. Same job. One of them fits in a drawer.

 

P.P.S. You can be cold and get through it. You can sit in the dark and get through it. Clean water is the one thing you can't go three days without. That's the one I made sure of first. Do the same for your family, and you can stop thinking about it.

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