As part of a landscape job we were doing, we cleaned out this guys garage that hadn’t been entered for about 20 years.
We found some “earthquake water” (I’m in southern California). This is water that we are asked to store in case an earthquake occurs and the taps go dry.
Anyway, this water is in large sealed plastic bottles and is about 20 tears old.
Is it still H2O? Has it lost something since the day it was bottled? Safe to drink? Safe to water plants with?
I would think that if properly sealed it would never stale… stagnation is due to other things growing in the water.
To be safe just use to to water your lawn and release it back to the environment… if you wake up to find an empty front yard well you know what happened.
It’s probably bacteriologically safe to drink, but it almost certainly tastes terrible.
After just a year or two, IME, water picks up a nasty flavor from being in plastic. After 20 years, I’d only be comfortable using it to wash down the driveway.
The jury is still out on whether or not chemicals in plastic are really safe for humans - things like phthalates, BIS-A and so on… After 20 years in plastic bottles, that water will have a lot of this stuff in it.
I’ll wager that it’s perfectly safe and tastes a little like plastic. Any cracks/leaks in the bottle and it would have dried out or lost a significant volume of water.
There’s a lot of FUD out there about “chemicals” and such, but you could eat the bottles and the worst risk you would face is a perforation.
Unopened newspapers from the late eighties and early nineties. Very interesting reading.
A complete still in sealed boxes 1993 encyclopedia Britannica. I guess some encyclopedia salesman came to his door and made a sale. With the Internet, I doubt they even publish them anymore.
I think when I have a thousand bucks to spare and a big enough house, I’ll buy a set of encyclopedias. When I was growing up, I would peruse two sets at my grandmothers house, one from 1947 and the other from 1967. To me, it was fascinating reading then-current biographies, country profiles and science articles. I felt like I was entering the world of that time, in some sense, as I perused a snapshot of the overall state of knowledge for that particular period.
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Oh–old water, you say? I imagine if you go into the basements of many older stone or brick buildings, you’ll find 50+ year old water (and maybe food, too). Fallout shelters, dontchyaknow.
I had a garage sale and some families would buy nice lookng hard-cover books just for show. I found this hard to beleive, but had it verified but numerous sources.
Plenty of Pretetende Olde Worlde Places (Bed & Breakfasts, Englishe Pub[del]e[/del]s etc.) buy old fashioned leather bound books by the foot, just to try and look authentice.
Respectable Newspapers and Lawyers sometimes have them for reference purposes- if a Reputable Printed Reference is needed for something, it’s hard to go past the Encyclopaedia Brittanica.
That and it looks Respectable & Professional to have a collection handy- same with things like a Big Leather-Bound Dictionary.
Concurred. And I’m probably one of them : I find a library shelf neatly filled with thick leatherbound tomes aesthetically pleasing, and in a way I couldn’t begin to explain, reassuring.
It’s not about appearing to be an 'telekchual, it just looks nice.