US People Horrified As American Brings Water Backpack to European Restaurants

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People Horrified As American Brings Water Backpack to European Restaurants​

When 34-year-old Liz White from North Carolina couldn't find the water she wanted on her European trip, she came up with an unusual solution—bringing her hiking hydration backpack to the restaurant.

White had been traveling through London, Venice, and the Dolomites, where she says she struggled to meet her daily water intake. "I drink a lot of water in general," she told Newsweek. "After a few days of struggling to get the water amount I desired at restaurants in Italy and England, I realized I could be innovative."

Her solution? Bringing her hiking hydration backpack to sit-down meals. "It worked really well! I didn't have to repeatedly ask for water refills, or buy water at the restaurant," she said. "I adapted to the conditions by just sipping from my backpack instead."
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She shared her unusual method for hydration in a now-viral video on TikTok which has more than 100,000 views since being shared last week.

The response was swift as people reacted to White's backpack solution. In the video she said: "Y'all are flaying me alive in the comments, calling me a stupid American, but I don't think you understand how accessible water is in the States," she explained that the difference in Europe was stark, offering examples: "This is a typical pour of water I receive in Europe when I ask for water in a restaurant," she said, showing a small glass of water.

The debate follows a recent wave of TikTokvideos where American tourists claim water is hard to come by in Europe. Europeans took to TikTok to debunk the idea that water is hard to access, with one viral clip showing a Danish woman calmly filling her bottle from a bathroom sink, captioned, "It's literally free from the tap."

While Philippa Raphet Meeg from France responded to the trend saying: "Just because we don't carry around big Stanleys all the time doesn't mean we don't drink water. Please, please stop."

As White's video gained more attention, opinions on White's water method were seriously mixed.

"This is satire right?" asked Noémie. While Alex said: "Tap water is free all over Europe. This is insane nonsense."

While others agreed with White's idea. Kat from Arizona said: "I feel dehydrated just looking at this. You go girl!" While another commenter said: "They never serve you enough water and the 500ml bottles for 4€ is too much!"

The clash, however, isn't just anecdotal. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) U.S. adults drank an average of 44 ounces of water per day. While data from the European Commission found that most European countries consume less than 34 ounces per day, with the exception of Austria, Germany, Norway and U.K.

White was shocked by the reaction, but added that it didn't put her off her new water travel hack. "I was pretty surprised how offended many Europeans were," White said. "I don't think I said anything insulting, nor did I indicate that anything should be different. In fact, I shared how I chose to adapt to the culture by bringing my own water.

"I do think Americans are much more used to kind of poking fun at each other, and I've learned Europeans are a lot more defensive of their homelands," she said.
 
I think nobody's actually horrified, and she can have her silly little backpack everywhere for all I care. Who decided a camelbak is ok at restaurants for hikers, and verboten in the city. This is literally a storm in a glass of water.
It's just that if I met someone who is chewing the mouthpiece all the time, I'd suspect they also have headphones that tell them INHALE-EXHALE, and when the battery runs out, they suffocate.
Also this is likely just a language difference, but if someone says something like ''I must hydrate self'' instead of ''I have to drink enough water'' like a normal person, they are likely hopelessly orthorexic to the point their stress of not living healthy enough negates all the possible benefits.
 
I need someone well-traveled to tell me if there is anywhere in the world with potable water that tastes worse than LA's tap water.
It HAS to be potable. I'm sure tons of places have icky poison water, but I want to know if anything beats Los Angeles in terms of "It's safe to drink but it tastes like you've done something wrong and are being punished."
Florida, used to go on vacation to visit my grandma every year and it was the one place where I simply couldn’t tolerate the tap water, no matter how cold it was. It tastes like it came straight from the swamps Florida is covered in. Arizona’s is incredibly mineralized, but I still find it palatable.
 
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Florida, used to go on vacation to visit my grandma every year and it was the one place where I simply couldn’t tolerate the tap water, no matter how cold it was. It tastes like it came straight from the swamps Florida is covered in. Arizona’s is incredibly mineralized, but I still find it palatable.
Florida water tastes like dead alligators, greasy sand, and fish oil. And christ the reek. It reeks to high heaven.

New York water tastes far better, but there is a sinking notion that you are nurturing an extra finger or nostril somehow. Love Canal comes to mind.

My mammaw said never drink bathroom sink water, or warm water from any tap. Is there any legitimate thing that created that thought in her head?
 
My mammaw said never drink bathroom sink water, or warm water from any tap. Is there any legitimate thing that created that thought in her head?
Yeah. Hot water can leech lead and zinc out of old pipes. Cold water also comes directly from the water main, but hot water has to sit in the tank for a bit and the tank can get stuff in it (unless you have an in-wall tankless heater).
I imagine the bathroom sink thing is more of a hygiene matter due to proximity to the toilet.
 
My mammaw said never drink bathroom sink water, or warm water from any tap. Is there any legitimate thing that created that thought in her head?
Potentially, bathroom sink water could have more bacteria. And warm water from taps often tastes off because the warmer temperature makes a lot of "Mineral" taste in it more pronounced.

It's why are lot of people say warm water from a shower tastes metallic while cool water from a sink doesn't.

In practice? It doesn't really matter. Unless you're bathroom is gross, any amount of extra bacteria will be trivial. And warm water from a tap might taste worse, but isn't anymore less safe to drink.


Edit: NoReturn is correct and there can definitely be issues if you have old pipes or an old water heater. But with modern pipes and a modern water-heater, it's really a non-issue.
 
Yeah. Hot water can leech lead and zinc out of old pipes. Cold water also comes directly from the water main, but hot water has to sit in the tank for a bit and the tank can get stuff in it (unless you have an in-wall tankless heater).
I imagine the bathroom sink thing is more of a hygiene matter due to proximity to the toilet.
She wasn't the type to warn people against anything, ever, so it stuck with me. She also said never drink the water from the showerhead, and sure enough i read about some poor bastard getting bacterial meningitis from it. AND that nobody cleans their ice maker in the fridge so don't use that ice.
 
Im not going to lie but the tap water in Ohio tastes nice, ( this was in Cleveland and Sandusky Ohio, ) im from north Texas and it tastes okay compared to up there.
Maybe thats why pizza tastes better in NYC and the Midwest.
 
There are over three times as many Europeans who die from heat each year than there are Americans who are shot and killed (including suicides):
View attachment 7656047View attachment 7656052

>be European
>can't drink water or run A/C because of a lack of carbon credits
>die from heatwave (72°)
So even after adjusting for population, you're still more likely to die from heat in Europe than be shot in the US. When will Europe have common-sense heat control?
Rekt.

I know you meant Australians, but the thought of some random German offshoot squaring up and having words with a Kangaroo in the Austrian alps is hilarious.
That's the fuckin' joke my dude.
 
Of course it’s not. Over hydration can lead to serious problems just like under hydration. Electrolyte balance, sodium balance, stress on your kidneys that many people may not be aware that they have a problem with.

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But sure, keep slurping down gallons of water because you were dumb enough to follow some arbitrary and unscientific “rule” like “8 cups a day”. Keep buying overpriced consoooomer crap like Stanley cups because you want to be cool like the zoomer chicks, and live in a country where you can’t just pour a glass of tap water from the tap.


Would you rather use your hands like a dirty pajeet?

Don’t bring up fries until you can appreciate that civilized people eat them with mayonnaise, instead of slathering them with ketchup like a goddamn animal.
Tell me you're a dainty little princess who has never worked a day in their life without telling me.
 
I was told by actual British people from England that most restaurants in the UK will actually charge for a glass of water. They were surprised when they first came here that restaurants just give them away for free.
All licensed premises (places that serve alcohol) are legally required to provide free tap water. If you can get a glass of wine with dinner, you can get free tap water (and typically they'll offer a jug of water for the table). The only places that might charge for water are fast food restaurants or tourist trap cafés, but I can't say I ever recall getting charged for tap water. The "actual British people from England" may have been pulling your leg.
Stinginess with water on the continent is a known phenomenon though. At least with Germans their word for tap water is "Leitungswasser", which translates to "plumbing water", which may explain their squeamishness with it.
 
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All licensed premises (places that serve alcohol) are legally required to provide free tap water. If you can get a glass of wine with dinner, you can get free tap water (and typically they'll offer a jug of water for the table). The only places that might charge for water are fast food restaurants or tourist trap cafés, but I can't say I ever recall getting charged for tap water. The "actual British people from England" may have been pulling your leg.
Stinginess with water on the continent is a known phenomenon though. At least with Germans their word for tap water is "Leitungswasser", which translates to "plumbing water", which may explain their squeamishness with it.
A few people have said this now. The person I know moved from England almost 20 years ago. Maybe things changed or maybe it's just the area they were from or maybe they were mistaken. Either way I suppose I shouldn't make blanket statements.
 
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