Mostly, though, I just use a water bottle and refill it from the tap at home or from a water fountain at work. I confess to having a filter on our drinking-water tap, in part to reduce the amount of chlorine in our water, upped considerably since the Walkerton tragedy, an hour's drive north of here.
According to Lester Brown, [h/t to Jack]
"There are places in the world where safe bottled water is important," Brown notes. "The United States is not one of them." [EE note: neither are Canada or England]Conspicuous consumption? Gee, when I refill a water bottle from the tap, I don't really feel the same way I would if I'm put cheap scotch in an empty bottle that once held expensive scotch; it sure isn't conspicuous consumption on my part, and it probably isn't some overbearing concern about the environmental impact of using too many plastic bottles.
"It's an example of conspicuous consumption," Brown says. "Reasonably well-educated people have been convinced that water in plastic bottles is better for them than water that's in their tap." In fact, most U.S. states regulate tap water much more stringently than they do bottled water, he adds.
Maybe it's just because I'm cheap.





I also like bottles... I sometimes get 3-4 0.5l Coca-Cola bottles rather than 1 2l bottle because they're like portions. The system helps me know when to stop drinking.
While I'm informed by "experts" that my hometown's tap water is safe to drink, I can assure you it is not potable by normal human standards. Not when it still tastes like somebody filtered it through a layer of coarse gravel and dirty underwear... not that I've ever tasted water filtered in such a manner. or, if I had, not that I would admit it without a sufficient supply of Very Good Scotch in my bloodstream, first.