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2007-03-15 10:01:40 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Food & Drink Non-Alcoholic Drinks

10 answers

Mountainwood Spring Water Company. They sell spring water to other bottled water companies like Culligan. We found out that spring water is a big business. The spring at Mountainwood is part of a 75 acre, wooded property and has been used for its spring water for the past twenty-five years. The owner said that the spring water comes from a very deep aquifer under his land. The water came naturally to the surface and was there when he bought the land.
The spring runs through some rocks into a little shed. In the picture on the left, the pipe is used to suck the water up into a larger pipe so that it can be pumped to a building farther away. The metal disk is put there so that sand and rocks don't get sucked up into the pipe, too.
Then the water goes to the main building. The water is filtered [like our experiment] and ozone is added to it there. Ozone burns up bacteria and only stays in the water for a few hours. We didn't know that spring water was treated before it was bottled. We found out that samples of the water are sent to a testing laboratory twice a year even though the Department of Environmental Protection says it has to be done once a year. A bacteria test is done three times a week. They make sure that the water is safe to drink.
Then the water is pumped at 120 gallons per minute into a 5,000 gallon tank. The water is held in the tank until it is bottled or pumped into tanker trucks.
Bottling was interesting. Many times, 5 gallon bottles are reused. These are the kind that are used in water coolers. The first step is for a 'Sniffer' person to smell any bottles that will be used again. He is smelling for things that don't belong there because people might store other liquids [like gasoline] in them before they are returned. If a bottle like that was put into the bottle washer, it would ruin the whole load of bottles.
The bottles get washed and are put on a conveyor belt that takes them to be refilled with water. The picture to the left shows the line of water bottles being filled. The picture on the right shows the bottles being capped. After that, the bottles are stamped with a date. Now the water is ready to be sold.
The filled bottles are put back in the tractor trailers that brought the empty bottles. It seemed that there was a lot of bottle reuse with the 5 gallon bottles.
The owner of the company loves the land and respects the water on it. He is careful to protect it so that it is safe to drink. :

2007-03-20 00:31:14 · answer #1 · answered by Hope Summer 6 · 2 0

If it says the words "Spring Water" on it, it has to be with in a certain distance from a natural spring. That makes it so that bottled water compinies will seek out pristine abundant springs in the mountains and suck them dry, killing all plants and animals that once depended on the spring. In essence, spring water isn't much different than any other water, it's all H2O, and after all the treatment it goes through, it's just like any tap water that went through the same treatment. The only reason bottled water companies kill springs like that is because consumers like to see the words "Spring Water" on the labels of their bottled water.

2007-03-15 17:32:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Read the back of the bottle it usually says right above the bar code or where the ingredients are listed. The one I have in front of me is Nestle PureLife and it's from Greenwich, CT.

They did a piece on this on 20/20 News a while back, they say a good number of the water itself is just "tap" water from the specific state, just with added things and purified, rarely does it come from "special" places... you know, glacier or whatever.

2007-03-15 18:35:39 · answer #3 · answered by Josie 1 · 0 1

Natural Springs.

2007-03-21 10:22:46 · answer #4 · answered by Kath N 1 · 0 0

some of the very best bottled water comes from nyc- it has the most refined drinking water reclaimation system in the us

if it says spring water, then it HAS to be from a spring- which all water is from if it comes from ground water... it has only been recycled

2007-03-15 17:05:44 · answer #5 · answered by notfromaround_here 4 · 0 1

There is this water called "Voss" that claims to be from "fijords of Norway" but whatever, I don't care if it ran down Ghandi's buttcrack, I'm not paying 6 bucks a bottle for it.

2007-03-17 02:35:57 · answer #6 · answered by Amy 3 · 0 1

Most of the brands come from a tap

2007-03-15 17:05:02 · answer #7 · answered by kanman1958 3 · 0 1

A tap which probably comes from an aquifer.

2007-03-15 17:08:57 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

JUST ABOUT EVERYONE SELLS IT NOW. IT IS NOW THE THING TO DRINK FOR A BEAUTIFUL BODY. IT'S NATURES SOURCE.

2007-03-20 19:43:43 · answer #9 · answered by cindy s 1 · 0 0

grocery stores

2007-03-15 17:09:31 · answer #10 · answered by Ashley 3 · 0 1

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