Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have assigned Thermoflasks. I rinse off the mouth piece but never wash the insides...why? its just water in there.
Please look up the science on this. The human mouth harbors bacteria, sugars, etc. The stuff from our mouth gets inside of water bottles. No telling how often kids backwash into their water bottles and then keep drinking. No telling how often the stuff from inside our mouths mingle with the water in the bottle. Water bottles are meant to be washed, either by hand or dishwasher every day.
I hate the freebies. They always smell like chemicals to me and they always leak. I want to throw them away ... but isn't the whole point to not generate more garbage?
Anonymous wrote:I agree with the less is more poster. My kids each have one nice Yeti water bottle. So far this seems to be the most durable of the various ones we’ve used over the years. They’re still too young to successfully wash them (pre-k and 1st) so DH and I wash them every 2-3 nights. My youngest does have 1 other water bottle that lives at his preschool during the week. It gets rinsed out daily, but I do a deep wash over the weekend. I myself also have 1 Yeti (I keep it at my desk during work, use it during exercise, by my bedside at night, etc.).
DH on the other hand has fifty gazillion water bottles. This one fits in the car cup holder. That one is good for taking on hikes. He likes XYZ bottle for his desk. And so on. I don’t wash them so it’s not really my problem, but it drives me batty at times when the counter is FULL of them. And the amount of time he spends keeping track of them just doesn’t seem worth it to me, but I knew what I was marrying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids have assigned Thermoflasks. I rinse off the mouth piece but never wash the insides...why? its just water in there.
Please look up the science on this. The human mouth harbors bacteria, sugars, etc. The stuff from our mouth gets inside of water bottles. No telling how often kids backwash into their water bottles and then keep drinking. No telling how often the stuff from inside our mouths mingle with the water in the bottle. Water bottles are meant to be washed, either by hand or dishwasher every day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My dishwasher isn’t really tall enough to put the bottles upright, unless maybe on an angle in which case they take up a lot of room.
The bottom is not tall enough?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids each get two water bottles and two only. One that is in use and one that's either clean or waiting by the sink to be cleaned. I strongly encourage them to use each one for 2-3 days before I switch them to the other bottle. This has helped a lot.
Still a lot. I have 3 kids, then my husband any myself. That is 10 water bottles.
Anonymous wrote:My kids have assigned Thermoflasks. I rinse off the mouth piece but never wash the insides...why? its just water in there.
Anonymous wrote:My kids each get two water bottles and two only. One that is in use and one that's either clean or waiting by the sink to be cleaned. I strongly encourage them to use each one for 2-3 days before I switch them to the other bottle. This has helped a lot.