#868 in Sports & Outdoors
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Reddit mentions of LifeStraw Go Water Bottle 1-Stage with Integrated 1000-Liter LifeStraw Filter, Blue
Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 9
We found 9 Reddit mentions of LifeStraw Go Water Bottle 1-Stage with Integrated 1000-Liter LifeStraw Filter, Blue. Here are the top ones.
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- LifeStraw Go
- LifeStraw Go
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Features:
Specs:
Color | Blue |
Height | 9 Inches |
Length | 3 Inches |
Weight | 0.41667367518 Pounds |
Width | 3 Inches |
It depends on where you're going and what shots you want.
Are you planning to go to Udawalawe? If so, your kit lens will do for the most part, but do bring a telephoto to get some of the wildlife shots esp. the birds. Depending on the guide and timing, you can actually get pretty damn close to the elephants for example: http://i.imgur.com/fhtcL6z.jpg. However, there are other things like birds you can't really get without a telephoto.
For example, if you're going to Polonnaruwa and want to take shots of the monkeys, you need a telephoto. You don't want to get very close to these bastards despite them being used to people and coming pretty close to people. I have a bunch of shots from here, but these are not on my phone unfortunately, so can't upload them. edit: Found a few more pics: http://imgur.com/a/eqEg1
Pic 3 - I wish I had a fast zoom. You can clearly see the issues with the image in low light. This + bad tripod + no IS (older kit lens) on the lens = bad time.
Pic 4 - Frescos are pretty cool and there were places where I couldn't get multiple of them in to one shot like I wanted. A wide angle would help. I can imagine a few cool macro shots of the frescos as well, but I wasn't really able to do that due to equipment limitations.
For landscape hots of say Polonnaruwa or Sigiriya or Mackwoods other places, you definitely should go with a wide angle. The Canon 10-18mm f/4.5-5.6 IS STM is under $300 and probably your best bet when it comes to price vs performance. It's by no mean the absolute best wide angle lens, but it's pretty cheap and offer good performance.
Your f2.8/1.8s will come in very handy, especially if you want to take inside shots of say the Dalada Maligawa. I really wished I had a fast lens when I went.
Also, if you're going to the Peradeniya Botanical Garden, either bring a macro lens or extension tubes. You may also want to invest in a GoPro (or a Xiaomi Yi, make sure you get a real one and not a counterfeit). I wished I had a GoPro or similar action cam to record say the ascend/descend for Sigiriya.
And bring LOTS of batteries AND a DC to AC car inverter in the 100-200W range so you can charge your stuff on the go. My relatives told me to bring this, and it was invaluable while traveling to charge my camera batteries, laptop and phone. I used this one: http://smile.amazon.com/Outlets-Inverter-Charging-Smartphones-Tablets/dp/B004MDXS0U/
DO bring a laptop and external HDD/SSD for backing up. I would personally go with a 500GB or larger SSD now as things can get rough on a HDD while traveling. I had 2x500GB SSDs (swapped out DVD RW to 2nd HDD cage see: http://www.smile.amazon.com/Protronix-Optical-Drive-Caddy-Universal/dp/B004XIUQYA/, make sure you get the right sized one) on my laptop, and had an 2TB HDD. Backed up photos/videos to both of these.
Things I wish I brought:
Source: Been there, done that. Spent about 4ish weeks in June/July. Traveled to Udawalawe, Polonnaruwa, Sigiriya, Mackwoods and Peradeniya. I didn't spend a lot of time in the big cities like Colombo, so can't really comment on cityscape stuff. I traveled with my aunts, cousins, uncles, etc who live/lived in Sri Lanka so they knew their way around stuff which made it a lot easy to get to places. PM me or ask here if you have any questions.
Well, that's a lot longer than I expected... hope this helps OP!
Get a Lifestraw! I used it for the whole three months and had no problems whatsoever
something to clean the water you drink.
Water itself doesn't go bad, it's the conditions it's kept it. It stagnates in air, or in bottles the chemicals leach into it.
That's why I have one of these on my wishlist.
LifeStraw® Go - Water Bottle https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B00H90PFOK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fRQAyb8FGERFY
Regardless of the situation, it will make enough water safe to drink for my family and I for at least 125 days (based on the average 1000 litres, and 4 people drinking 2 litres a day).
I've been trying to improve my self-reliance ability. A lot of it is about hands on experience and knowledge, but most of my outdoor items are invaluable tools. I have most of the basic things, but I've been looking to expand and cover more bases.
The Lifestraw water bottle (or alternatively, the $9 cheaper filter without the bottle) seems like a great item that everyone should consider. You need clean water more than anything else, so the more ways to get it the better.
/u/Morthy is the sexy mod.
We bought a life-straw bottle when we went. I found it a bit chlorine-y at first, but after a bit it made even the grossest fountain water taste like bottled. It was a bit expensive for a water bottle, but at $3 per drink in the park it was well worth the price overall.
Yes! Excellent Eagle eye!!! The campsite was awesome!!! We had a blast! We used Lifestraw water bottles (Amazon link below) and it tasted amazing. We did use our balaclavas and bandanas to cover the opening just to filter out large particulate and floaters. I'll definitely be going back again. Tried fishing, with no luck but at any rate... A+
http://www.amazon.com/LifeStraw-Bottle-Integrated-1000-Liter-Filter/dp/B00H90PFOK?ie=UTF8&psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o02_s00
Yeah, the LifeStraws only filter if you sip through the straw. I don't think it is overly difficult to suck through the straw nor does my wife. This is what we have and use. I have no real complaints, to be honest.