Hallo zusammen,

Ich bin gerade mit meiner Freundin in Österreich unterwegs und es gefällt uns hier sehr gut, die Leute sind nett und hilfsbereit und die Aussicht ist fantastisch. Gestern haben wir eine Wanderung in der Nähe von Hallstatt gemacht und sind an dieser Wasserstation vorbeigekommen. Leute, die den Weg gehen, sagten uns, dass es völlig in Ordnung ist, daraus zu trinken (aus dem Bach selbst, nicht aus dem Pool). Sie sagten, dass es überall auf österreichischen Wanderungen solche Stationen gibt, und sie haben auch getrunken. Leider musste meine Freundin einige Stunden, nachdem wir fertig waren, ununterbrochen erbrechen und wir mussten sie ins Krankenhaus bringen. Ich kam später in der Nacht an die Reihe, erbrach mich und litt.

Meine Frage ist, woher weiß man wirklich, ob man beim Wandern trinkbar ist? Einerseits ist das Wasser in Österreich so sauber wie es nur sein kann. Andererseits erholen wir uns immer noch von einer schrecklichen Erfahrung. Gibt es eine Faustregel? Etwas, worauf man achten sollte, wenn man auf diese Stationen stößt? Oder ist es einfach besser, sie zu meiden.

Danke schön!

https://i.redd.it/dxcyejf7ykid1.jpeg

Von Psycofreudian

19 Comments

  1. Have been drinking from these all my life and never had a bad experience.

  2. Mormegil81 on

    I am 99% sure that it was something you ate that day that caused your symptoms and not that water station…

  3. You may aswell not be used to it from drinking fixed up water. These are safe to drink for our standards

  4. As far as i know those sources should be safe . Are you sure that maybe Not a sun stroke hit you Both or did you eat the same things ? What did they doctors say i suppose you told Them the Story as it is .

    All the best for you two – Hope you Are feeling better soon

  5. If you used your hands to scoop water, you might both have had something on them that made you vomit. And as mentioned by others, it could also have been something you ate or heat exhaustion. I.e. did you drink enough, wore hats, kept to the shade …
    I hope you both feel better soon!

  6. dassind20zeichen on

    Those fountains are usually fine if they come from a stream there is always the chance that something is in the water upstream. Sometime slurry gets washed in after a big rain. I had a extremely bad experience at the Königseer Ache I didn’t know if I should sit or kneel before the toilet.

  7. They are all safe to drink from, it must be something you ate. Generally if the water is clear you can drink without problems, if it appears muddy you should be careful. But I hope you know this already!

  8. No-Preparation-167 on

    The water that comes out of this is normally better than anywhere else, it could be that there was a dead animal in the water a bit higher up tho, than its not so good

  9. DeiMamaisaFut on

    It was probably the best water you guys ever had, problem is more likley food/-sun related

  10. You might not be used to some of “our” normal bacteria found inside the water or your sickness might have another cause (heat, virus, food, etc.).

    Generally flowing water on mountains is safe to drink if there are no obvious sources of contamination nearby (aggriculture, animal herds, heavy rainfall, etc.).

  11. When it comes to water those springs are probably as clean as it gets, never had any problems with them.

    Pretty sure the water is not to blame here, you probably ate or drank something before that caused this, or you’re unable to handle untreated water.

    With the heat those days it could also be a heat stroke.

  12. Chrischtel_ on

    In the mountains almost every stream of water is safe to drink (at least me and my friends never had problems). I even go as far as “oh there is some water coming out of this ground and there is no cow waste nearby? Let’s fill up my waterbottle.”

    Maybe there is some dirt and some moss in there, but as I said, I never had any problems and the earthy taste of the water is very enjoyable for me.

  13. Butterbackfisch on

    To all the people saying it’s safe to drink:

    Yes it can be safe to drink but if there is one condition off it can be contaminated. Something upstream can happen and water gets dirty. It rained the last days here and there so maybe some dirty water spilled into the stream.
    Maybe a tourist made his business into the stream. We will never know!

    I tend to use a waterfilter for any outdoor watersource. You can get them very cheaply over the internet.

  14. tomyumnuts on

    Norovirus can spread like crazy everywhere, imo this is the most probable.

    But I also know someone where the whole hiking group drank (what they thought was) spring water and got ill. On the way back they found a cow herd shitting upstream.

  15. RealFetigePomes on

    I am not aware of regulations for those springs, but the public consideres them as safe I guess. I never had a bad experience with the water, and I visit the mountains almost every weekend. But i don’t know if there are people who maintain/clean the pipes if necessary.

    Rule of thumb is – as you said – to only drink from the water that is flowing, cleanly opaque without a bad smell.

    Whatever caused your illness, I wish you a great recovery and much fun in austria

  16. Zealousideal-News-31 on

    Water like that is pretty much always safe. The spring straight out the mountain is most likely just a few meters above.
    Something that can be a reason is: this water is absolutly ice cold. My dad told me to drink too much straight away but let it warm in a bottle a little bit.
    But i suppose its more something you ate or a virus. (Noro-virus is a biatch)

Leave A Reply