I'll never forget Killene, Texas...that how you spell it...We were
stationed there in the 50's . . .
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Yes, lots of water in Texas does not have a good taste. Many times it is
very "hard" -- lots of minerals. Of course, we who grew up here have really
strong teeth (lots of natural flouride), but we also have brown stains on
our teeth from the minerals. Thank goodness for bonding or porcelains!
Because we don't care for the taste of our city water, we have an RO machine
attached to our home ice maker and a gooseneck faucet at the sink. When we
are getting ready for a trip, we have some 2.5 gallon jugs and 8 or 10
one-gallon jugs. We begin filling them with RO water a few days before we
leave and take our water with us. If we happen to stop at a place that has
really good local water, THEN we fill our fresh water tanks with THEIR
water.
When we were in Yuma, the water there is so salty that we wouldn't put it in
our tank. We went to some of those water places that had a hose that we
could run to our tank, we filled our tank with GOOD water. Yes, twenty-five
cents a gallon is expensive, but we didn't want to contaminate our tank with
salt water.
I would love to have a small RO machine in our motorhome if such exist.
Betty in Texas
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