Has anyone used the water at Cecil Plains for drinking?
I'm wondering if thats what made me so sick. I bottled some on the advice of a couple in a motorhome who said they drink it all the time and filled their tank while there. I drank it all the way down to Echuca and became sick the next morning.
Have come right now after drinking boiled water, eating boiled chicken, crackers and apple, No tea or coffee. Lost 7 kgs.
Assuming that you are talking about tap water ........
It is my understanding that reticulated water is constantly monitored for quality.
A goggle search revealed this ...
"DERM regulate water supply activities under the Water Supply (Safety and Reliability) Act 2008. This includes the provision of drinking water quality by drinking water service providers. They administer monitoring and reporting requirement notices & Drinking Water Management Plans. Health encourages water supplied to meet the ADWG & samples & tests for compliance with these Guidelines."
So Cecil Plains reticulated water should be OK.
Maybe you should report your experience to them.
You may have stumbled across an effective weight loss method. I would like to loose 7kg but the pain might not be worth the gain (or loss in this case).
We were at Cecil Plains in September and on the advice of a couple of other travelers at the camp we filled up with the water also. We then used that water over the next week and had no "ill" effects. The water didn't have any smell or sediment (we also filled a couple of jerrys). As Cupie suggest maybe you should let them know! Hope you are all better now. Cheers Chris and Peter
What did you eat that evening when you arrived at Echuca Marj? Maybe it wasnt the C.Plains water. Or maybe it was a combination of things, you were pretty stressed.
Glad to hear you have come good, it lasted too long.
Tea or coffee can be safer than ordinary water to drink inasmuch as the water is first boiled.
Assuming that you are talking about tap water ........
It is my understanding that reticulated water is constantly monitored for quality.
A goggle search revealed this ...
"DERM regulate water supply activities under the Water Supply (Safety and Reliability) Act 2008. This includes the provision of drinking water quality by drinking water service providers. They administer monitoring and reporting requirement notices & Drinking Water Management Plans. Health encourages water supplied to meet the ADWG & samples & tests for compliance with these Guidelines."
So Cecil Plains reticulated water should be OK.
Maybe you should report your experience to them.
You may have stumbled across an effective weight loss method. I would like to loose 7kg but the pain might not be worth the gain (or loss in this case).
Thanks cupie, sounds ok with all that info. I bet I put the weight back on just as quick too.
We were at Cecil Plains in September and on the advice of a couple of other travelers at the camp we filled up with the water also. We then used that water over the next week and had no "ill" effects. The water didn't have any smell or sediment (we also filled a couple of jerrys). As Cupie suggest maybe you should let them know! Hope you are all better now. Cheers Chris and Peter
Thats what I was told by the couple who were filling up Chris and Peter, all the nomading public use the water, didn't expect there to be any problems, so can't have been that , just a series of eliminations. The water did taste great, tasted it before filling my bottles.
What did you eat that evening when you arrived at Echuca Marj? Maybe it wasnt the C.Plains water. Or maybe it was a combination of things, you were pretty stressed.
Glad to hear you have come good, it lasted too long.
Tea or coffee can be safer than ordinary water to drink inasmuch as the water is first boiled.
Trying to eliminate possiblities Gerty as have no idea what caused it and only just coming right.
Had chinese takeaway for tea, which was my first thought. Checked the shop, doesn't use msg. Thought it might be the A2 milk daughter uses, but unlikely. The chemist I saw said it could be a combination of stress and something I ate.
The day before I left I had 14 stitches out of my back, so that was uncomfortable. Stress was certainly on the agenda. Felt good till the last day before I arrived here.
Who knows, probably never know. Still on boiled chicken, rice with beans and broccoli. Apples, savoy crackers and boiled water.
My medical knowledge is very limited but I think that weight lost would mostly be dehydration which is normal in cases of severe diarrhoea and/or vomiting. It is important to rehydrate with plenty of water. After a severe illness such as that it will take time to recover.
My suspicion would be food rather than water. One of the most common causes of food poisoning is poor temperature control of the food. Food should be kept either below 5c or above 60c. Food temperature issues and cross-contamination (ie contamination of cooked food by uncooked food) cause much more cases of food poisoning than does a dirty kitchen.
My reference here is having volunteered in a Meals on Wheels kitchen were food poisoning issues were of uppermost importance when supplying meals to frail and aged clients.
I'm thinking the same thing Jimricho. It has to be food, just can't work out exactly what. I am using hydrolytes in drink to rehydrate, oh I'm sure the weight will go back on. lol
Marj, it may be that your take-away had cooled down into the danger range below 60c for long enough for the bugs to multiply to a dangerous level. Even if the food were initially prepared in a kitchen that strictly observed proper food handling practice, food poisoning is still a risk if the temperature drops into the danger range after it leaves the kitchen. To give you an idea, if you put your hand in water at 60c you will pull it out very quickly as it will feel damn hot.
The "luck of the draw" can apply here as we've probably all been less than diligent in this regard many times and got away with it.
Getting back to Meals on Wheels, we went to considerable lengths to ensure that hot meals were kept hot when they were being delivered including putting a recording temperature probe into one of the last meals to be delivered and the data downloaded to a computer to keep a record of the temperature of the delivered food.
wishing you a speedy recovery,
Jim
-- Edited by jimricho on Monday 12th of November 2012 07:24:35 AM
Marj, it may be that your take-away had cooled down into the danger range below 60c for long enough for the bugs to multiply to a dangerous level. Even if the food were initially prepared in a kitchen that strictly observed proper food handling practice, food poisoning is still a risk if the temperature drops into the danger range after it leaves the kitchen. To give you an idea, if you put your hand in water at 60c you will pull it out very quickly as it will feel damn hot.
The "luck of the draw" can apply here as we've probably all been less than diligent in this regard many times and got away with it.
Getting back to Meals on Wheels, we went to considerable lengths to ensure that hot meals were kept hot when they were being delivered including putting a recording temperature probe into one of the last meals to be delivered and the data downloaded to a computer to keep a record of the temperature of the delivered food.
wishing you a speedy recovery,
Jim
-- Edited by jimricho on Monday 12th of November 2012 07:24:35 AM
I can say that I'm not guilty of chicken washing but I have to admit that was because I'm fundamentally a slack ba***rd.
Another common source of cross-contamination is taking meat to the barbecue or camp kitchen and using the same plate to serve it onto when cooked. By comparison even a dirty barbecue cooking surface is safe as the heat effectively sterilises it.
Was there chicken in your Chinese take-away? Improperly cooked/reheated chicken is a huge culprit in food poisoning events.
I can't remember now wendy, there was a mixture of dishes.
Been to doctor, having blood tests and taking in sample tomorrow, then see doc again on Friday. Drink more water with hydralytes as still very dehydrated.
I did hear that rice is one of the worst to get food poisoning I once had food poisoning from chinese i could not even bare to smell It i had it that bad ,hope you are on the mend xxx big hug from me to you
If it is Giardia, then that usually comes from contaminated water - sorry to tell you this, but usually sewage contamination! Or. I guess, from someone with Giardia handling food without washing hands. It can take ages to fully get rid of, unfortunately. Daughter picked up a dose when hiking in Nepal and I think she kept getting bouts of it for over a year.
I googled it wendy and thats what I read too. I hope its not. Have felt really good today and walked all over town. A case of having to after Myrtle went to the doctors and no other way to get into town. Thought it might have knocked me for 6. Was b...........d when I got there so went for a very weak cappachino, which didn't affect me. But did get the runs later in the arvo. Was able to get a lift home with daughter who had been at mothers group.
When i first moved up to the Gold Coast about 18 years ago, i got really sick. Kept going to different doctors who kept telling me it was "the change in water"
I was about to move back to Geelong i was that sick.!! It continued for over a month, i could hardly walk i was so weak from not eating. I finally found a great doctor who told me to get some "Inner Health" and within a couple of days i started to improve.
This particular doctor told me he always started a course of this before he travelled overseas because of the dodgy water !!
Good luck HW at the doctors tomorrow, i hope you feel better soon. A good dose of "Green's Lake" will do wonders for you when you feel up to it, its a terrific place.
__________________
"we haven't been everywhere....but its on our list"