Truck Water Storage- show me your setup

feanor

WKR
Joined
Aug 15, 2018
Messages
1,258
I’m looking for customized water storage, or even clever solutions. I’ve done the 5 gallon water jugs and smaller brick systems and always loath it. I typically use 15 gallons of water on a given hunt. Whatcha got?
 

Brando

FNG
Joined
Oct 2, 2018
Messages
66
Location
SW Washington
Always with a truck base camp?
When truck base camping I use 2-4L MSR dromedary bags, 1-10L dromedary bag with a spigot, 1-2 flats of 16 oz bottled waters, and multiple 32 oz nalgene bottle in all the door cup holders in my truck (4) Plus the 48 oz nalgene in my backpack. Doesn’t equal 15 gallons but for a 5 day hunt I haven’t run out of water. And If I drive somewhere I always have water in the truck and can fill up my pack bottle if needed.
I also carry a MSR squeeze water filter.
Seems like a bunch of extra work to not just fill up a cube but I can leave water at camp, have water with me, and quickly grab bottles to throw in my pack if needed before hitting the trail.
 

NRA4LIFE

WKR
Joined
Nov 20, 2016
Messages
1,903
Location
washington
If you have a local beer making supply store, they sometimes have the blue 15 gallon malt barrels for sale on the cheap. They need some soaking time to get the malt taste out but I scored 3 of them a number of years ago. And at 15 gallons, they're not too terribly heavy.
 

kpk

WKR
Joined
Sep 25, 2014
Messages
782
Location
MN
I bought these collapsible ones this year and they worked well and don't take up space to store. Not sure how to get away from something like that for 15 gallons.

 

7mm-08

WKR
Joined
Oct 31, 2016
Messages
888
Location
Idaho
If you have a local beer making supply store, they sometimes have the blue 15 gallon malt barrels for sale on the cheap. They need some soaking time to get the malt taste out but I scored 3 of them a number of years ago. And at 15 gallons, they're not too terribly heavy.
Damn, 123 pounds seems heavy for a 130 pound (old) man. I'm into the bricks of water bottles from Costco. Sorry, Mother Nature, for generating so much plastic waste, but I recycle all my bottles when I return home. Interested in other (better) ideas.
 

elkliver

WKR
Joined
Dec 25, 2018
Messages
363
Location
Oregon
tough to beat 3 blue jugs. I lose about 1 every trip from the jug cracking so i am not a fan of putting all my water in 1 basket. They are easily movable. You can keep one in the truck and leave two at base camp. You can bring them into a wall tent to keep from freezing. Take an empty with you in case you get by somewhere with potable water... the list goes on.

Depending on the base camp, we have used the Blue barrels but at the end of the day, the jugs are easier. IF someone knows of heavier duty jugs, i would be interested. Some overlanding folks with roof racks or roll bars have built the racks so that the pipe holds water. Not sure i would want to drink said water but... to each their own. Also the concerns about freezing would still be valid.
 

jonesn3

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 11, 2022
Messages
282
I tend to go through a lot of water at a truck camp. For just me, in a 10 day hunt, I pack at least 3 of the 7-gal containers in the truck. I’ll add a fourth if it’s particularly hot weather, early season, or if a second person is riding for all those days. Seems like a lot, and I’m sure Im overly conservative in my planning, but between water-required meals, coffee/mtn ops, occasional hand washing, and packing up to 3L in my pack each day it just seems to disappear faster than I would like. 2 gal per person per day at a truck camp is what I tend to plan for. Usually as a nonresident, out-of-state hunter, I plan to not go back into town at all for the duration of the trip. Factor of safety of 2 (two is one mentality).
 

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BBob

WKR
Joined
Jun 29, 2020
Messages
4,709
Location
Southern AZ
IF someone knows of heavier duty jugs
LCI is the US manufacturer of military water jugs. Scepter is the Canadian manufacturer. You won’t find them cheaper anywhere than buying from LCI directly. You can get dispenser hoses that screw into the cap for them. You can also get dip tube hoses and fittings that also screw into the cap and run them to an electric pump. Line them up in a rack and pump it wherever you want. When one runs dry switch to the next one. They are very tough. I’ve been using them for 20+ years now.

 
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