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by mister_tee 1384 days ago
Some bottled water brand had a tagline "no other water hydrates better"

in case anyone does want to use nitrogen in their tires, I think at least US Costcos with tire centers have free self-service nitrogen inflators for members.

3 comments

Speaking of bottled water, guess what Evian is spelled backwards...
What?
Underrated joke
Nivea.
My local Costco doesn't check for membership at the tire pumps. YMMV.
Sometimes you can also sneak in the exit and buy yourself a hot dog.
There's no sneaking, you can go buy a hot dog without a Costco membership.

(Vegetarian here, who also doesn't like cheap-ass pizza, so it is possible this has changed in the last few years without my knowledge.)

Just before the pandemic blew up in the US, Costco changed its rules to require showing a membership card to access the food court. (You still don't have to scan a membership card to use the food court kiosks, just show it to get in the door.)

https://www.latimes.com/food/story/2020-03-03/costco-food-co...

In locations with the food court outside, they generally scan it when ordering at the food court window or at the kiosks.
Don't know about the states, but in Canada, you don't have to be a member to use the pharmacy, that gets you in for samples and everything.

Plus, their pharmacy is a great deal.

I think this is true in the US as well. And possibly liquor in some states (meaning a subset of the states that offer it in the first place).
This is true, but if you run into an officious gatekeeper, they will block you 'while they get the approval of the manager' before they will allow you to proceed. I hate going to Costco stores generally but their online operation is generally awesome, including prescriptions by mail.
well, not all liquids hydrate the same. Some even de-hydrate (coffee, seltzer water etc.). The water you're drinking is not pure, it always has some impurities which affect how much you hydrate drinking it. Pure water (distilled) is "undrinkable" for humans. I can see how a water with ions and whatnot (like a gatorade) can hydrate and replenish your electrolytes better.
> Some even de-hydrate (coffee, seltzer water etc.)

This is mostly a myth. Water hydrates you regardless of whether it's mixed with CO2 or with coffee beans. The thing about caffeine is that it is also a diuretic, so some of that water will be quickly expelled.

There is such a thing as osmolar pressure. Simply put, water wants to dissolve things and it goes wherever the solute is. High enough concentrations of solute in the intestines cause actually cause water to leave body instead of being absorbed, often causing diarrhea. Oral rehydration solutions consist of water with appropriate amounts of sugar and salts such as sodium and potassium.

There are very simple experiments you can perform to demonstrate this phenomena. Grab plants or something similar and put them inside three different solutions: hypertonic, isotonic and hypotonic. There will be interesting results.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmotic_concentration

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmotic_pressure

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Osmosis

Coffee will hydrate you. The amount that you expel from the caffeine is typically less than the amount you have taken in.
But then why do they use saline instead of (relatively) pure water in IV bags? I would think it's fair to say there's some sweet spot when the goal is hydrating the body, though I doubt it's what the slimy advertiser above was intending to convey.
They use saline because it goes directly into your blood stream. If they used pure water, the osmotic pressure would force water into your cells, causing them to burst (hypotonic).

You can drink pure water because it "becomes" saline as it mixes with the food in your stomach.

Even unfiltered tap water doesn't have very many ions compared to blood or saline solution. Most of your ions come from your food.

They use saline instead of pure water because it's isotonic with respect to serum/plasma. i.e. you're not going to go into electrolyte imbalance if a lot of it is put into your blood.

Normal saline is about one-quarter the concentration of sea water, by the way.

here I thought I was saving cash by injecting sea water
I don't know where you're getting your science from, but seltzer water is not dehydrating, and distilled water is not undrinkable for humans.

At best you can say that if you consume exclusively distilled water for a long time, you might deplete your body of some minerals unless they are replenished another way.

I didn't mean it as a direct consequence. Seltzer water will de-hydrate people that have bladder sensitivity to acids (like myself).

Also, the purpose of the " in the "undrinkable" statement was to make it clearer that it's about people considering it "undrinkable", not that it's toxic or it doesn't hydrate. You just wouldn't drink distilled water unless you were dying of thirst in the desert.

AFAIK the only solution in water that actively dehydrates you is a strong salt water (roughly, sea water). Others (e.g. coffee) are just not as efficient at hydrating you due to diuretic effects or whatever.
it depends, if you irritate your bladder through the ingestion of coffee or acids(it's a thing for some people, including myself), it might actually de-hydrate.