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Originally Posted by jiejie
(Post 20320525)
I have always done so. In Beijing I'll rinse mouth and toothbrush out with tap water then again with bottled. Maybe Shanghai also. Everywhere else, bottled for all rinsing operations.
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Originally Posted by tiblot
(Post 20320362)
Is there any need to brush your teeth with boiled/bottled water?
I wasnt planning on it ... This is one of those things where you can quickly drive yourself mad if you worry about it too much: i.e. what about accidentally swallowing a bit of water in the shower? Or maybe that restaurant washed the dishes in tap water and some got left behind? I'd be more concerned about the dangers of Chinese traffic and the chronic "fog" that engulfs most cities than any bacteria in tap water. |
I used to be paranoid about the need for bottled/boiled water for everything, but gradually moved to using tap water in Ningbo for washing vegetables (including for raw salads), and also for rinsing my mouth after brushing. After many months I haven't yet gotten sick from this, although food from a couple of small restaurants have given me two days in bed.
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Originally Posted by anacapamalibu
(Post 20302983)
Usefull ice terms
Ice-bing Ice cube/s-bing kuai Ice water- bing shui Add ice- jia bing ;) |
Originally Posted by Scifience
(Post 20321241)
FWIW, I almost always use tap water for brushing teeth and rinsing my toothbrush, even in most Tier 3 places, and certainly wouldn't bother in a Tier 1 city. I've got a bit of an iron stomach, though, and also used the tap water in places like Bangladesh with no ill effects... :p
This is one of those things where you can quickly drive yourself mad if you worry about it too much: i.e. what about accidentally swallowing a bit of water in the shower? Or maybe that restaurant washed the dishes in tap water and some got left behind? I'd be more concerned about the dangers of Chinese traffic and the chronic "fog" that engulfs most cities than any bacteria in tap water. I've been brushing my teeth in Taiwan tap water (which is supposedly unsafe to drink) for almost 30 years without any problems. And I've never hesitated to eat raw veggies and salads here. But they generally practice reasonable food prep hygiene here. On a recent trip to India, however, I was quite concerned about the lack of basic food prep hygiene, and I avoided anything raw (except for fruit I could peel), and used bottled water to brush my teeth. But I still got very sick from the food. |
Originally Posted by Skyman65
(Post 20330901)
You're nuts- ni shen jing bing
;) |
Originally Posted by anacapamalibu
(Post 20331127)
Binlang xishi - well go to Taiwan to find that.
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In some locations you don't have to worry about bacteria. It is the unsafe levels of chlorine that has killed all the bacteria you need to worry about.
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Originally Posted by Shimon
(Post 20332171)
In some locations you don't have to worry about bacteria. It is the unsafe levels of chlorine that has killed all the bacteria you need to worry about.
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Timely report by People Daily on the epedemic water polution.
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90882/8145140.html |
Maybe that was the only perk of staying in a mainland (non-chain) budget hotel- water coolers. Not to brush the teeth with, instead to prevent going out and buying a (refilled) bottle of 农夫山泉.
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