Stephen Koch

Motivational Speaker, Mountain Guide, Snowboard Instructor, Alpinist and Family Man

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How To Clean Your Hydration Pack / Camelbak

January 19th, 2010 · 5 Comments · Instruction, climbing tips

I find that, inevitably, when I go to use my hydration pack it has been sitting with water in it for three months and is basically unusable until cleaned. I came across the following information on how to clean your hydration pack on http://www.utahmountainbiking.com, which seems to be very comprehensive. I will add one thing: when done with your clean hydration pack for the day, take it out of your pack, drain it, pull the hose off, put a bent coat hanger (with ends/sharp bits on the outside or taped) on the inside to separate it/open it up and hang it, so it dries completely after each use. I know…kind of a pain and maybe not worth it but the price to pay for clean water on the go.

Cleaning your hydration pack!

Got some black deposits in the tube of your Camelbak? Dark stuff in the seams? Little black spots? You’ve got fungus, mold, and bacterial slime inside your hydration pack. Do you really want to drink that stuff? Didn’t think so.

First, get the inside of the bladder clean. That’s the easy part. You can use a baby-bottle brush. I’ve found what works best is a long-handled foam paint brush. The point of the foam gets into the seams nicely. Don’t use soap, unless you want to taste soap for the next month. Just use plain water for your routine cleanings.

For deeper cleaning, use a paste of sodium bicarbonate (add just enough water to make it squishy) as an abrasive to remove stubborn deposits. The bicarbonate also kills germs and removes unusual tastes such as that “stale plastic” flavor.

Scrub into the seams, and don’t forget to clean inside the port where the hose attaches. (A persistent nasty taste can mean the plastic is degenerating and poisoning you. If an odd water taste persists after soaking the bladder overnight in bicarbonate solution — 1 teaspoon per pint — buy a replacement.)If you can’t get a brush to a cruddy seam area, squeeze the bladder sideways so the seam touches a flat area. Trap the seam between thumb and finger as shown. Now squish back and forth, working down the seam. Not as good as a brush, but better than nothing.
Now sterilize the bladder. This slows down the regrowth of spores and germs. Put about 1/2 cup of water in the bladder and toss it in the microwave. Don’t boil the water! Just heat it up, a bit at a time, until the bladder is too hot to touch. Take it out and let it sit flat, so the hot water contacts the entire inside of the bladder. Leave it until the water is cool.
Now the fun part — the hose. Pull the hose off the bladder, and pull the bite valve off the hose. I recommend you buy a tube-cleaning brush. That’s a long stiff cable with a little brush on one end, made just to clean the inside of hydration bladder tubes. That’s the best solution for a frequent rider. Quick and effective, with a tool made specifically for the job.But if you’re cheap or only plan to clean the tube on rare occasions, here’s a home-made tube cleaner: Get an old derailleur cable. (Clean it first with soap and water if it’s greasy!) Slide the derailleur cable through the hose.
Take a short piece of paper towel (NOT tissue paper). Get it slightly wet, then wrap it around the derailleur cable.
Spiral the paper towel a couple of inches up the cable, making sure it’s narrow enough to fit into the tube opening.Slide the cable, with its paper towel coating, into the tube. (Don’t pull on the tube yet.)
It may help to rotate as you push the paper towel-covered cable into the tube.Once the knob is inside the tube, squish the tube with your fingers, just in front of the paper towel. Pull on the free end of the derailleur cable. The knob will compact the paper, expanding it so it tightly fills the tube. Now we’re ready to clean!
Slowly pull the cable through the tube. As you come to obvious problem areas, again squish the tube somewhat, so the paper rubs hard against the inside of the tube.
Once the cable comes out the other end, suppress your urge to hurl as you see what you’ve been drinking recently. Discard the paper. Reinsert the cable, get a fresh piece of paper towel, and repeat the process until the paper comes out clean and your Camelbak tube looks crystal-clean.Now put everything back together.
One way of slowing the growth of mold is to let the hydration pack sit for a day with a very dilute bleach solution (a teaspoon in an entire bladder of water). Rinse well afterward. This will inhibit growth of slime for a couple of months — about the same time it takes before you stop tasting Clorox. I’ve done this, and it does prevent growth of algae and bacterial biomembranes. But my kids complained mightily about the taste of the water. Also, the bleach will oxidize the plastic, reducing the lifetime of your hydration pack innards.
Prevention! If you’re a water drinker, you can avoid fungus and calcium deposits by always using demineralized or distilled water. If you use an electrolyte solution, you’re going to get critters growing in your hydration pack no matter how carefully you rinse it after each use. I suggest you grab an old derailleur cable and foam paintbrush, and make them part of your bike tool kit.

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5 responses so far ↓

  • 1 Stephen Koch // Jan 19, 2010 at 5:50 pm

    When using your Hydration pack in winter, do the “blow back.” This is where you blow the water in the hose back into the bladder after you have taken a drink. There is little or no water in the hose to freeze!

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  • 2 Brian // Feb 5, 2010 at 6:22 pm

    Soaking with vitamin C after the Clorox treatment might reduce the clorox taste, except for whatever has been absorbed by the plastic and leaches out over time. All you need is the amount of dust gotten from rubbing two tablets together over the bladder opening and filling with water. This concept works with iodine for water purification in plastic bottles, so it should work with bladders.

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    Stephen Koch Reply:

    Great suggestion Brian. Thanks!

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    Alex Chavez Reply:

    Here’s another tip for keeping your hydration bladder clean. As soon as you get back from a trip, dump the water, throw the bladder into a plastic grocery bag, and toss it into your freezer. Take it out only when you’re ready to use it again. Now you don’t need to worry about drying out your bladder after every trip and you will have to clean it far less often. Works well for me.

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    Stephen Koch Reply:

    Thanks for the tip Alex! I look forward to trying it out.

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