It is what you’ve all been waiting for, the exciting conclusion to the Bottled Water Test! (Okay, really, if you’ve been waiting for this, you need to get out more. Or read a book or something.)
This little experiment was inspired by a Life Ionizer video that was sent to me, warning of the dangers of acidic bottled water. I address some of the medical claims of alkaline water in Part 1, and in the following video, I see how acidic bottled waters (and soft drinks and tap water) really are…
So, yeah, don’t take YouTube videos at face value, even mine. This is an easy test you can do yourself!
Me, I’ll stick to my tap water. As long as it doesn’t actually come out green…













I love this – the fact that not only did you debunk the medical claims, you went on and examined the video. It honestly hadn’t occurred to me to do that, once the original claim was shown to be nonsense I didn’t think about the results of the video any more.
Well done. Your measurements were more precise, you used several testing methods to prove the results. And the conclusions were sound.
Of course if you want drink something to keep your body from being too acidic, simply drink……water.
Thanks!
Addendum: Sent the video to the friend who originally started me on this line of thinking. She liked it! And asked if she could forward it back up the email chain. Yay.
Addendum 2: Posted it as a reply to the most popular version of the Life Ionizer video. So we’ll see what that generates…
I like this video. Another way to find out the pH of the bottled water without doing the test is to ask the bottling company for their water analysis report. All bottled water must be tested by an independent agency, which looks for a variety of things, including pH levels.