US People Horrified As American Brings Water Backpack to European Restaurants

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People Horrified As American Brings Water Backpack to European Restaurants​

When 34-year-old Liz White from North Carolina couldn't find the water she wanted on her European trip, she came up with an unusual solution—bringing her hiking hydration backpack to the restaurant.

White had been traveling through London, Venice, and the Dolomites, where she says she struggled to meet her daily water intake. "I drink a lot of water in general," she told Newsweek. "After a few days of struggling to get the water amount I desired at restaurants in Italy and England, I realized I could be innovative."

Her solution? Bringing her hiking hydration backpack to sit-down meals. "It worked really well! I didn't have to repeatedly ask for water refills, or buy water at the restaurant," she said. "I adapted to the conditions by just sipping from my backpack instead."
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She shared her unusual method for hydration in a now-viral video on TikTok which has more than 100,000 views since being shared last week.

The response was swift as people reacted to White's backpack solution. In the video she said: "Y'all are flaying me alive in the comments, calling me a stupid American, but I don't think you understand how accessible water is in the States," she explained that the difference in Europe was stark, offering examples: "This is a typical pour of water I receive in Europe when I ask for water in a restaurant," she said, showing a small glass of water.

The debate follows a recent wave of TikTokvideos where American tourists claim water is hard to come by in Europe. Europeans took to TikTok to debunk the idea that water is hard to access, with one viral clip showing a Danish woman calmly filling her bottle from a bathroom sink, captioned, "It's literally free from the tap."

While Philippa Raphet Meeg from France responded to the trend saying: "Just because we don't carry around big Stanleys all the time doesn't mean we don't drink water. Please, please stop."

As White's video gained more attention, opinions on White's water method were seriously mixed.

"This is satire right?" asked Noémie. While Alex said: "Tap water is free all over Europe. This is insane nonsense."

While others agreed with White's idea. Kat from Arizona said: "I feel dehydrated just looking at this. You go girl!" While another commenter said: "They never serve you enough water and the 500ml bottles for 4€ is too much!"

The clash, however, isn't just anecdotal. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) U.S. adults drank an average of 44 ounces of water per day. While data from the European Commission found that most European countries consume less than 34 ounces per day, with the exception of Austria, Germany, Norway and U.K.

White was shocked by the reaction, but added that it didn't put her off her new water travel hack. "I was pretty surprised how offended many Europeans were," White said. "I don't think I said anything insulting, nor did I indicate that anything should be different. In fact, I shared how I chose to adapt to the culture by bringing my own water.

"I do think Americans are much more used to kind of poking fun at each other, and I've learned Europeans are a lot more defensive of their homelands," she said.
 
When I was in Paris in 2016, the cafés and restaurants I went to put a bottle of water on the table without asking. This was free, "still" water, I assume from the tap, served in those wine-type bottles with the ceramic and rubber stopper. It tasted fine to me, and I'm from an American city that is renowned for its delicious tap water.
 
Pull up with a hummer h1 with 2 of these in the back connected to a giant hose to supply you with an infinite supply of water I'm sure Europeans would appreciate that.

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Our lawn mowers are to big do drive on their faggot ass cobblestone streets, you certainly won't be able to fit a water tote through them.
 
A woman brings her own water while she's walking around - the scandal! Every person I've met who has been to europe mentions they're stingy with handing out water and will usually try to push you into buying bottled stuff.
there was a hefty debate about the water situation another article thread about euro'a touristy resturants being a scam you have to ask and they'll sometimes charge you for the privilege. apparently the EU'ss water treatment is as good as mexico which makes it so scarce.
 
1. Why you niggas drinking so much?
2. How much of that is soda for the Americans?
Remove the fat black women drinking soda from the study and the average will fall to match the average in europe and elsewhere.

That said, once I saw an asian woman in California that were constantly sipping from her water bottle. One sip between every sentence while she was talking. I thought she was autistic.
It was super annoying. Having to wait for her to fill up with a few sips of water before she could respond every single time.
 
Been to Europe before. You can get tap water, but they may or may not charge. It’s up to the restaurants. In Spain if you get the menú del día which is a lunch special with a drink, an appetizer, and an entree, tap water would be considered your drink instead of the baby size 200 mL Coca-Cola.

Let’s say you do get tap water and it happens to be free. You would need to chase down the waiter every time your 8 oz of water is done which can be an issue. Waiters in Europe are not as attentive as waiters in America.

In short, bring your own water like the lady did.
 
there was a hefty debate about the water situation another article thread about euro'a touristy resturants being a scam you have to ask and they'll sometimes charge you for the privilege. apparently the EU'ss water treatment is as good as mexico which makes it so scarce.
So you're going to be pissing out your ass for a month?

Good to know.
 
Lmao at needing to specify "still" water.
In places in Europe you have three types of water to choose from.
Water: normal tap water
Still: non-carbonated mineral water
Sparkling: carbonated mineral water

"Still". In southern europe it is common to mix "Still" with red wine for lunch. It allows you a glass of red wine without becoming tipsy when you go back to work.

But also, just bring a fucking bottle to the table if you need one.
Don't bring your fucking hiking backpack and sit and sip from it at the table. Are you a fucking homeless or something?
 
In places in Europe you have three types of water to choose from.
Water: normal tap water
Still: non-carbonated mineral water
Sparkling: carbonated mineral water
It's often called "con gas" or "sans gas" (adjusted into your local Romance language version).
 
I frankly agree with this lady. I drink a gallon on a cold day and up to two on a hot day, so I oftentimes have a lot of water with me just to stay hydrated. I haven't been to mainland Europe so I can not speak definitively, but if it's as bad as a lot of people say, I would probably have done the same. Hydration is key.

Also this is the funniest fucking thread I have read in ages. Europeans are fucking lizard people, and they're even mad about other people actually drinking reasonable amounts of water.

This is very true I have to say.

Often, they ask if you want still or gas when you ask for water if you don't specify you want it from the tap. They are running a business after all.

If you ask and you're a paying customer, nobody will refuse you though.
Maybe it's because I live in the American Southwest, but the idea of pushing someone to buy water is just fucking insane to me. Hell, I am in the midwest right now for work, and I went to a hole in the wall restaurant today, and when I asked for a water cup, he told me just to take one of the bottled waters for free. In a lot of places it is legally required to provide water to people. The idea that you would be stingy with water is such an alien idea; sure, your hotel or apartment has a tap, but what about when you're an hours travel away from there? Just fill up a glass for a niggy, it's not hard.

Hell, even waiting rooms and such will usually have a water cooler and cups... I can't imagine being such a Jew that you are stingy with water.
 
Look, this is downright considerate. I'd be inclined to bring a molle vest with as many bottle pouches as will fit slapped on it containing insulated bottles just to make a point. Put 'em all on the table and say "fill 'em up". :story:
And all that ice is ridiculous. Y’all act like you live in a Pepsi commercial. An ice cube or two is fine. As is NO ice cubes since they have a magic device called a fridge these days. Can comes chilled.
I distinctly remember the minifridges in hotel rooms in Europe being unable or unwilling to make ice, and in Italy I struggled to find a minifridge that would actually get a can of anything cold...they kind of "chilled" it which means after a few hours the can would briefly display a haze of condensation and the drink would be luke-warm by the time you held it in your hands long enough to open it.

If you live in Europe I don't think these problems would be as obvious but when you're living out of hotel rooms as a tourist, these issues become more apparent unless something has drastically changed since the 2000s.
 
Also this is the funniest fucking thread I have read in ages. Europeans are fucking lizard people, and they're even mad about other people actually drinking reasonable amounts of water.
Normal people just bring a bottle of water with them.
What people are disgusted by is some retard bringing a hiking backpack to the table to sip from like they are fucking vagrants or something.
 
I frankly agree with this lady. I drink a gallon on a cold day and up to two on a hot day, so I oftentimes have a lot of water with me just to stay hydrated. I haven't been to mainland Europe so I can not speak definitively, but if it's as bad as a lot of people say, I would probably have done the same. Hydration is key.

Also this is the funniest fucking thread I have read in ages. Europeans are fucking lizard people, and they're even mad about other people actually drinking reasonable amounts of water.


Maybe it's because I live in the American Southwest, but the idea of pushing someone to buy water is just fucking insane to me. Hell, I am in the midwest right now for work, and I went to a hole in the wall restaurant today, and when I asked for a water cup, he told me just to take one of the bottled waters for free. In a lot of places it is legally required to provide water to people. The idea that you would be stingy with water is such an alien idea; sure, your hotel or apartment has a tap, but what about when you're an hours travel away from there? Just fill up a glass for a niggy, it's not hard.

Hell, even waiting rooms and such will usually have a water cooler and cups... I can't imagine being such a Jew that you are stingy with water.
Where I am in the south east you won't ever be given bottled for free basically. But - any restaurant has to have tap water and it will absolutely be given freely to any paying customer or someone *with* a paying customer. If you're nice you might not even have to be a paying customer.

You may have to ask for it, but it would be straight out lunacy to not be given it freely.

Some locations do have laws stating that when under a drought customers must ask vs tables being preset.

One "fancy" restaurant here tried a few years back acting like Europe was the way to act and served sparkling water for a price as the default. That shit lasted like 2 weeks before the pushback changed their minds.

Also who cares what the europoors think? Their Muslim and African imports are gonna set the culture from now on anyways
 
I frankly agree with this lady. I drink a gallon on a cold day and up to two on a hot day, so I oftentimes have a lot of water with me just to stay hydrated. I haven't been to mainland Europe so I can not speak definitively, but if it's as bad as a lot of people say, I would probably have done the same. Hydration is key.

Also this is the funniest fucking thread I have read in ages. Europeans are fucking lizard people, and they're even mad about other people actually drinking reasonable amounts of water.
Today I learned that pissing clear is apparently a privilege only Americans understand and enjoy. God, it feels good to have first world water infrastructure. You know, at least in the places run by white people.
 
I frankly agree with this lady. I drink a gallon on a cold day and up to two on a hot day, so I oftentimes have a lot of water with me just to stay hydrated. I haven't been to mainland Europe so I can not speak definitively, but if it's as bad as a lot of people say, I would probably have done the same. Hydration is key.

Also this is the funniest fucking thread I have read in ages. Europeans are fucking lizard people, and they're even mad about other people actually drinking reasonable amounts of water.


Maybe it's because I live in the American Southwest, but the idea of pushing someone to buy water is just fucking insane to me. Hell, I am in the midwest right now for work, and I went to a hole in the wall restaurant today, and when I asked for a water cup, he told me just to take one of the bottled waters for free. In a lot of places it is legally required to provide water to people. The idea that you would be stingy with water is such an alien idea; sure, your hotel or apartment has a tap, but what about when you're an hours travel away from there? Just fill up a glass for a niggy, it's not hard.

Hell, even waiting rooms and such will usually have a water cooler and cups... I can't imagine being such a Jew that you are stingy with water.
It's also illegal to refuse water in many EU countries too.

I guess I am just used to it. I never even thought about it. I just use the proper terms when I ask for water, as in a pitcher for example. If you ask for a glass, many countries will serve you what you asked for, but they would also have served you a liter if you were not as specific.

No excuse for the UK, but I guess in Italy, people are not super English friendly, so they'll just do what you ask and assume you're happy.

And even Italy, it's well known for tourist traps in the restaurant industry. Like different menu cards for locals and tourists, and deceptive pricing. So I would not be shocked some would scam for water too.
 
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