h2o Aqua Premium (Spring)
Our Water Product
Our spring water products are produced from the purest minerals on the planet. Which have a purity rating of 99.999% pure. Our manufacturing process uses the purest water from a five step purification process to contain the minerals which produce our supreme quality spring water product.
How important is water?
As truth that is often told is that water is the essence of life. it covers nearly 70 percent of the earth's surface and makes up more than 60 percent of adult body weight. The intake of water on a regular basis throughout the day is essential for proper body functions. It acts as a shock absorber in the eyes and the spinal cord and aids in maintaining body temperature. Water also lubricates bone joints and plays an important role in respiration, digestion, assimilation, metabolism and waste extraction.
Is Water An Essential Nutrient?
Water contains no calories or fat. It increases your mental and physical performance, helps reduce cancer risk of the colon, kidney and bladder, and aids in keeping your skin healthy and glowing.
Considering these attributes and so many more, we should be as discriminating about the water we put in our bodies as we are about the food we eat. This is the reason you should drink the best water possible.
How Do Minerals in Drinking Water Affect Your Health?
Even the modest amounts of minerals found in regular drinking water play a beneficial role in your health. Calcium and magnesium are important for strong bones, of course. Magnesium also helps to regulate your blood pressure. In fact, people who live in areas with very soft water (which is low in minerals) may have a higher risk of heart disease. Ironically, the same thing can be true if you live in an area with very hard water. All those minerals can be rough on the plumbing, so people who have hard water often use a water-softening system to remove minerals.
Should You Drink Spring Water?
If you suspect that your drinking water is low in minerals, could mineral water be a good thing to add to your diet? It might. Bottled mineral water contains up to four times as much calcium and magnesium as regular tap water. One study found that people whose drinking water was low in magnesium were able to lower their blood pressure by drinking a liter of mineral water every day. Of course, there are other ways to get magnesium. Brown rice, almonds, lima beans, and spinach are all examples of good sources of magnesium. But drinking natural spring water can definitely add to your intake of calcium, magnesium, and other minerals.
Natural Spring Water is water from a spring where various minerals such as salts and sulfur compounds. spring water can be sparkling (with effervescence), or still (without effervescence).
Traditionally, spring waters were used or consumed at their spring sources, often referred to as "taking the waters" or "taking the cure," at developed sites such as spas, baths or wells. The term spa was used for a place where the water was consumed and bathed in; bath where the water was used primarily for bathing, therapeutics, or recreation; and well where the water was to be consumed.
In modern times, it is far more common for sping waters to be bottled at the source for distributed consumption. Travelling to the spring water site for direct access to the water is now uncommon, and in many cases not possible (because of exclusive commercial ownership rights). There are more than 3,000 brands of spring water commercially available worldwide. The more calcium plus magnesium ions are dissolved in water, the harder it is said to be; water with few dissolved calcium plus magnesium ions is described as being soft.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration classifies spring water as water containing at least 250 parts per million total dissolved solids (TDS), originating from a geologically and physically protected underground water source. No minerals may be added to this water.
Is Spring Water Good for You?
A lot of people are concerned that fruits and vegetables are less nutritious than they used to be because the soil has become depleted of minerals. (Whether or not this is something we really need to worry about, spring water sounds as it if might be a good idea—sort of like a vitamin supplement that you can drink.
Are there health benefits from drinking spring water? Are there any risks?
First, you should know that you’re probably already getting some minerals in your regular drinking water. Most tap water contains minerals. For example, if you drink two liters of water a day, you could be getting 10 to 15% of your daily calcium requirement and up to a third of your required magnesium just from the water you drink. But the amount of minerals in tap water in different regions varies greatly.
How Do You Know What’s in Your Water?
As we talked about you are on a public water system here in the U.S., you should get a report every summer with details about your water quality, including mineral levels as well as any contaminants that have been found. It’s often included with your water bill. If you’re a renter, you probably never see these reports. But many are posted online on the Environmental Protection Agency’s website. (Visit the EPA’s website for Local Water Quality Information.) Checking your water quality report can give you an idea how high in minerals your local water supply is.
I realize that many of you are not in the U.S. and I’m sorry I don’t have more information for you. If you live elsewhere, your local government or water authority may have some answers for you.
How important is water?
As truth that is often told is that water is the essence of life. it covers nearly 70 percent of the earth's surface and makes up more than 60 percent of adult body weight. The intake of water on a regular basis throughout the day is essential for proper body functions. It acts as a shock absorber in the eyes and the spinal cord and aids in maintaining body temperature. Water also lubricates bone joints and plays an important role in respiration, digestion, assimilation, metabolism and waste extraction.
Is Water An Essential Nutrient?
Water contains no calories or fat. It increases your mental and physical performance, helps reduce cancer risk of the colon, kidney and bladder, and aids in keeping your skin healthy and glowing.
Considering these attributes and so many more, we should be as discriminating about the water we put in our bodies as we are about the food we eat. This is the reason you should drink the best water possible.
How Do Minerals in Drinking Water Affect Your Health?
Even the modest amounts of minerals found in regular drinking water play a beneficial role in your health. Calcium and magnesium are important for strong bones, of course. Magnesium also helps to regulate your blood pressure. In fact, people who live in areas with very soft water (which is low in minerals) may have a higher risk of heart disease. Ironically, the same thing can be true if you live in an area with very hard water. All those minerals can be rough on the plumbing, so people who have hard water often use a water-softening system to remove minerals.
Should You Drink Spring Water?
If you suspect that your drinking water is low in minerals, could mineral water be a good thing to add to your diet? It might. Bottled mineral water contains up to four times as much calcium and magnesium as regular tap water. One study found that people whose drinking water was low in magnesium were able to lower their blood pressure by drinking a liter of mineral water every day. Of course, there are other ways to get magnesium. Brown rice, almonds, lima beans, and spinach are all examples of good sources of magnesium. But drinking natural spring water can definitely add to your intake of calcium, magnesium, and other minerals.
Natural Spring Water is water from a spring where various minerals such as salts and sulfur compounds. spring water can be sparkling (with effervescence), or still (without effervescence).
Traditionally, spring waters were used or consumed at their spring sources, often referred to as "taking the waters" or "taking the cure," at developed sites such as spas, baths or wells. The term spa was used for a place where the water was consumed and bathed in; bath where the water was used primarily for bathing, therapeutics, or recreation; and well where the water was to be consumed.
In modern times, it is far more common for sping waters to be bottled at the source for distributed consumption. Travelling to the spring water site for direct access to the water is now uncommon, and in many cases not possible (because of exclusive commercial ownership rights). There are more than 3,000 brands of spring water commercially available worldwide. The more calcium plus magnesium ions are dissolved in water, the harder it is said to be; water with few dissolved calcium plus magnesium ions is described as being soft.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration classifies spring water as water containing at least 250 parts per million total dissolved solids (TDS), originating from a geologically and physically protected underground water source. No minerals may be added to this water.
Is Spring Water Good for You?
A lot of people are concerned that fruits and vegetables are less nutritious than they used to be because the soil has become depleted of minerals. (Whether or not this is something we really need to worry about, spring water sounds as it if might be a good idea—sort of like a vitamin supplement that you can drink.
Are there health benefits from drinking spring water? Are there any risks?
First, you should know that you’re probably already getting some minerals in your regular drinking water. Most tap water contains minerals. For example, if you drink two liters of water a day, you could be getting 10 to 15% of your daily calcium requirement and up to a third of your required magnesium just from the water you drink. But the amount of minerals in tap water in different regions varies greatly.
How Do You Know What’s in Your Water?
As we talked about you are on a public water system here in the U.S., you should get a report every summer with details about your water quality, including mineral levels as well as any contaminants that have been found. It’s often included with your water bill. If you’re a renter, you probably never see these reports. But many are posted online on the Environmental Protection Agency’s website. (Visit the EPA’s website for Local Water Quality Information.) Checking your water quality report can give you an idea how high in minerals your local water supply is.
I realize that many of you are not in the U.S. and I’m sorry I don’t have more information for you. If you live elsewhere, your local government or water authority may have some answers for you.