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I normally use cheap, lightweight water bottles to carry my water when I'm hiking. However, sometimes I'm with people who use bladders such as a CamelBak, and I offer to go and fill water bottles, so I have to fill theirs. Maybe I just need to ask them to explain or demonstrate the technique for me, but I find it really slow and difficult to fill those things, especially when I'm filling from a lake or pond. Is there a trick? If I stick the bladder under the surface, it sort of crumples, and when I pull it back up, it's only about 10% full. The best method I've improvised so far is to fill one of my own rigid bottles with water, then pour that into the bladder.

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    I use a mix of hard-sided bottles and 2L Platypus bladders, that sound exactly like what you were struggling with. If the water is still, I use a hard-sided bottle to fill the soft ones, exactly as you said. I've never found a better way.
    – Ryley
    May 12, 2015 at 18:46

3 Answers 3

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The answer depends a lot on the style of bladder, there are a couple different styles.

I have a classic camelbak, which has a nalgene sized opening on it and a handle to hang onto for filling one handed, so it's real quick and easy to stick in the water and fill up:

enter image description here

I've had other types of water bladders though that you had to fold the tops over and slide on a top piece. These types of closures are not as user friendly, but apparently leak less, and are able to hold back a lot of pressure which is why they're used on the fancy Geigerigs:

enter image description here

These ones aren't super easy to fill in flowing water, you need to use two hands and depending on the flow they tend to spill a lot. Easiest thing is exactly what you were doing, fill a bottle and pour it into the bag, I always carry an extra nalgene, even when I'm carrying my camelbak, it's handy to have for those small streams where you can't seem to get your bladder under the water.

Personally, I prefer the Camelbak twist closure over the slide tops, even though it can be a pain to open if you tighten it too much, and it does drip a bit sometimes, they're just easier to fill.

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  • The one that I struggled with most recently didn't seem to be either of the ones illustrated in your answer. It had a roughly one-inch screw cap.
    – user2169
    May 12, 2015 at 0:14
  • That does sound like a struggle, that'd be terrible to try and clean... I remembered there's another way to fill them: you can buy adapters that fit on the end of the hose so you can fill the bladder while in your backpack using a tap or water bottle.
    – ShemSeger
    May 12, 2015 at 15:09
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My standard daypack came with a Camelbak shutoff valve and quick disconnect for the bite valve. I upgraded all my other packs to have the same using Camelbak's HydroLink Filter Adapter kit, which also comes with an endpiece you can put onto a filter hose.

This allows me to stop for water and, without removing the bladder from my pack, simply disconnect the bite valve, plug my filter into the place where it was, and pump water through the hose into the bladder. I use this with both my Katadyn Hiker PRO pump filter and my Sawyer Mini filter and it works great with both. On the Katadyn, it takes about 40 pumps to add 1 liter to the bladder.

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  • This makes sense if you're filtering, but the supposed need for treating or filtering backcountry water is a myth, at least anywhere that I hike, such as in the Sierra: lightandmatter.com/article/hiking_water.html
    – user2169
    May 11, 2015 at 16:22
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I simply added a pen top to the end of my filter hose. Remove my bite valve, and put the top in or on the camelbak hose and get to pumping.

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    This needs further context/explanation - I don't get what you're describing at all.
    – imsodin
    Oct 25, 2017 at 8:09

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