I purchased a a gallon of this a couple years ago for my dogs. I even use it to wash the tile floor in the room where the dogs hang out.
Directions are 1.0 oz mixed with 1 gal. of water. Lasts for years!
https://www.chewy.com/durvet-chlorhe...xoCiWsQAvD_BwE
Poor personal hygiene is the number 1 cause of food borne illness. Norovirus disease is the most common example. Absence of hand washing and/or improper hand washing by an infected person after defecation is the culprit. I make a point not to touch faucets or door knobs in public rest rooms. The norovirus grows in people not food. Hand sanitizer complements using soap and water during hand washing.
I have a pack of the multi-scent of these from Costco. This product does NOT appear on the list of things that are EPA registered claiming to be good for Norovirus, located here:
https://www.epa.gov/pesticide-regist...rovirus-feline
'99% of household germs' does not include stuff like C-diff and norovirus.The regular Clorox wipes I have don't have bleach in them.
Coming off a 12, more later after a nap.
'Nobody ever called the fire department because they did something intelligent'
I'm probably not going to carry a jug of stuff around. Would these wipes be worth it:
Sage 2% Chlorhexidine Gluconate (CHG) Cloths - Each (1 package of 3)
https://www.amazon.com/Sage-Chlorhex...821900&sr=8-42
Expensive but I could see a pack in the car go bag, and the range bag for the vile outhouse.
Cloud Yeller of the Boomer Age
What are you trying to do with these wipes? If it's just general cleanliness of your hands, sure, they'll work well. If it's for wiping down hard, non-porous surfaces that you might run into before you use them, they're a waste of money, as there are much cheaper wipes with greater efficacy out there. If you're trying to guard against norovirus, too, CHG is generally viewed as having minimal biocidal effects against norovirus.
Not all hand sanitizers are created equal: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles...22.869087/full
Nothing besides bleach beats straight ethanol as a general disinfectant. And even then I prefer ethanol, because it has less chemical reactions with stuff, rapid evaporation times, and the fumes dissipate quickly.
Thru-hiking season is just getting cranked up on the AT and I'm already hearing reports of the NORO.
The path of least resistance will seldom get you where you need to be.
“Hamlet focused on a 70-mile stretch of trail south of the Lodge, where ill hikers were coming from. One common rest stop, he learned, was a remote log cabin in the meadows, with a pit latrine and a stream that's used for drinking water.”
Well...duh.
Working diligently to enlarge my group size.