I have used the Aqua-Pouch for a few years now, and my opinion of it mirrors Montanero's. It is light, compact, reliable, and cheap. It is great when you have no other option, and it is a valuable adjunct when you do have a primary rigid container. I tie a piece of 550 cord through the grommets to make a hand loop for easy carry or attachment.
Uses:
- primary water container when you simply don't have space for anything else
- store extra water beyond your primary container's capacity
- treat suspect water with chemicals as you drink good water from your primary container; this is a real time saver
- inflate with air and use it in a backpack or clothing for buoyancy during a water crossing
- cut in half at an angle, then use the bottom half as a collapsible water scoop for dipping out of shallow creeks, ponds, and drips. Works far better than a ziploc bag for this, with minimal disruption of silt at the bottom of the water source
Since it can be opened very wide, it is much easier to dry an Aqua-Pouch for storage than a Platypus bottle.
One time I had a well-used Aqua-Pouch develop a leak; I think it bumped up against a sharp object. I emptied it, dried the area around the leak, and patched it with duct tape. Worked fine for the rest of the trip.
Mors Kochanski teaches that your survival gear should do 2 things for you: help you sleep, and meet your water needs. Clothing, fire, and clean water will do this for you. A knife, ferro rod, Aqua-Pouch, and CLO2 tablets make a very powerful little minimalist kit.
Of course anything extra is gravy and I'll take it when I can get it.