Sea-Pack desalination kit
After investigating the reverse osmosis desalination system used on French sail training ship Belém, I followed a few trails and found a very interesting product based on normal (forward) osmosis - Manta Ventures’ Sea-Pack kit, designed for use in liferafts and sea kayaks as a desalination system that doesn’t need power to drive it.
It uses state-of-the art membrane technology, but works on the well-known principle of osmosis. If two solutions are separated by a membrane with ‘holes’ so tiny that water molecules can pass through but bigger molecules and ions such as the sodium and chlorine components of dissolved salt cannot, the water migrates to the side with the stronger solution.
To use the Sea-Pack kit, you put sea water in one compartment and concentrated dextrose syrup in the other. Each charge of syrup produces half a litre of liquid similar to dilute grape juice in about five hours, and the kit comes with 5 syrup charges.
That means one kit can produce 2.5 litres of drink in 25 hours, which should suffice for one person even when exposed to blazing sun all day. However, since you must wait five hours for your first drink, remember to carry sufficient bottled water to cover the waiting period.
Water, not cola or other sodas. They all contain so much sugar that digesting it leaves you more dehydrated than when you started - if you don’t believe me, talk to one of the Colorado river-running boatmen. Beer is even worse - not only does it dehydrate you as you digest it, but it’s a diuretic as well. Alcohol and survival do not go together.
A recharge kit of five syrup charges costs US$38 - just over seven bucks a pint for you drink, but if the alternative is to die of thirst…
To me, this seemed a little like the inkjet printer business - most of the profit in the consumables - so I asked Rick Feineis of Manta Ventures whether I could use any concentrated juice or rehydrate syrup as an alternative if I ran out and couldn’t get genuine Sea-Pack recharges in a hurry. I give full marks to Rick, who told me that they use a dextrose syrup with an additive that prolongs its shelf life to five years. It would be possible to experiment with your own formula, but you need to match the concentration to the task in hand.
My advice, therefore, is to buy the real thing, but know that a pack of grape juice concentrate might be a useful addition to your survival kit in case you are unlucky enough to be adrift for a long time. If you don’t use it on your voyage, you can drink it when you get back to port.
Those who get involved in such things should take a look at the rest of the Sea-Pack range, designed for things like hurricane relief and fighting AIDS in the Third World.

Thanks for posting this. We saw this product at the Miami boat show and picked up four along with some of the resupply kits. It always helps to know that we made a sound decision.
Thanks again.
If you use any of them (hopefully not under serious emergency conditions), tell me about your experiences - either as a comment here, or by sending me an article.