As long as your tap
water is safe for human consumption, it's okay for you to use for your bird's baths.
Not exact matches
In the Capital Region, concerns about PFOA found in
water supplies in Rensselaer County erupted in 2014 when Michael Hickey, a former village trustee whose father died of cancer, sent samples from the Hoosick Falls
water system to a Canadian lab that reported levels of PFOA that the EPA had advised
were not
safe for human consumption.
So the bivalves would help clean New York's polluted
waters, and in a decade or two they might even
be safe for human consumption.
Everything depends on the
water's source: where it comes from, what the characteristics of the storage basins
are, how far
is it transported and what chemicals
are added to it to make it
safe for human consumption.