Open to: Registered Users, detailed results viewable to: All, participants: 16
Do you keep track of how much water you drink?
Yes, accurately, in units of 8 oz glasses.
0 (0.0%)
Yes, accurately.
2 (12.5%)
Yes.
0 (0.0%)
Well, roughly.
4 (25.0%)
I drink when i'm thirsty.
10 (62.5%)
If you were to count glasses of water what additions would you accept as still being "water"?
carbonation
10 (66.7%)
lemon or other citrus slice
15 (100.0%)
mint or other fresh herb
14 (93.3%)
spices (like tumeric or ginger)
14 (93.3%)
a dash of bitters
8 (53.3%)
Would you count any of the following in your water tracker?
herbal tea/tisane
10 (100.0%)
tea
5 (50.0%)
coffee
2 (20.0%)
mate
2 (20.0%)
fruit or vegetable juice
2 (20.0%)
some blended concotion
2 (20.0%)
milk
2 (20.0%)
soda
3 (30.0%)
beer
1 (10.0%)
wine
1 (10.0%)
mixed drink with soda water or tonic water
1 (10.0%)
mixed drink with other mixers
1 (10.0%)
alcohol on the rocks
1 (10.0%)
soup
3 (30.0%)
watermellon
3 (30.0%)
no subject
So according to what i was taught, herbal tisanes which are not strong diuretics and don't contain caffeine (which is a diuretic) count. Tea, coffee, mate, juice, milk, highly sweetened beverages (ie soda), alcoholic beverages, and smoothies don't count as all of them either have diuretic properties (tea, coffee) or rquire more fluid to process than they bring in (juice, beer).
This was about 40 years ago, though, so understandings of how the body processes, say, milk or vegetable juices may have advanced and changed which categories the different beverages belong to. But the basic advice is still sound: if it flushes fluids (diuretics) or requires a lot of fluid for the body to process (alcohol), it doesn't count toward liquid requirements.
no subject
Admittedly "consume to keep hydrated" and "counts as water" aren't exactly the same question.