...open the bottle with gloves on a bridge above a large river or lake and just drop it so it sinks off and slowly dillutes there. Better a few dead fish then a chemical burn
Hey, it worked for Uncle Sam!
I wonder how much they managed to raise the pH of that lake....
none at all but i would rather neutralize and pour to sewage, if there is no place for disposal of chemicals (first choice).
here in EU we have those disposal places in every town - and those guys will take care of the stuff (chemicals, oils, old car batteries...etc...)
Actually this is mostly true, old engine or gearbox oil, oil filters, batteries, etc. the local environmental recycling facility will take them (in the UK).
However, draining engine coolant into the sewer seems quite common to me, but I realised how poisonous that shit is (dogs love the taste, and die drinking it). I phoned my environmental health dept at the council on how I can legitimately dispose of this stuff.
You would not believe the carousel of phone calls from the recyclers / dumps / hazardous waste / sewage authorities I had to ask the same question to. The only legit but absurd answer I got was I had to contract with North West Water for a few £1000's and get a certificate, then turn up with my 2 pints of waste engine coolant and lob it in their sewer.
Thankfully the guy on the phone understood my concerns of not killing fish and stuff, and suggested that I dilute my ethylene glycol waste in a full bath of water and then drain it. Though that is technically illegal.