<p>The combined use of deuterium and tritium to determine travel time distributions (TTDs) in streams is an important development in catchment hydrology (Rodriguez et al, 2021). This comment takes issue with Rodriguez et al.'s general rejection of the truncation hypothesis, i.e. that the almost exclusive use of stable isotopes has truncated our vision of streamflow TTDs and caused us to miss the long tails of old water often shown by tritium. We discuss reasons why this hypothesis may not hold for the catchment described by Rodriguez et al. (2021), but could still apply to a large proportion of all catchments. We also discuss more generally future applications of tritium in northern and southern hemisphere catchments.</p>