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Bulgarianlily



Joined: 01 Jun 2008
Posts: 1667
Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 11:54 am    Post subject: humanure Reply with quote
    

Not sure where to put this, gardening, or here?

Just spent a happy half an hour moving our compost heap from just outside the greenhouse into the now empty greenhouse where it can sit for the next five months.

We have three composting toilets here, used by between two and six people depending on who is staying. Our latest outdoor heap was four pallets, probably enclosing about a cubic meter, of which 80% was full. It was started six months ago. We have been using composting toilets since 1981, and have tried lots of different versions. We are happiest with the current models, a wooden 'throne' with a standard toilet seat on top, containing a 15 liter bucket that comes with a snap on lid. A similar bucket by the loo contains fresh sawdust from the local sawmills. This is used with a scoop made from a washing liquid bottle to cover over the results of a bathroom visit. The room smells only of the piney sawdust, which several people have commented on favourably. Kitchen composting waste ends up in the same bucket.

Several buckets are usually waiting for emptying, standing decretely by the heap with their lids on. We keep a good supply of empty buckets so we are not 'caught short'. We find the buckets need replacing now and then as micro scratches when cleaning them make it hard to keep them really clean. We keep some straw or old chicken bedding to hand to use for covering the heap. The buckets are washed out well and left in the sun to dry before having a couple of inches of sawdust in the bottom before being used.

Having just moved the heap and in the process turned it top to bottom I can report that:

There was very little sign of toilet paper, just the odd bit that was near the edge of the heap and had gone dry.
There was almost no sign of recognisable shit.
Apart from the most recent layer which had a sharp smell of ammonia, there was no smell.
Surprising there was no sign of vermin, and few insects, not one worm (Bulgaria seems very short of worms but has dozens of different types of ant).
The sawdust had gone a lovely orange tan brown reacting with the urine.
Apart from a couple of whole red peppers, there was little sign of vegetables.
The straw had not broken down much
I found one pair of scissors!

Over the course of the winter it will be used in planting holes for new fruit trees and bushes.

I know you have to be a sad individual to be that interested in your shit, but it could be useful to anyone thinking of doing this at some point.




RichardW



Joined: 24 Aug 2006
Posts: 8443
Location: Llyn Peninsular North Wales
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 1:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Was it the 6 month old heap you moved?

Do you know what the type of saw dust it is?

Do you separate the urine?

Our first heap is just over 3 years since we started it & 2 years since it was filled. It does not seem to be composting that well yet but thats just looking at the top. I guess I will have to turn it to see how the bottom is doing. When filling that one& the next we did not separate. This years we have been separating it so can compare how it affects it. I do feel that using Cedar saw dust was a bad move as it rots so slowly. Prob needs more kitchen green waste too but we dont get much.

Bulgarianlily



Joined: 01 Jun 2008
Posts: 1667
Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 1:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

It is pine sawdust, and yes it was the six month one, but we have a very dry hot climate, with little summer rain. We don't seperate out the urine as I have had problems with it setting like a concrete gel in the pipes used to take it away.

Isn't cedar anti-baterial and resists fungus? Will it ever rot?

RichardW



Joined: 24 Aug 2006
Posts: 8443
Location: Llyn Peninsular North Wales
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 2:21 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Bulgarianlily wrote:

Isn't cedar anti-baterial
and resists fungus?
Will it ever rot?



Yes
Yes
I hope so.........

In fact the first compost area was filled using a mix mainly of other softwoods. The latter ones are almost pure Cedar.

I guess its time to take a look.

Andrea



Joined: 02 May 2005
Posts: 2260
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 3:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

We have two loos, which we rotate. I need to dig one out about once a year, at which point it will have been standing for about a year. Our loos are 'dry' and should contain very little loo paper as we ask people to keep it separate as it fills the loo up very quickly otherwise. We use sawdust from whatever we've been working on or have scavenged.

When I dig it out it's unrecognisable and has no discernible smell. It looks like well rotted, dry compost which has contained sawdust. I normally dump it in a heap from where it's transferred to the base of fruit trees. So far, none of our volunteers have guessed what it is, despite using the compost loo.

dolmen



Joined: 07 Oct 2011
Posts: 108

PostPosted: Sun Oct 23, 11 4:00 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

We have one bucket with lid type, for wet and dry, covered with sawdust. It has been working great, with no smell or flys, buckets are emptied into a composting container along with kitchen waste.

Takes a year to fill, then sits a year before being used on the fruit crops and deep beds. If mankind is to achieve better health, many more folks will have to move forward to using humanure and getting our mineral and trace element intake up.

Cheers


dpack



Joined: 02 Jul 2005
Posts: 46207
Location: yes
PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 2:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

a sprinkle of wood ashes with the waste and sawdust improves the results a lot

if no sawdust use dried earth and ashes

Bulgarianlily



Joined: 01 Jun 2008
Posts: 1667
Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 2:46 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Wood shavings were the worst option we tried, too up too much room and didn't seal in the smell.

I love this site, where else could I discuss this?

RichardW



Joined: 24 Aug 2006
Posts: 8443
Location: Llyn Peninsular North Wales
PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 3:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

What was the best then?

We have found that Cedar is good for covering & smell but slow to compost.

Bulgarianlily



Joined: 01 Jun 2008
Posts: 1667
Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 4:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Fresh pine sawdust collected regulary from the saw mill. We use a lot of sawdust and also shavings in our cement stabilised earth walls, we are always picking up new bags.

dolmen



Joined: 07 Oct 2011
Posts: 108

PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 6:55 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

sawdust is my choice, clean to use, fresh pine smell. Ash would be dusty and stick to everything, peat or dried soil similar, shavings are too course.

Cheers


Kenworth



Joined: 04 Apr 2011
Posts: 855
Location: Michigan
PostPosted: Mon Oct 24, 11 9:09 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Outhouses over here used to have a container of loose lime in them to sprinkle ontop of solids.

Unfortunately, many places have outlawed privies. The law wants running water piped into a home, not a hand pump or a well. They also want "proper" plumbing going into a septic tank, or if in the city, be hooked up to water lines and sewage lines.

I think nowadays not too many Americans would understand how to or even have the inclination to properly care for an outside privy, or even an inside composting toilet.

I grew up with an outhouse, so it's no big deal to me. Once every few years dad would remove a back pannel of the privy and dig out the waste. We were under specific orders to NEVER place toilet paper down the hole ROF. The waste was then took to an obscure place and buried.

Oh yes, I remember freezing my a$$ off in the wintertime when the wind came whipping up the toilet seat hole.

dolmen



Joined: 07 Oct 2011
Posts: 108

PostPosted: Tue Oct 25, 11 11:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

I guess it would all depend on the type of paper used, but my bucket system is treated just like a conventional plumbed toilet, wet, dry and paper, thats the beauty of it, and it works a dream.
Plus no digging out to be done, buckets are emptied into a composting pile, left to rot down into perfect crumbly compost for a year, sometimes two, then used in deepbeds and fruit growing.
All the nutrients go back into our system, in my research its one thing that is needed to greatly improve the health of mankind.

Improve the food fed to the animals and they produce much healthier food for us then keep it in the loop. I know our own health has greatly improved, I'm not great at eating enough greens, but the animals and poultry just love the nutrient rich greens on our holdng and we benefit from their conversion of it into wonderful nutrient rich eggs etc.

Cheers

cassy



Joined: 04 Feb 2008
Posts: 1047
Location: South West Scotland
PostPosted: Tue Oct 25, 11 1:53 pm    Post subject: Re: humanure Reply with quote
    

Bulgarianlily wrote:
I know you have to be a sad individual to be that interested in your shit, but it could be useful to anyone thinking of doing this at some point.

It is very useful and thanks for posting all the details.

We're due to empty our first compost heap next summer (2 years from filling) and I'm sad to say that I'm looking forward to seeing the results!

Andrea



Joined: 02 May 2005
Posts: 2260
Location: Portugal
PostPosted: Wed Oct 26, 11 9:33 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

dolmen wrote:
I guess it would all depend on the type of paper used ...


We ban paper from the loo simply because it fills it up faster than it would without, and therefore means it needs digging out more often. Those stray bits which make their way down there anyway rot down just fine and are ultimately unidentifiable.

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