[Greenbuilding] [BULK] Composting toilets
Corwyn
corwyn at midcoast.com
Wed Dec 20 08:51:21 CST 2006
On Dec 20, 2006, at 00:34, Reuben Deumling wrote:
> I'm also specifically curious how much of an issue smell is with your
> composting toilets--of any variety? I get the idea that with a well
> designed
> stack and a tight fitting lid/seat it is fairly easy to reduce this to
> a
> minor inconvenience.
Honest assessment time. My system has neither a stack, nor a tight
fitting lid. With the lid down, I detect little to no odor. With the
lid up, sometimes it is better than others, usually the smell indicates
that I am doing some thing wrong (sawdust not fine enough, not enough
sawdust, etc.). My sister claims that there is an odor all the time.
However, one of the comments I often get from people entering the house
for the first time is how nice it smells (some know about the
composting toilet, some don't).
Emptying the buckets is an odious chore, make no mistake. It is
smelly, messy and unpleasant. I look forward to the day when the honey
wagon again roams the street collecting buckets (and bringing me back
the compost). Once covered in the compost pile there is usually no
odor. Sometimes the smell of the day of dumping lingers for a bit.
Sometimes the pile smells like decomposing hay (unsurprisingly enough).
More hay usually fixes these two problems.
> I'm not personally offended by the smell of an outhouse.
If your composting system smells like an outhouse, you are doing
something DRASTICLY wrong.
> But I live in a city on 1/12 of an acre with all sorts of finicky
> visitors and relatives. Turning folks off to the whole idea by
> confirming
> their misconceptions about the undesirability of such alternatives is
> not my
> goal. If you can speak to how you've dealt with this I'd be grateful.
My neighbors are over a rise, so I can't answer to that.
Thank You Kindly,
Corwyn
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