We used a simple composting toilet system for a whole year (and here's how it worked out)

Тәжірибелік нұсқаулар және стиль

Some years ago I conducted an experiment to see if we could use a composting toilet system in our house. I had read Joseph Jenkins' book "The Humanure Handbook" (amzn.to/2Ko8bm8) and decided it made a lot of sense. Here's how that easy composting toilet system worked out.
BoonJon Composting Toilet: www.c-head.com/BoonJon_system....
Nature's Head Composting Toilet: amzn.to/2jhCsXn
Joseph Jenkins' "Humanure Handbook:" amzn.to/2Ko8bm8
Compost Everything: amzn.to/2raN91L
David's books: amzn.to/2pVbyro
Get David's free composting booklet: thesurvivalgardener.lpages.co...
Compost Your Enemies: www.aardvarktees.com/products...
The Survival Gardener website: www.thesurvivalgardener.com

Пікірлер: 317

  • @raquels1293
    @raquels12934 жыл бұрын

    You know you’re destined to be an extreme composter when you find this story thrilling and you’re on the edge of your seat.

  • @hudsondingus7249

    @hudsondingus7249

    Жыл бұрын

    Toilet seat I hope

  • @kimberlielawrence369

    @kimberlielawrence369

    8 ай бұрын

    I was going to say on the edge of your toilet seat! 😅

  • @eveadame1059

    @eveadame1059

    4 ай бұрын

    🚽 Yes! It definitely makes a difference when you have a Toilet Seat, for your 5 Gallon Composting Bucket

  • @David-kd5mf
    @David-kd5mf6 жыл бұрын

    You don't have to be weird to compost humanure. The conventional waste managment system is what's weird.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, that's the truth. We use clean water to get rid of "waste" that should be returned to the soil.

  • @pete_lind

    @pete_lind

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thats not really a composting toilet when the composting is not done by the toilet . Outhouses was still used in some houses to 1980s in urban areas in Europe . Last ones in city where i live got running water in 1990s and thats in a city founded 1652 . Then again water treatment started after 1950s , before that you did not have tech to do it .

  • @midkiffsjoy

    @midkiffsjoy

    6 жыл бұрын

    Pete Lind Outhouses were also still being used in rural areas (and small towns) in Texas in the 1980s. No one thought anything of it. It was just a normal part of life.

  • @sweetpeapearllynn3715

    @sweetpeapearllynn3715

    5 жыл бұрын

    I can't agree more. I have been wanting to do compost toilet for a while and with 2 major issues with septic tank and learning about them I am done with it. I am all about not using any system that can break and be a financial nightmare and a damn yard nightmare. Yeah no thanks! Its just another way to get us further from the way we were meant to live.

  • @MarlonVanderLinde

    @MarlonVanderLinde

    5 жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Flushing away drinkable water, where the water to waste ratio is what?... 10 to 1, that is weird. Composting humanure, and reusing it, that is NORMAL. No odours, no waste, that is normal. Geoff Lawton and David the Good both makes this sound really great.

  • @SoulfulVeg
    @SoulfulVeg6 жыл бұрын

    I stayed on a permaculture farm in Nicaragua, and they used rice hulls in their composting toilets. They had 3 for about 20+ guests per day. I was afraid of it at first, but it was just fine. The first stage of compost for the human compost after it matured a bit was heating water. They had very cold water that ran down from the mountain, so they put hoses through the compost, and it would heat up the water that was in the hoses in the pile. It was a very cool place. Cheers!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    That sounds like a great system.

  • @kimberlielawrence369

    @kimberlielawrence369

    5 ай бұрын

    Wow that's ingenious!

  • @kimberlielawrence369
    @kimberlielawrence3698 ай бұрын

    I'm sorry, I didn't realise this would be so funny, but you had me in absolute stitches when you said there were times where it wasn't appropriate to empty the buckets. "Like the neighbours were having a picnic or something like that. 😆🤣😂😅

  • @cathycotton9635
    @cathycotton96355 жыл бұрын

    "Don't ask, don't tell." LOLOL You delivered that line with such a straight face!!!

  • @1acrehomesteader43
    @1acrehomesteader434 жыл бұрын

    3:54 My dad composted a whole cow once. He always piled up the old hay from the feed lot every week just before putting new hay out. One winter he had a cow get sick and die. He buried her in that big ole compost pile and comes spring, there were just some bones left!

  • @sandieblack4860
    @sandieblack48606 жыл бұрын

    I have an off grid summer cabin and use a composting toilet for night use. (I am 70 years old and do have to get up a couple of times in the night.) I have an outhouse for daytime use but much prefer the composting set up. All I did was get myself an over the toilet commode chair and set it over a 5 gallon bucket with a little peat moss in the bottom. I have a separate container with a mixture of sawdust and peat moss. After every use I just sprinkle a cup full or so of the dry material into the bottom of the bucket. No muss, no fuss and definitely no smell. In fact last winter I had an issue at my home when my plumbing system backed up so, no big deal.I just got me another 5 gallon bucket and luckily I had just purchased a BRAND NEW commode from a second hand store for $20.00 and in less then 10 minutes we were in "business" haha! As for disposing of the end product, I never let mine get very full because it would be too heavy for me to carry, but I would just dig a hole at the top end of my garden, dump the contents of the bucket into the hole and cover it up. Now, I don't put any paper in the composting toilet I prefer to burn the paper, but that is just my own preference. I know the paper would break down along with all the other material. I know there are people that live in their converted vans etc., and use a similar system to mine but instead of using the peat moss or sawdust they line their "toilet" with a plastic bag, do their business and then dispose of the bag and it's contents in a garbage bin at the next coffee shop!! I suppose if you have no fixed abode so to speak they don't have too many options but in our town we have a couple of homeless people who regularly sift through the garbage bins outside stores etc., to see what they can find, I would hate for them to come across any surprises. Anyway, enjoyed your video, take care and stay safe....

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you. Good system.

  • @nancylourose

    @nancylourose

    2 жыл бұрын

    Not impressed with people who dump their waste into someone else's trash bin.

  • @FreeFinca

    @FreeFinca

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nancylourose I lived in a van and would put my waste in the dog waste bins along with my dogs, much easier for everyone. Nobody rummages in dog poo bins 🤪

  • @summerland6397
    @summerland63975 жыл бұрын

    We had an outhouse. Our washing was done in the wash house. We took baths as kids in a washtub before the cast iron stove on the kitchen. We lived in a three room log cabin. Our neighbors lived a mile away. The power went out every winter. You had to boil snow for water when the pipes froze. Then we moved to a new farm. It had better power and an oil furnace. A fireplace and wood stove. An indoor bathroom with a hot water tank tub and shower. We always had gardens and orchards we fertilized with cow manure because that is what we had. Now I live in the so called modern age. I look at the prices for food and fruit I used to pick off the tree and the garden and sigh as I long for those days. In the kitchen, the previously warehoused frozen fruit rots on the counter before it can fully ripen and be eaten. Those farms all became housing developments after the bank squeezed us out.

  • @godonlylovesme1638

    @godonlylovesme1638

    3 жыл бұрын

    This is so sad.

  • @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY
    @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY6 жыл бұрын

    7 years for us here, good vid! We just emptied a bin for flowers and garden 👍

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Good work!

  • @sweetpeapearllynn3715

    @sweetpeapearllynn3715

    5 жыл бұрын

    I love your guys. I'm getting tons of useful info and especially on composting toilets. We are now on the system.

  • @timgiles9413

    @timgiles9413

    4 жыл бұрын

    Hey Doug & Stacy, we are building the Humanure System because we watched your video. Our cabin in WV will use this because we are tired of trying to keep pipes from freezing in the winter because we are not there. This system will eliminate all those problems. We will be removing the old porcelain throne soon. We also plan on building an outhouse for an outside toilet facility. Keep up the great videos. :)

  • @Blaculo
    @Blaculo6 жыл бұрын

    Bad boys bad boys, whatcha gonna do? Whatcha gonna do when we compost poo?

  • @svetlanikolova7673

    @svetlanikolova7673

    5 жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @onechristianwallace

    @onechristianwallace

    Жыл бұрын

    Solid gold!

  • @duckymr1

    @duckymr1

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha!! Nice

  • @brocky78

    @brocky78

    5 ай бұрын

    Missed a trick should hae left out the st on compost 😎

  • @richardhawkins2248
    @richardhawkins22482 жыл бұрын

    When I started raising turkeys I ran across a chapter regarding how to compost dead turkeys. It was in their own poop. By the time a few months have passed ain't nothing left. LOL

  • @dewuknowHIM
    @dewuknowHIM5 жыл бұрын

    I lived 6 years off grid w a "Loveable Lou"..... It never had a smell....worked great.....

  • @antoinettecourtois2452
    @antoinettecourtois2452 Жыл бұрын

    Been living with it for 24 yrs... AWESOME! Livin off grid that is. Recycling old fridges for insulated growing mediums. Such a great life! Kudos!

  • @rustedoakhomestead
    @rustedoakhomestead6 жыл бұрын

    Dude! These tomatoes are the Shhhhhh... lol

  • @rachealhart7098

    @rachealhart7098

    5 жыл бұрын

    I would ask because I always wanna know what my food grows in

  • @Yiriyah

    @Yiriyah

    5 жыл бұрын

    🤣LITERALLY

  • @Magickfae

    @Magickfae

    3 жыл бұрын

    😂 hahaa awesome

  • @pollyjetix2027
    @pollyjetix20275 жыл бұрын

    Ever try peat moss? It comes in big bales, and is super-dry. I've used it -- absolutely no smell. Perfect success. Also, if you dig a 3' square hole, 3' deep in the fall... and fill it with manure and carbon material during the winter, and top it off with 6 inches of dirt... Set a few straw bales around it, and top it off with a window, or a frame wrapped in plastic. You've got an 1800's style hotbed!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it works really well.

  • @Yaqeen2013
    @Yaqeen20136 жыл бұрын

    Back in the 1970s in a town about 90km away, the house owners would build their elevated toilets in their backyard with a bucket beneath. A man (probably farmer) would go around and collect them, he must have used it as fertilizer. I guess that's the reason why the veges those days are healthy looking,

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    That is really cool.

  • @champagneboatingonabeerbud7184
    @champagneboatingonabeerbud71844 жыл бұрын

    Mid-1960's. Fort Wayne, Indiana. I was a teenager. My mom was a microbiologist and a gardener. We'd go down the the sewage treatment plant and get composted poop for free, to take home and put on the yard... not the veggie garden. Still though, I thought it was a great idea. Now, I"m an old sailboat cruiser and composting toilets occupy some of my idle hours. Thanks for the videos!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the story. I think it makes sense to close the loop.

  • @rainsunshine5258
    @rainsunshine52584 ай бұрын

    Anybody else hanging out til the end for those beats

  • @harvdog5669
    @harvdog566927 күн бұрын

    I use fine wood shavings from the feed stores. People use this for bedding in horse stalls

  • @marie-louisenieuwhof8510
    @marie-louisenieuwhof85106 жыл бұрын

    I have a number 1 bucket and a number 2 bucket. Fruit trees love them both!

  • @Beecozz7
    @Beecozz76 жыл бұрын

    A great straightforward lesson in human waste composting, thank you.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    You are welcome. Thank you.

  • @Copyright-di4we
    @Copyright-di4we Жыл бұрын

    Biochar seems like a good option for covering the poop, and always having a trench avaliable to empty the buckets seems good too.

  • @stebarg
    @stebarg Жыл бұрын

    I use soil and grass clippings. Works like a charm.

  • @VochosGranja
    @VochosGranja6 жыл бұрын

    Great info David and great song.

  • @hyanotha
    @hyanotha5 жыл бұрын

    This is a good description of what to do. Thanks

  • @ChallengeTheNarrative
    @ChallengeTheNarrative6 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely love kind of stuff

  • @totoroben
    @totoroben Жыл бұрын

    Great job. It makes so much sense!

  • @daisymoses6812
    @daisymoses681211 ай бұрын

    Me too. Very similar experiences and similar solutions implemented, with similar successful results.

  • @contentment164
    @contentment1645 жыл бұрын

    We have just begun to compost our waste on our off grid property.. it works just fine. Thanks!

  • @HomesteadersDiscovery
    @HomesteadersDiscovery6 жыл бұрын

    We love our compost toilet. It works great. Thanks for your informative videos.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    You are welcome. Thank you.

  • @livingincrete7157
    @livingincrete71575 жыл бұрын

    Great info and I love your style. of talking/ delivery.

  • @judycopp9426
    @judycopp94266 жыл бұрын

    Yep, it works. Good job.

  • @babetteisinthegarden6920
    @babetteisinthegarden69206 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing

  • @laurieparis2203
    @laurieparis22036 жыл бұрын

    Always wondered about composting toilets. Thanks for sharing.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    You are welcome.

  • @fourdayhomestead2839
    @fourdayhomestead28395 жыл бұрын

    Great video. I've got an expensive elec compost toilet, and it's not a good thing. I'll be "going" the bucket route now.

  • @AroundtheBlueBend
    @AroundtheBlueBend6 жыл бұрын

    My great grands and great aunts and uncles all grew up in the Appalachian foothills of North Alabama. I still remember outhouses and chamber pots - the original composting toilet systems, I guess. ☺️ So grateful I was connected to a time where others were mindful of waste and their connection to their food and the earth that gives it. What a shame we felt embarrassed until the outhouses were torn down and the indoor plumbing was complete.

  • @AroundtheBlueBend

    @AroundtheBlueBend

    6 жыл бұрын

    Cee be WOW! I never thought much about the media influence. Powerful insight. I’d give so much just to have an ounce of the wisdom they had in self-reliance. I think many who thought they were poor were those who were genuinely rich.

  • @AroundtheBlueBend

    @AroundtheBlueBend

    6 жыл бұрын

    Cee be THANK YOU!! I had no idea the series existed! I was going to interview my aunt the next time I was home. This is incredible! I want to show her the books and ask her for her memories. So grateful for you sharing this!

  • @karensprings4237

    @karensprings4237

    6 жыл бұрын

    Practice Hospitality I have the first five Foxfire. Most of it is the way my grandparents live in the Ozarks. They did a good job of preserving the knowledge for future generations.

  • @vixi314
    @vixi3145 жыл бұрын

    Very funny and love your great relaxed attitude!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, April.

  • @Uncle_Buzz
    @Uncle_Buzz6 жыл бұрын

    Your music is the best bro. Cheers! Chris.

  • @BrianWagnerBMW1220
    @BrianWagnerBMW12206 жыл бұрын

    I read Jenkins book and used a sawdust toilet for a couple years. It worked great. Things happened in my life, things change, and I haven't done that for 15 years or so. This video has inspired me to try again. Wonder how grass clippings would work to block the odor????

  • @sandieblack4860

    @sandieblack4860

    6 жыл бұрын

    No I wouldn't suggest grass clippings, you would be running into problems . Way too much moisture involved and nothing to soak up the liquids. Sorry I don't explain it very well, I understand what I mean as I have lived with composting toilets most of my life and they are second nature to me, but don't ask me to explain the science behind them haha! I am sure someone will be able to give you more details as to why you shouldn't use grass clippings.

  • @Kimberly-wt1nu

    @Kimberly-wt1nu

    5 жыл бұрын

    grass clippings are too moist. Mine often grow mold on top.

  • @annabodhi38
    @annabodhi386 жыл бұрын

    That song at the end, love it!! Great video, thank you for taking the time to make this for us. I appreciate it.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @cassianoroloff

    @cassianoroloff

    2 жыл бұрын

    what is the song in the end? great video =)

  • @annabodhi38

    @annabodhi38

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@cassianoroloff Not sure what the song is called but David The Good is the guy singing... if you listen again, you'll here him say "and check out my book and compost everything" That's all I know. Enjoy the rest of the evening!

  • @nolonger7912
    @nolonger79126 жыл бұрын

    THANK YOU!

  • @ingeleonora-denouden6222
    @ingeleonora-denouden62226 жыл бұрын

    Interesting information! Since I visited a place with a composting toilet (which I found interesting long before ) I decided to give it a try. My composting toilet now is still experimental, with a bucket like you tell. I have a compost heap for 'composting everything ' . But I wasn't sure about how to continue. So thank you for explaining!

  • @ingeleonora-denouden6222

    @ingeleonora-denouden6222

    6 жыл бұрын

    O, I forgot to tell: I live in a ground-floor apartment in a suburban neighbourhood 🙄

  • @MaxMiniTV
    @MaxMiniTV5 жыл бұрын

    You're a really GOOD composter! You should advertise to all the RVers who use composting toilets but just throw the humanure in a trash can. They could drop it off with you on their way through town!

  • @rodrigosouto9502
    @rodrigosouto95024 жыл бұрын

    Dude, you are a pro composter!

  • @livingincrete7157
    @livingincrete71575 жыл бұрын

    The rap at the end!!! BRILLIANT.

  • @TehKegz
    @TehKegz6 жыл бұрын

    I wanted you to know, I'm totally buying your books because of that song at the end (and cause I was already debating it but that sealed the deal) I found your stuff based on the Spring Gardener Green house review (I think i may buy one soon) and I love your content. Keep it up!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Hey - that's awesome. Thank you.

  • @Stephen_Strange
    @Stephen_Strange Жыл бұрын

    Wooo you make your own music too, very cool David!

  • @davidthegood
    @davidthegood2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching. Composting doesn't have to be a pain! Learn how to compost the easy way in my book Compost Everything: amzn.to/3zy4rYB Get my free composting booklet: www.thesurvivalgardener.com/simple-composting/ "Compost Your Enemies" T-shirts: www.aardvarktees.com/collections/vendors?q=The%20Survival%20Gardener

  • @TheTiceybear
    @TheTiceybear6 жыл бұрын

    Dried and shredded corn cobs make a wonderful composting toilet litter. Great video.

  • @clairesides3559

    @clairesides3559

    5 жыл бұрын

    Fred Tice How do you shred a corn cob?

  • @AatosStarfire
    @AatosStarfire2 жыл бұрын

    This is a good video.

  • @d.e303-anewlowcosthomebuil7
    @d.e303-anewlowcosthomebuil75 жыл бұрын

    Hey Dave!....2 contractor 3 mil plastic bags( double bagged), on a scrap of a tarp so you can skid it, and pee elsewhere. Put the bag in the yard with leaves on it for a year, and you can dump then re-use it. cheap, easy, little smell if each dump is covered with dust and compost. You have to knock down the volcano at times, but can just leave the stick in the pile.....MM....

  • @KeikoMushi
    @KeikoMushi6 жыл бұрын

    You could use a mechanical system for applying the sawdust into the waste bucket. Think something similar to the classic pull-down flushing system but with a solid rather than a liquid. That could avoid kids making a mess all over the space.

  • @KeikoMushi
    @KeikoMushi5 жыл бұрын

    I still remember poo pickup during the early '80s. By the mid-'80s, a lot of Aussie councils had phased out the service. A lot of the concerns do appear to relate to sewerage going into the water supply, but they could easily require people to have closed humanure services.

  • @mark-nt5pg
    @mark-nt5pg6 жыл бұрын

    We have an old fashion septic tank. In my mind it works similarly to your composting system except it is buried and the water leaches out. I guess if you can't see it people are ok with it. I would not only eat your tomatoes but ask for seconds.

  • @jocarson5310

    @jocarson5310

    3 жыл бұрын

    The problem isn’t your neighbor; your problem is the local/state codes on black water disposal.

  • @wakkywabbit5446
    @wakkywabbit54464 жыл бұрын

    Recycled fridges make great cold and hot smokers. I use them mostly for cold smoking because very little work is needed if a smoking tube is used.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    4 жыл бұрын

    Good idea.

  • @qualqui
    @qualqui Жыл бұрын

    Humanure, something the vast majority of us waste, recently watched a documentary about Teotihuacan when it was a thriving metropolis some 2,000-3,000 years ago, archaeologists were baffled at not finding any sewer system, not even a chamber pot! I'm thinking those ancient Toltecas were composting the humanure and growing beautiful 3 sisters crops! 🌽🌽🌽

  • @dinosanchez8528
    @dinosanchez85282 жыл бұрын

    Hilarious. Ur one of my favorite people.

  • @timdrake220
    @timdrake220 Жыл бұрын

    Damn! That song at the end slaps!!!

  • @adellsinclair8797
    @adellsinclair87976 жыл бұрын

    We had a peach tree on top of leach lines from our septic system. Peaches were unedible!!!

  • @sunnyinrtrx7247

    @sunnyinrtrx7247

    6 жыл бұрын

    Leach lines get really clogged up by tree roots -- that's why you're not supposed to plant perennials there. That said, the peach flavor was the variety, not the water source. Tree fruit is the one food that pretty much cannot be affected by even un-composted manure -- witness generations of grazing meat animals intentionally (and unintentionally) raised in orchards -- they poop where they live.

  • @Guy4UnderDog

    @Guy4UnderDog

    5 жыл бұрын

    Way too much nutrients and water for Peaches...unless your in the desert. We had peaches next to our septic line when I was growing up in Tennessee. The peaches all molded. The trees grew really fast though.

  • @beavercreekfabrications1719
    @beavercreekfabrications17196 жыл бұрын

    Lol.... Don't ask don't tell. Reminds me of and old horror movie with award winning chili.... Lol... Great video. I was cracking up with the thought of the law kicking in the door... Lol

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @khm2128
    @khm21283 жыл бұрын

    If there is a farm animal feed store near you, there's something called bedding pellets, made out of compressed wood chips. We use it for our cat litter boxes. It has zero scent & covers the scent of the cat urine perfectly. Not so great on the poo if there is any left uncovered. I've often thought if I ever for real use a composting toilet, I'd use this material. It's super cheap. It's like 40 pounds for less than 8 dollars. We get it at Coast Farms in Oregon.

  • @charlesdanweirdotoo1287
    @charlesdanweirdotoo12875 жыл бұрын

    I got three compost tiolets in my house when my plumbing goes bad or when someone is using my bathroom and i need to use it, i have no problems using a bucket and woodchips. I even have a compost tiolet in a off grid cabin i have my relative staying in my backyard. I plan on building a second tiny off grid cabin with a compost tiolet

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    Good work.

  • @southtexassue6666
    @southtexassue66665 жыл бұрын

    Howdy ! Hurricane Harvey wiped out my rural septic and at first I panicked at the thought of thousands of dollars to replace... then I realized that it was the “jumping off place” ... the driving force to go ahead and do this. I got over the icky factor a couple years ago , when I began ‘ watering’ my banana trees with the golden elixir... that was the first year my trees began to make bananas. I’m sold. Great video David keep em coming ! 👍

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    Good work, Sue. Thank you.

  • @GoldenEagle_Matariki_Kaleolani
    @GoldenEagle_Matariki_Kaleolani5 жыл бұрын

    My grandparents were shepherds they had composting toilets, grandpa would also use horse manures/sheep manures as fertilizers. May I ask, who is the adorable old man singing :"Ah~" @0:16? Please let me.....(anyways, at home, my dad use his poop to fertilize, I save all my urine as well as shower water and water that's used to wash face and hands --- all saved in a pail and used to water trees outside our house)

  • @edwardleroy7648
    @edwardleroy76486 жыл бұрын

    Good info. Makes night soil much less intimidating. Never read a book on it. Never thought about that there might BE a book on it. With the Chinese building up 15 feet of top soil at their home sites over thousands of years I should have known better. Interesting.

  • @khm2128

    @khm2128

    3 жыл бұрын

    Great term: night soil. I'd forgotten about that!

  • @manguydude287
    @manguydude2876 жыл бұрын

    I have been so excited to try this out! I have a lot of access to sawdust and I have had good, non smelly, experiences with it as, you said. ...... And that rap was sick dope!

  • @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY

    @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY

    6 жыл бұрын

    Manguy dude yep, sawdust (raw) is the best, you should go for it!

  • @Raj-yy7xx
    @Raj-yy7xx2 жыл бұрын

    I thought of using a Bulk food dispenser filled with sawdust and pipe to poo bucket box, as a way to controll the kids with sawdust. I couldn't find a large cheap bulk food dispenser so trialing it with a smaller one. Not ideal as it means more turns of the dispenser knob.

  • @muriellecordemans4556
    @muriellecordemans45564 жыл бұрын

    i was on a permaculture course in the south of spain, and if i remember well they developed a kind of compost toilet, but it separated urine from pooh, they didn't like the urine so much mixed in. They would wait 3 years before using it on their veggies. It was wonderful, do you know of this system? (Supernatural)

  • @MarielasSister
    @MarielasSister3 жыл бұрын

    When you did this, did you separate the pee from the poop or did it all go in together? TIA! Thanks for sharing a part of your life with us.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    3 жыл бұрын

    All together.

  • @karensprings4237
    @karensprings42376 жыл бұрын

    How do your buckets last so long? We go through a bucket every 3 days with just two using it. Do you just use minimal amount of sawdust? I love composting but I always wonder if I am doing it wrong to have to empty it so much. 😋 Just curious. Thanks.

  • @jasonbuzzard3127
    @jasonbuzzard31276 ай бұрын

    You let the neighbors picnic stop you from dumping? What about the commitment!!😅

  • @riverhuntingdon6659
    @riverhuntingdon66596 жыл бұрын

    Shitting in the Fridge ? Amazing.

  • @claygreen4723
    @claygreen47234 жыл бұрын

    I want to start doing this as a protest against paying the city to recycle waste that I can use for my own plants.

  • @evelynyoung6869
    @evelynyoung68692 жыл бұрын

    Just wondering if you have tried the C-Head yet? Good video!

  • @stripersniper4890
    @stripersniper48906 жыл бұрын

    In North Korea, I believe Humanure is called "Night Soil" and during winter, citizens are expected to chip it out of communal lavs and reuse as fertalizer. By the way, I drive by a company called BoonJon on Rt. 40 often. Always wondered what they did. I assume it's the same company?

  • @gardenstate732

    @gardenstate732

    6 жыл бұрын

    Striper Sniper thats also why that soldier who escaped and was shot was examined and was riddled with parasites. If your not doing it 100% right dont put it on your food

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yes! That's the guy. Sandy's place. He's awesome - you should stop in and say hi.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    It's also why raw vegetables are uncommon in cultures that use sewage to fertilize.

  • @QuickFixTips
    @QuickFixTips6 жыл бұрын

    Ahahaaa, loved it!! We really don't want to mess around with the dreaded composting-toilet police! HA!

  • @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY

    @OFFGRIDwithDOUGSTACY

    6 жыл бұрын

    Twinas' Cheri lol 😉

  • @tristanstephens3322
    @tristanstephens33222 жыл бұрын

    There is a huge stigma about humanure. But I think putting organic human waste in perfectly clean water and using 10l a flush is insane! Not only does it breed methane that just goes into the atmosphere. It’s actually a environmental hazard that nature intended to be a fertilizer for trees. They give us oxygen we give them carbon dioxide and compost. Perfect circle. I’m Living off grid, composting my waste.

  • @nathanieltaylor9466
    @nathanieltaylor94666 жыл бұрын

    if you fed me a tomato and then said you grew it with your poop i would ask for another

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    That is too weird even for me.

  • @huckfinn4260

    @huckfinn4260

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, don't ask, don't tell. Even when they beg to know "what's your secret?"

  • @jamesholland7250

    @jamesholland7250

    4 жыл бұрын

    You mean another tomato grown with or without human waste? Lol

  • @c.j.rogers2422
    @c.j.rogers24226 жыл бұрын

    David, what do think about the idea of having a conventional, normally plumbed toilet empty straight into a VERY large BSFL system? I'm talking VERY off-grid, miles from prying eyes, situated a good distance from an elevated house (gravity!), with an endless supply of wood chips for daily covering within the Larva Factory. BTW, I'm also looking into installing a stand-up urinal that empties straight into an IBC tank. Aged urine, anyone? Seditious, ain't we?

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    If it went down into the ground enough with drainage to keep it from becoming a fetid bog, why not? There's probably a good way to engineer it. I thought about setting up a banana circle around a pit that a toilet emptied into.

  • @c.j.rogers2422

    @c.j.rogers2422

    6 жыл бұрын

    David The Good Nice! I love the idea of placing the "farm" in a bit of a depression, and surrounding with water- and nutrient-hog bananas, or something similar. In my model, the toilet would be emptying onto a large are of chips, probably 8 x 12 or more. Plenty, I think, to handle the couple gallons per flush. With your idea, any bit of leakage would be sucked up by bananas anyway. I'm on FLA sugar sand, so you know there won't be any standing cesspool! I've already considered a very shallow cattail pond for gray water; why not make the pond more of a mote around BSF Island, with bananas ringing the shoreline? No nutrients escaping that trap! I just hope "they" aren't listening!

  • @katewizer2736

    @katewizer2736

    6 жыл бұрын

    Here in the west, we only have shallow Wells.... consequentially I would not like to take the chance of polluting my own well from the leeching of waste. I'd feel more secure with a rubber lined pit with boulders and gravel, to allow for evaporation.

  • @TheTiceybear

    @TheTiceybear

    6 жыл бұрын

    Build a bio-digester system using IBC containers and collect methane fuel. ;)

  • @c.j.rogers2422

    @c.j.rogers2422

    6 жыл бұрын

    Fred Tice I have a specific reason for using BSF: chickens, laying and meat. Raising without commercial feed or commodity grains, the biggest challenge is protein.

  • @kerem7546
    @kerem75466 жыл бұрын

    i've always wondered one people do with their solid waste when they set up systems in their mobile tiny homes?

  • @LaMoynihan1
    @LaMoynihan14 ай бұрын

    Would you put a composter in a greenhouse to keep plants warm? Or is does it smell? Would sawdust prevent that? If it’s that warm, it almost sounds like a good idea.

  • @mio.giardino
    @mio.giardino6 жыл бұрын

    I don't think I'd have a problem with this, yes it's icky but if it's WELL composted the danger & smell should not be an issue. The only problem is IF the contributors were on medication that gets excreted in their waste, would it be broken down or remain in the produced compost? Would the plants pick it up?

  • @5keeno

    @5keeno

    5 жыл бұрын

    Good question

  • @juliedorman1858

    @juliedorman1858

    4 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but that's already in the water supply. All our meds are in the water supply.

  • @khm2128

    @khm2128

    3 жыл бұрын

    Chemo drugs are the only hazards of which I'm aware.

  • @patricklee780
    @patricklee7806 жыл бұрын

    If I remember correctly, the folks at Off Grid Hawaii say pee is a great fertilizer for the plants as well. Use liberally :)

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, it works like a charm.

  • @sandieblack4860

    @sandieblack4860

    6 жыл бұрын

    Best to dilute the pee before you use it on your plants, some people dilute at a ratio of 1:10 and some 1:15 and, just for interest, human urine is completely sterile when it comes out of your body, it is after it is generated that bacteria is created.

  • @karenhobbs3218
    @karenhobbs32186 жыл бұрын

    David this is a great video. However I need some well thought out advice please. I am in Ecuador and most plumbing systems cannot handle toilet paper. Consequently everywhere you go there are baskets beside the toilet for the paper you use. I hate gathering up the bag once a week (!) and leaving for garbage pick up. so, my question is do you think i can take the bag out to the confined compost pile, move stuff out of the way - kinda like worm composting - deposit the bag of used paper, cover it up and walk away until next week. I dont have red wigglers - they are hard to get here - but my compost piles are usually full of regular earth worms. i should mention that i have built a series of 8" high raised beds and put all compostables in one until it is full and then just leave for a month or two before planting.

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yes. I would just put them in the compost pile. Just give the pile a year to break down and all should be fine.

  • @philup9864
    @philup98644 жыл бұрын

    If anyone thinks human poo is nasty just know that the produce you buy at the store is grown with animal poo and even blood from the slaughterhouses. Great vid btw man

  • @OnTheRogersJourney
    @OnTheRogersJourney3 жыл бұрын

    I loved the whole video, but the best part was the rap at the end.

  • @HoneyHollowHomestead
    @HoneyHollowHomestead5 жыл бұрын

    This is what I am trying to do. Mainly because our well is not very productive. It would sure save water. I am just not happy with where I am currently dumping the bucket. Also, going to try to make my own urine diverter using a plastic bed pan. I couldn't see paying over $40 for a piece of molded plastic!

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    5 жыл бұрын

    I agree - make your own!

  • @jedics1
    @jedics15 жыл бұрын

    You don't have to look into it very far to realise a composting toilet is by far the best solution in every way, the only downside is how its perceived, I will never own land so the composting side doesn't really apply to me but I will be doing it in my off grid truck and will skip the whole porta potty and dump station thing not to mention the expense.

  • @alecluna4921
    @alecluna49216 жыл бұрын

    When I learned about humanure it was like 5-7 years but prob less or no filler..

  • @thebigmann81
    @thebigmann81 Жыл бұрын

    Pine pellets are good

  • @salmacuppini6772
    @salmacuppini6772 Жыл бұрын

    I live in a mobile home and have built a urinal separator myself with a 5 liter (small) bucket at the back, I use a decomposing plastic bag with sawdust and tie a knot and throw it out after every toilet visit, now I have bought a small house in the country and would like to use the same system, but I would like to compost my small bags in possibly with some small bags of kitchen waste too would that work in your opinion?

  • @TheKnightsShield
    @TheKnightsShield2 жыл бұрын

    I've read online that you shouldn't use humanure for growing food. If it is possible to do it, how is it best to do it?

  • @federico8342
    @federico83422 жыл бұрын

    that song... wow

  • @Stephen_Strange
    @Stephen_Strange Жыл бұрын

    Very hot? Right, I'm going to heat my greenhouse with it!!!

  • @evelyny7037
    @evelyny70379 ай бұрын

    Did you have any trouble with anything like those bagged leaves that came from someone else’s yard? I thought about doing that but then I had concerned about whether or not those leaves were sprayed? Any thoughts?

  • @LB-vl3qn
    @LB-vl3qn6 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for posting this. I've been very curious about how this could work if we really needed it to. So, this begs the question... what about cat waste? Would you have to use a special kind of cat litter? It sounds like you have a big family, which is a blessed, wonderful thing. May I ask how many children you have?

  • @davidthegood

    @davidthegood

    6 жыл бұрын

    We have eight. I would avoid cat, due to toxoplasmosis.

  • @LB-vl3qn

    @LB-vl3qn

    6 жыл бұрын

    Eight children. You are, indeed, blessed. Thanks for your reply.

  • @DJ-uk5mm
    @DJ-uk5mm Жыл бұрын

    7:22 “except for very strange people” yep thatsnme

  • @susanbartlett5932
    @susanbartlett59325 жыл бұрын

    This guy is so funny....the digester....lol

  • @juliegogola4647
    @juliegogola46472 жыл бұрын

    Okay so you made your own system? I was wondering about those ones you buy. I know somebody who wants one.

  • @robertalangley2182
    @robertalangley21822 жыл бұрын

    I am new to humanure composting but am very excited to try this! I have 2 questions: 1) I saw on another old blog where someone used wood pellets (for wood stoves) as a cover material for the toilets. Because I live in an area where saw dust is not easily obtained, I was thinking this might work for us. What do you think about using wood pellets for a cover material? 2) I am wanting to use the humanure set up for the rural property that we are developing. But since we only get out there about 1x a month, I am concerned that we will not have enough fill material in order to keep the compost pile hot enough to kill pathogens. Maybe if we kept our kitchen scraps at our current home to dump as well when we go out there, maybe that would work? Any suggestions would be appreciated. We are planning on building a home in a couple of years when we retire and at that time the amount of waste we can dump in there won't be an issue. It's just this time from now until then.

  • @elizabethjohnson7977

    @elizabethjohnson7977

    2 жыл бұрын

    Take a large black plastic bag to the cabin and take the humanure home for your compost pile.

  • @oldauntzibby4395

    @oldauntzibby4395

    Жыл бұрын

    Lightly spritz the wood pellets with water to get them to puff up and turn into fine sawdust. Let the sawdust dry a bit before using it. You can also add fireplace or wood stove ashes to the bucket of cover material. It helps keep bugs out and adds minerals.

  • @llcarignan

    @llcarignan

    8 ай бұрын

    The problem with wood pellets is they're too dry. I recycled used wood-pellet cat litter (sans cat poo) as cover material for my toilet and it worked reasonably well for odors, but it did not compost well. The wood was too dry and was visible as clumps of yellowish sawdust in the pile a year later. It didn't smell; it was just unsightly. So, I dumped several bins of used cat litter on the ground near my compost bin and let it get wet and "rot" a bit. I think once it soaks up enough moisture and begins to break down, then it will work better in my toilet and in my compost bin. As for your infrequently used rural cabin, I would go ahead and set up a compost bin and just dump and cover your material each month and not worry about it. In a couple of years, any pathogens (assuming you HAVE any pathogens in your feces in the first place) will have died from exposure, privation, or predation from competing microbes.

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