TrainChaser
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2016
- Messages
- 2,260
- Reaction score
- 1
I didn't think of this myself. I got hold of Anna Edey's second book (first was the famous Solviva), titled The Light at the End of the Tunnel, just to see what she was doing now, and found this, and immediately thought RV? Would it work under these conditions?
One section of it tells about how she uses redworms (Eisenia fetida, specifically) to break down human waste. I haven't got all of the details fixed in my poor little A.D.D. brain yet, but it sort of sounds like it would work in a van or RV. I guess you could include some urine in it (enough to keep it moist), but w/o a bottom drain, it doesn't seem likely that you could include all that you would produce.
Redworms require more top surface area than other types of worms, so a rectangular container (like an 18-20 gallon Rubbermaid tote would be better than a 5-gallon bucket. The bedding material would be sawdust/leaves/compost (sawdust: regular woodworker type, not dust, not shavings, not varieties that resist breaking down). The material needs to be kept damp, not wet. They can apparently accept urine, but you can't drown them in it. If you separate the urine, you have to add water.
She said there is no odor, but she does use a tiny ('biscuit'???) fan, very low power. A goodly supply of redworms will break down a solid deposit in about 2 days in warmer weather; I think she means not freezing -- her insulated outdoor unit works all year in MA, but a bit slower. One thing that shocked her was that she kept checking the container for when to empty it, and the level took forever to reach that point, but she had more and more worms.
Around here (WA) redworms cost about $25/lb -- a one-time expense until you do something dumb, it sounds.
If ('IF') a regular heavy-duty Rubbermaid tote would hold a person's weight... maybe if you put a wooden platform all the way across the top to spread out the weight over the existing support, cut the hole and installed a regular toilet seat?
Has anyone ever tried anything like this?
And before all of the Constantly Fearful start yammering about disease, she has the results of independent testing. E. coli seems to be the first to disappear; if I understand properly, many bacteria are completely digested when they go through the worms' guts -- GONE. She lists the results of the tests.
One part that I'm not clear on is the usual one- or two-year safety breakdown time that is mentioned in The Humanure Handbook by Joseph Jenkins. OTOH, if you aren't harboring anything nasty (infectious diseases like cholera, typhoid or rotovirus) except for the usual intestinal bacteria, what would be the problem? And I'm not sure about the worms staying in the container -- would they try to migrate or something?
I'm going to condense the information and give it a try, I think. I've tried things that don't work -- and this might be one of them, but..... it would be great if it did work.
One section of it tells about how she uses redworms (Eisenia fetida, specifically) to break down human waste. I haven't got all of the details fixed in my poor little A.D.D. brain yet, but it sort of sounds like it would work in a van or RV. I guess you could include some urine in it (enough to keep it moist), but w/o a bottom drain, it doesn't seem likely that you could include all that you would produce.
Redworms require more top surface area than other types of worms, so a rectangular container (like an 18-20 gallon Rubbermaid tote would be better than a 5-gallon bucket. The bedding material would be sawdust/leaves/compost (sawdust: regular woodworker type, not dust, not shavings, not varieties that resist breaking down). The material needs to be kept damp, not wet. They can apparently accept urine, but you can't drown them in it. If you separate the urine, you have to add water.
She said there is no odor, but she does use a tiny ('biscuit'???) fan, very low power. A goodly supply of redworms will break down a solid deposit in about 2 days in warmer weather; I think she means not freezing -- her insulated outdoor unit works all year in MA, but a bit slower. One thing that shocked her was that she kept checking the container for when to empty it, and the level took forever to reach that point, but she had more and more worms.
Around here (WA) redworms cost about $25/lb -- a one-time expense until you do something dumb, it sounds.
If ('IF') a regular heavy-duty Rubbermaid tote would hold a person's weight... maybe if you put a wooden platform all the way across the top to spread out the weight over the existing support, cut the hole and installed a regular toilet seat?
Has anyone ever tried anything like this?
And before all of the Constantly Fearful start yammering about disease, she has the results of independent testing. E. coli seems to be the first to disappear; if I understand properly, many bacteria are completely digested when they go through the worms' guts -- GONE. She lists the results of the tests.
One part that I'm not clear on is the usual one- or two-year safety breakdown time that is mentioned in The Humanure Handbook by Joseph Jenkins. OTOH, if you aren't harboring anything nasty (infectious diseases like cholera, typhoid or rotovirus) except for the usual intestinal bacteria, what would be the problem? And I'm not sure about the worms staying in the container -- would they try to migrate or something?
I'm going to condense the information and give it a try, I think. I've tried things that don't work -- and this might be one of them, but..... it would be great if it did work.