You folks never cease to amaze me with links and stuff. Thanks!
JanaBanana said:I have been in remote areas and lo and behold, right on the trail is a f*cking human turd! It is because of morons like this that all the rules exist. How hard is it to step off the trail a ways, dig a hole with a stick, do the business and then cover it up?
"No household waste" means do not bring your garbage from house to throw in there. Bags of poop from camping should be fine. I throw a handful of wood chips in with the poop as well to help with moisture and small control.So I was watching them videos and heard a couple of people say, "I just poop into two bags and put them in the garbage," and I thought: Oh, a second bag, apparently that works. (I'm sure I missed something, but...) Came to this farm, did for a couple of days, went to throw something in the trash and, of course, was knocked out by the smell.
Dug 'em out, bagged 'em up, and went looking for that "public dumpster" the original poop baggers' mentioned, found one out in front a visitors center by the highway where the trucks parked, tossed the bag in -- then saw a sign saying, "No household waste or we revoke your birth day, sincerely: The State of Maine." Whoops.
So I tried to get that out, but you know what? It was pretty deep. So knocked on the back door -- the visitors center being closed for Covid, of course -- and said, "I threw a bag of crap in there, should I get it out?" And the guy said, "Nah, just don't do it again."
I wonder what he said when he opened that dumpster later.
Oh, well.
But are people really just pooping in bags and throwing them in dumpsters? I'm finding that hard to believe. Maybe out west, but it's a dicey proposition here, my friends. I'm back to the sawdust and grateful for the lesson.
You have provided the most interesting answer! For you've explained that the state has regulated that the best thing to do is bag it and head for the dumpster. I also mix both poo and pee with white vinegar where I do them (separately), resulting in no bad smell from either.My 98 year old mother in law lives in an assisted living facility. This place is licensed and regulated by the state. Nothing is too insignificant to not be covered by at least one regulation.
Walter is the maintenance guy. He constantly battles paper towels and flushable wipes. If any diapers were flushed he would know. He has never complained to me about diapers or the flat pads used on beds and chairs.
The adult diapers get folded up with the poop, wiping materials, and gloves usually inside a flat pad. Then it goes in the trash bag in the bathroom. That goes to the big trash bag when the little ones get emptied. Finally the big bag goes in the dumpster along with food waste and all other trash.
Nobody kneels before the toilet rinsing out diapers.
I'm saving money on rent the same way.I'm cutting back on the use of plastic bags for environmental reason. Just **** right in the dumpster.
I'm afraid to look at that! I do the best I can wherever I can.Virtually every surface in the public is covered with fecal contaminates. That should be a much bigger concern than odor. If you don't smell it or see it it doesn't exist?
Why would the idea of doodoo compacted and buried in a dump be worse than all that crap going into the water system, streams, lakes, oceans...which is far greater health threat than buried. You do realize the the doodie isn't going anywhere once in the landfill... its compacted and buried...unlike flowing from a sewage "treatment" plant and then released back into the waters.. talk about crap going everywhere!
I am always amazed at how many people live in a bubble.... I just wish they would stay there.
I guess you could always crap on a paper plate then put it on the campfire..
Here is a link to a nice little diagram from the EPA explaining what happens to sewage from the toilet.
https://www3.epa.gov/npdes/pubs/centralized_brochure.pdf
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