I've made a couple of these and they are great cheap toilet for the DIY'er. The wheels mean that it is easier to move a bin full of crap around. On the other hand, one of the design issues is that a full wheelie bin this size is very heavy and difficult to maneuver in a small tight space (which is generally where they are). So not recommended for the average person to have to move a full bin this size- you don't want any bins tipping over which can happen as they are so tall and top heavy!! Options are to only fill the bin to 2/3 the volume or you can get wheelie bins in smaller sizes, but the trade off is that they will fill quicker. The smaller bins will also benefit setups where you have height restrictions and cannot install the bigger bins. You need to think about the access to the bin under the pedestal and getting the bin to where it will compost (needs 6-10 months as mentioned) while another one is being used. An addition to this model is installing a fan in the upper side or top of the bin and associated piping to reduce smells and increase air circulation to help the composting process and also a urine diverting seat and associated piping will greatly reduce bad odors! This has been revolutionary in our DIY composting toilet journey- installing a urine diverting seat. No more stinking toilet smells once you divert/ remove the urine from the pile- it's amazing!! If you go with peeing in the main chamber, be mindful of where you attach the urine drain as when you move the bin fittings can be easily snapped and in my experience are usually a point of leakage so seal them well! But I can't recommend enough diverting the urine from the pile in the first place. You also want to have the installation of the urine drain easy to access for cleaning and maintenance. A few tips.... .
Yup. 96 gallon Toters are quite heavy when full. Their advantage is large diameter wheels. As long as the ground is hard and flat, they're pretty easy to move. If not, I make a path with corrugated corrugated cardboard or old fence boards. If you don't have a lot of material, you can make two 6-foot sections and advance by moving one section at a time.
Can you show us the type of toilet installed and how it connects to the wheelie bin downpipe please. Also in another video you showed how to connect a downpipe to help further wick the smells away please
Thanks I was looking for a Swedish model composting toilet. Been around for hundreds of years. Built in and permanent It needs height and a slope down one story to a door at the bottom for clean out once a year. The slope is "stepped" and the steps slope downward too. This allows the material to turn as it makes it's way to the bottom clean out. I'd like the proper degree of slope. Don't want to get plugged up because it was not steep enough and don't want it too steep either. It needs the time to fall and turn as it composts. Liquid drains out the bottom. It needs a high pipe to/through the roof that controls the smell with the natural up-draft that is created. This requires a tight lid so you're not losing the heat of the home. Air intake vents in the clean out door. I'm building with superadobe and it doesn't get much simpler than that. A hole in the floor would work and be healthy for you but I like the height of a toilet these days. Did you know "squatting" is the natural way to go? Your bowel hole opens fully and operates properly when squatted and only half works on a toilet. It leads to problems later in life. Don't ask me how I know. IBS anyone? How about a "leaky" hole? And it's not the one in the floor! When I was young I was shown a hole in the floor as the toilet and told the people were substandard, ... little did I know that I was the substandard one. Nothing natural and organic was good enough for this idiot eh? Not when it can be "New And Improved", for profit that is. I've since discovered that profit is a lie and like all lies needs the constant expenditure of time and energy to exist. Your time and energy. Right Santa? Profit is the method used to concentrate the abundance of "our" world into the hands and control of the few, the elite, the entitled, and the great winners in a perverted world of win/lose. This hoarded abundance is then used to control and direct a population of brainwashed "for profit" economic slaves who only understand, worship, and practice the childish win/lose as civilised. Don't ask me how I know, .... Man, everything that's wrong with me was beaten into me as a child under constant threat of being wrong, making a mistake, failing, and being a filthy loser. The academic win/lose eh? The win/lose, just a disrespectful and childish understanding of our live/die life. Except you don't die silly! You just don't have an opinion that matters and your abilities MUST benefit the winners. I'm working on the Ways of the Win/Win and am happy knowing the future people will know that the work and the Ways of the Win/Win was born of their filth and failure, (that would be ME!) and not their wisdom or honour. The poor perverted people of the win/lose have no wisdom or honour. Sad but true. I know this because I once thought I had a little honour. Never even thought I was wise and still don't. I'm just doing a dirty job that must be done. You know, asking why people allow their own children to be born owing a debt of lies and corruption called "eternal growth and profit". Why do we allow our children to be born slaves? Easily denied eh? specially by the "free". lol, lol, lol, ... Then there's the paradigm shift from "for profit", to, "Not For Profit". A community owned Economic Win/Win based in time alone, backed by the abundance of "our" world and built on a foundation of Truth and Reality. Oh yeah, ... the paradigm shift is given freely and unconditionally. That alone makes it "suspect" eh? Then there's the cowards who drool "Commie". lol Sorry for using your post to plant these seeds of Win/Win, ... but I learned from the win/lose and don't play fair! Have a great one.
It seems you have a good overview of the political nature of man. I view the win/lose competition to be a great hobbling of mankind. I would like to discuss these topics further and in more detail at a later date. Regarding compost toilet. This video showed a half pipe in each corner of rolly bin. Are they meant to have free air flow or forced air flow or is static air sufficient?
Thanks a lot. I live in a zone that need to be preserve. But careless people do not know how to do it. Im working in a ecology proyect. But luck o money stop me. Now I will process with you kindness work. God bless you.
Great topic!! Thanks for posting! But it is a compost bin not a toilet. 😁 Show us your toilet Geoff 🙏💩 And do you add greens? I use the Joe Jenkins way.
I feel like there was a whole section of this video missing? It went from placing a drainage layer to adding sawdust to suddenly closing the lid and leaving for 10months. No in between of explaining how the actual toilet works and the inside toilet etc? Would love to learn all that bit too....can you make another more detailed version for us green learners pleasw:0)
Compost _toilet,_ (this is a bin ! for storage - it is is the next step in the process) ideally one of those toilets that separate urin and the feces or much more sawdust would be needed. They have them in campers (there is a lever and if you pull it, the whole in the back opens for number 2. If it is pee only it runs into an always open hole into the canister for urin, that can be emptied separately. And every shit must be covered by enough saw dust / wood chips that it will not stink (again people with nice campers use them). When the container for the solids is full they empty that (I think camping grounds handle that), or one would emty the content in the bin like the one model that Geoff showed. Then they put the container back and people can use the compost toilet again (maybe giving some sawdust on the bottom as well so the walls inside do not get dirty.
It's, in It's simplest form, an outhouse. You build a box to set on that is placed over top the delivery pipe. You keep fresh sawdust in the same space. When you're done "depositing" you "flush" with a can or two of fresh sawdust. Whe. The wheely bin is full is how you know to move/exchange it. The beauty is, the sawdust added each time eliminates/blocks the odor. (I don't expect you to believe that, but it's true). The tricky part is realizing that you need a toilet space with a floor elevated to at least the height of the wheely bin. Hope this helps.
@@jasonb9652 There are lots of other humanure videos to answer questions about The details of the filling process. This video was about building this kind of system.
If you’re new to this and not elderly, disabled or in very cold climates... the simplest toilet is a tiny garden shed that isn’t tightly built, built on top of a platform made from pallets screwed to posts on concrete footings. Put this near your front door, ideally in a spot that won’t get sun all day in summer. Line the composting chamber with black poly, and mound up soil or gravel as a base to keep surface runoff away from seeping through the bottom of your heap. Better than sawdust is rotted wood duff, but this is harder to find.
Don’t pee on the heap unless necessary. If you only have to go number one, you need to use a separate (much simpler) toilet that goes to a large camper plastic bag, whatever one calls those things. Put this in the same outhouse.
For a better water tight thread through the bin for the ball valve. Go to reece irrigation and get a 20mm water tank adaptor. They screw together either side and clamp against the bin with water tight rubber flange either side.
Wow thats very tempting, a wheelie bin compost dunny that costs maybe 100 bucks per year or a council approved aerated dunny with an annualised cost of about 1500.
My brother Has a similar system without the air pipes. He uses black soldier fly larva which do a great job. You never see the adult flies Or smell much of anything.
I suggest have another smaller pipe way going upwards, or a ''crossroad'' of the main pipe at the top. The smell would go out there also have proper ventilation. An better solution to this is one with a crank, soon as you are done, crank it so it mixes up with the compost material. Another old solution but effective if made properly. Look it up.
Love it, looks a lot easier to care for instead of a 5 gallon bucket. But... convince my local county to change the codes first so they don't make me tear it apart. Our society is all about "false Green"--they'd never allow natural poop to go where it's supposed to and cycle into the ground outside of expensive dug up septic leech systems. They're all talk and no real practical leadership-type action. We have a septic... but if it ever goes bad I'm in no hurry to fix it cause I know how to naturally deal with this stuff like nature does(and Geoff teaches). I'd just never be able to sell my home until I fixed our septic if it broke.
Thank you! Currently the only waste we produce in my house is my dogs & ours manure. I was looking for the next step, so im changing my bathroom to dry one, and i was thinking on putting a biodigestor, so probably im going to place this one, and the other 6months will gas them... Thank you for all the information
Providing the slots are not obstructed and they're less than 24 inches apart, the half-pipes don't need pressurized air to work. However, a pulse of air every half hour will definitely speed up decomposition.
May I ask how you vent this kind of compost toilet? Also wondering how you keep the "delivery pipe" clean. Would be great if you had a link to the plans for this in greater detail. Is that possible. Many thanks!
People commonly repurpose 5 or 6 gallon buckets, bottoms cut out, as a drop-pipe. BUT…since this bin has a drain for liquids, he could technically just flush a regular toilet, & have the normal waste pipe feed into the top of the bin, or top side of the bin (referrence: “Solviva” book by Anna Eddy). As long as the compost media is loose enuf, to allow fluids fast-passage to the bottom drain, the solids, + worms, do the work at the top of the compost media pile. Fluids out the drain, can be routed right to the garden via a slotted or perforated drain pipe, under the surface (out of sight)-gardens love the extra nitrogen. At the Solviva farm, they actually built a double chamber compost box at least 8’ h. X 2’x4’, insulated well against cold winters, w/a divider down the middle. & they added worms to the top of the pile in the chambers. Their old, high-flush toilet waste pipe was rerouted to the 1st chamber. It worked great, even tho they had some weekend seminars with up to 30 (?) or so people using that toilet, it never had a problem. At 1 year, upon checking (thinking surely they’d need to swab sides), the 1st chamber was doing great, no need to swap chambers! But that toilet was in there upstairs. Bins & tall compost chambers don’t work as well if there’s only a low crawlspace, & of course, no way, if house is on-slab. One unit made in Africa, has an outside bin; waste lands on a big acme screw, which turns each time the toilet seat lid is opened or shut, carrying solids out to the exterior chamber, where worms compost it, & its lid gives access for cleaning out the compost. Worms can help that compost faster too. Worms abate the coliform bacteria Code officials worry about. I think this is the one-looking at the page, it’s the one on the left…waterless, picture shows a diagram of it. www.esan.co.za/off-grid-sanitation-solutions/
@@Chimonger1 Thank you for responding. I'm not having any luck finding the diagram of which you speak. Would you mind clarifying how I can find that on the link you've sent me? Many thanks!
im curing why you suggest directing the surplus liquid to a gravel trench or reed bed. cant you use it to fertilize trees/veg garden? if so, what dilution ratio should be used? same as urine?
I got to say that's not only humanure for me Since I started doing it, my physical, mental and spiritual health inproved a lot. I recovered from a very hard and difficult to cure disease. Because of this, I could start doing in my life and invent many new things that I could not before due to poor health and poor general condition. Beacause of this, I was able to start working a lot physically and intellectually. I also feel better spritually- happier and freer to do good and generally as me and I can also give this happiness to others. The very sad thing is that people do not want to see that the changes that have taken place are the results of working towards humanure.
So, that hose thing... it's ok just to drain that out into the open? If i'm not missing something, would that be urine and "poop juice" that's being drained?? Thanks very much for the information, I'm hoping to build one of these.
Without sounding disgusting or cruel, can you add compost worms? Living in the suburbs what would you do with the liquid, my neighbour is down hill from me, i wouldn't be asking if I didn't like him.
I was looking at a wormery site yesterday and they had wormeries for pet poo, so I assume yes? The important thing about humanure, though, is that pathogens can last for (or so I've read) about two years, so you shouldn't really use them before that, and it would just be safer in general not to use them around salads, where the bit you eat is in contact with the humanure. As for the urine, it would be better in the suburbs to separate urine from solids. Urine is clean and sterile when it's fresh, as long as you don't have a urine infection, but it quickly turns into a breeding ground for microbes if you don't use it quickly, be that on a compost heap or mixed with water as a fertiliser.
Yes, I just found this video where a guy is talking about combining a composting toilet with worms and with bokashi composting all in one system. No idea if it's a good system though, but it seems to work for him. ua-cam.com/video/L1H7Wb35isw/v-deo.html
i have just started one like this an i use turkey nest instead of saw dust i am adding worms to help brake it down .i am hoping the nest materal will work better than saw dust as it is allready acataved no smale so fare
Александр Костин after you are doing pooping or peeing I’d suggest pouring in a few cups of sawdust. You want to cover your poop with it so there’s no flies trying to get to it.
Does anybody know if tree/bark chippings would be ok. I fear all the saw dust from saw mills etc will be contaminated with rot preventing chemicals. Any thoughts?
How many bins do people use? I have six bins, live with my husband and four dogs and am constantly running out of space… been doing this for two years and had to transfer unfinished compost into big bags on the land… any help appreciated!
We are in process of building one that should make Mr. Lawton proud. Question, does sawdust have to be added after every solid use, or just put the 20L sawdust on the bottom as described in the video?
Having visited Zaytuna farm I can tell you that you need to add sawdust or whatever after each deposit. Basically if you don't cover what you did then it will smell.
It’s really great design! ….except it only works for bathrooms that are up off ground high enough to give clearance to put the bin underneath to catch the waste.
@@katesaffin4148 Try getting ahold of a copy of book, “Solviva” by Anna Eddy (sp?) She invented a multi-bucket potty that uses a big bin full of loose mulch & worms. As each bucket is filled with wastes+ cover material, it gets overturned onto the mulch + worms, & left there. By the time the last of maybe 10 buckets gets turned over onto the mulch, the 1st bucket has been nicely cleaned out by the worms. Worms abate the disease-causing bacteria that permitting agents worry so much about. If you used a wheelie bin as a worm compost container, you could actually adapt that to use for a flush-toilet, too….(also see Solviva’s 2nd system).
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 down some small bags of kitchen waste would that work in your opinion?or would the mixture be too dry? I could possibly lead the urine down into the same bucket via a separate pipe system. even if it sounds silly. but I think that the bags will be dumped in a waste shaft with a 12v ventilation installed and the urinary system will be fitted with a valve. I expect it will be both odor-free and easy to clean
What happens if the evacuation of the human processed food is explosive? If the thing gets on all the walls of the bin, will it disapear with the compost?
What do the pipes (half pipes) in the corners do? I see that they help with air and ventilation but they are under the lid, so is there air in the pipes but not much air flow? How does this help? Does it help air get down under the level the bin is filled to? I guess you're adding wood chips every time you make a deposit?
I made some research. They permit all the gases to get up the delivery pipe, and you have a chimney with a ventilator just above the pipe. Like this you catch the gases before they escape the toilet. The chimney is on the toilet, above the pipe.
That's the shizzzzzz! ;- ) and even the pizzzz! Seriously, that is cool, and so simple. But, you did not really show us the full process. The bin you showed us at the end did not have a hole in the top. How did it get there. Can you do a full video that includes the complete process? And you illustrate the "cleaning process". I like the idea that this can be in the room underneath the toilet. I've seen huge composting toilets at campgrounds and they did not smell at all. Currently my toilet has a leak and I am wasting water until I get it fixed, so this would be much cheaper and simpler.
Lol just thinking how to explain it made me laugh. Visualize your ass seen from inside the bin. connect a tube between the 2 and a seat. Gravity should do the rest. If you don't like smells put a side tube on the main tube with a fan. You kinda need a height difference for this system to work. So with a wheelie bin you'd need at least 3.5 to 4 m for it to be comfortable From you anus to bottom would be around 2 m and then you need headspace.
The half pipes in the corners of the bin, do they need ambient air flow, forced air flow, or is static air pocket sufficient to induce good composting?
Providing the slots are not obstructed and they're less than 24 inches apart, the half-pipes don't need pressurized air to work. However, a pulse of air every half hour will definitely speed up decomposition.
Um trying to understand how the delivery pipe hooks into the toilet… very new to composting type systems and trying to figure out how to implement in my off grid journey! Any advice would be appreciated
Can you use the round American style plastic garbage cans about 84cm tall in the place of the wheeled bins? I'm thinking about building a outhouse, and worried about the height requirements. If I used the wheeled bin I'd have to build the outhouse 1.2 meters + off the ground on a dirt mound? I know it have to be emptied more often, than if not. Thank you.
it looks like the white has a hole while in place and filling, the original lid will be flipped out of the way. After full, you would move to allow to sit and 'compost' for the timeframe mentioned, months - during that time, the white lid would affix to the next wheelie bin and the filled one would just close the original lid.
I am wondering, is it fine to dig a hole and make the humanure in there? On a property, a designated place for this purpose. It's my dream to build that for myself in a sustainable home, in the future. I imagine in a deep hole manure and food waste will still become into a fertilizer, with time.
If you strictly keep urine and feces apart then probably yes.. But if the feces are in a hole in the soil and it rains bacteria can wash down into the groundwater and end up in peoples drinking water. So: if you live in a very dry place where people dont drink the groundwater yes you can do that if you put the urine in a seperate place. It is kind of important though to have the feces sit in a closed bucket for a few months so the content heats up in the sun and the bacteria die. Be careful and good luck
Is it not a problem that the "surplus liquid" is not just sterile urine, but urine that has gone through shit? What are the requirements for the gravel trench to make sure that the black water coming out of the system isn't unsafe?
Its gone through shit+several layers of compost and wood chips/sawdust with no solids coming through with all of the filtering. My understanding is that health wise and regulation wise its not much worse than a dirtier (i.e. kitchen) grey water system, meaning yea you'd want the reed bed or otherwise ensure that the water never comes up out over the surface of the gravel trench and instead just sinks down
This is the video I relied on to start making humanure, but two years later, I’ve got a big issue. The bins just aren’t composting and the taps are clogged so I can’t get rid of all the liquid. We are a family of two adults and 4 dogs but only put a bit of their poo from the patio, when they poo on the land, I don’t pick it up. We have six wheelie bins, and I’m at a point where I’ve had to transfer unfinished poo compost into big white bags because I need to make space for new poop coming in. Any suggestions? Anybody else have sissies and are stuck in a really bad position now? We have no more space for more bins and it seems silly to do that anyways since I’m trying to make this work, not end up with 100 bins on my land with nothing composting ever… any help appreciated!
Hi there, I live in a place that unfortunately is forbidden because the neighbors made and gave a lot of flys. Whether it's on the covered part of my backyard or inside the house, is there any way to compose my poop in a closed/sealed box? What would you have to do? Put extra bacterias? Put a humidifier in it? - A oxygenator? Helppp God bless u guys ❤️🙏🏼
Im thinking of making this for our ne toilet area, i am having trouble finding the pipe that goes from the actual seat to the bin, can anyone help me with this. tia.
Why does this method work without a separate compost pile? I know it doesn't work inside 5-gallon buckets because there isn't enough mass to create the heat necessary to destroy the pathogens. How much mass do you need for hot composting to happen? And how does the plastic of the wheelie bin handle that heat?
This would be considered slow composting as you adding mass slowly to it and then letting it break down over about 10 months. So it wouldn't generate much heat. The initial chips just help kick start the system
Hey Geoof, thanks for the video, looks great! Doesn't the humanure require air to compost in the proper way? Will stinky air get out of the toilet with such a system?
I guess the toilet bowl incl. urine separation (if it has that) and the exhaust chimney is just not covered in this video. Judging from compost toilet designs frequently used in campervans, an exhaust chimney is a long tube extending behind and up over the toilet, going through the outer wall or roof. It is often supported with an extraction vent and removes any smells by creating a slight underpressure in the toilet bowl.
Dunno if it has been asked before, but about how long does it take to fill up one of those homemade toilets. Also, is that just for solid waste or solid and liquid?
so you need to make more than one bin then when one fills up you switch it with a new one let sit for 10 months then empty and put back in line for refill? even if you make more than a couple its still cheaper than the others at 2000. usd
I believe human waste is a valuable resource that should be used for this purpose. However, most amateurs are far too lax with safety precautions. My opinion as someone who has studied soil, composting and biochemistry.
Well, Joe Jenkins, author of Humanure Handbook, recomends the use of bucket toilets that from time to time are discarded in larger compost bins enveloped with a thick layer (25cm to 30cm, 10 inches to a foot) of hay or straw. The idea is to compost the human excrements via thermophilic process (if that makes sense) and says that, in a compost bin that is able to retain temperatures over 55 degrees celcius, it needs only a week or so to kill all or the majority of the pathogens. In a bin that don't use thermophilic process, it will take something around 2 years to eliminate the pathogens. So, my question is: do you agree with him? Can we safely use your (or his) method to build soil in a garden?
Geoff uses this only under tree crops and stuff that wont touch it, stuff that generally wont get harvested for a couple weeks after application anyway. This process, interestingly enough, is in line with EPA regulations in the US. IF you wanted to make this totally safe for all crops, you would do it like he does for maybe 6 months, then dump it into a at least 4X4 ft cube covered with some more carbon material and either let it sit for about another year or make absolute sure the whole thing gets to temperature for over a week like Joe Jenkins does. That's probably the best balance between full versatile use, safety, and minimal handling of buckets and poop.
I can't understand - if you should keep the bin locked for 6 to 10 months - where you should store you waste in this period? It seems you should have more bins.
Yes, you'd need more bins. People using IBC containers for collection also have several of these. Human solid excrement is ca. 100 kg/(person×year), so minus drying and plus sawdust maybe 120 l. So get two such 250 l bins for every two people using the system. One to collect the waste, one to compost it.
I've made a couple of these and they are great cheap toilet for the DIY'er. The wheels mean that it is easier to move a bin full of crap around. On the other hand, one of the design issues is that a full wheelie bin this size is very heavy and difficult to maneuver in a small tight space (which is generally where they are). So not recommended for the average person to have to move a full bin this size- you don't want any bins tipping over which can happen as they are so tall and top heavy!! Options are to only fill the bin to 2/3 the volume or you can get wheelie bins in smaller sizes, but the trade off is that they will fill quicker. The smaller bins will also benefit setups where you have height restrictions and cannot install the bigger bins. You need to think about the access to the bin under the pedestal and getting the bin to where it will compost (needs 6-10 months as mentioned) while another one is being used. An addition to this model is installing a fan in the upper side or top of the bin and associated piping to reduce smells and increase air circulation to help the composting process and also a urine diverting seat and associated piping will greatly reduce bad odors! This has been revolutionary in our DIY composting toilet journey- installing a urine diverting seat. No more stinking toilet smells once you divert/ remove the urine from the pile- it's amazing!! If you go with peeing in the main chamber, be mindful of where you attach the urine drain as when you move the bin fittings can be easily snapped and in my experience are usually a point of leakage so seal them well! But I can't recommend enough diverting the urine from the pile in the first place. You also want to have the installation of the urine drain easy to access for cleaning and maintenance. A few tips....
.
Excellent tips, thank you!
Yup. 96 gallon Toters are quite heavy when full. Their advantage is large diameter wheels. As long as the ground is hard and flat, they're pretty easy to move. If not, I make a path with corrugated corrugated cardboard or old fence boards. If you don't have a lot of material, you can make two 6-foot sections and advance by moving one section at a time.
Excellent tips, thank you.
Geoff is the Chuck Norris of permaculture.
Rumor has it that Chuck Norris doesn't need a toilet
He can hold his breath for 9 months
Oh my Lord! How simple! I knew there was a better way! And this system is going to save me a lot of money! Thank you!
India needs about a billion of those
China as well!
the third world in general needs these
People all over the world would benefit from this!
Everyone needs this
@@matej9255 And the USA lol
Can you show us the type of toilet installed and how it connects to the wheelie bin downpipe please. Also in another video you showed how to connect a downpipe to help further wick the smells away please
My first thought was, " how do I perch on top to crap in it"?
Do the gargoyle stance of course
Bury it in the ground and squat 😂
Like a birb
My last thought was “he’s getting real intimate with that humanure there”.
Thanks
I was looking for a Swedish model composting toilet. Been around for hundreds of years. Built in and permanent
It needs height and a slope down one story to a door at the bottom for clean out once a year.
The slope is "stepped" and the steps slope downward too. This allows the material to turn as it makes it's way to the bottom clean out.
I'd like the proper degree of slope. Don't want to get plugged up because it was not steep enough and don't want it too steep either. It needs the time to fall and turn as it composts.
Liquid drains out the bottom.
It needs a high pipe to/through the roof that controls the smell with the natural up-draft that is created. This requires a tight lid so you're not losing the heat of the home. Air intake vents in the clean out door.
I'm building with superadobe and it doesn't get much simpler than that.
A hole in the floor would work and be healthy for you but I like the height of a toilet these days.
Did you know "squatting" is the natural way to go?
Your bowel hole opens fully and operates properly when squatted and only half works on a toilet. It leads to problems later in life. Don't ask me how I know.
IBS anyone? How about a "leaky" hole? And it's not the one in the floor!
When I was young I was shown a hole in the floor as the toilet and told the people were substandard, ... little did I know that I was the substandard one.
Nothing natural and organic was good enough for this idiot eh? Not when it can be "New And Improved", for profit that is.
I've since discovered that profit is a lie and like all lies needs the constant expenditure of time and energy to exist. Your time and energy. Right Santa?
Profit is the method used to concentrate the abundance of "our" world into the hands and control of the few, the elite, the entitled, and the great winners in a perverted world of win/lose.
This hoarded abundance is then used to control and direct a population of brainwashed "for profit" economic slaves who only understand, worship, and practice the childish win/lose as civilised.
Don't ask me how I know, ....
Man, everything that's wrong with me was beaten into me as a child under constant threat of being wrong, making a mistake, failing, and being a filthy loser. The academic win/lose eh?
The win/lose, just a disrespectful and childish understanding of our live/die life.
Except you don't die silly! You just don't have an opinion that matters and your abilities MUST benefit the winners.
I'm working on the Ways of the Win/Win and am happy knowing the future people will know that the work and the Ways of the Win/Win was born of their filth and failure, (that would be ME!) and not their wisdom or honour. The poor perverted people of the win/lose have no wisdom or honour. Sad but true.
I know this because I once thought I had a little honour. Never even thought I was wise and still don't. I'm just doing a dirty job that must be done.
You know, asking why people allow their own children to be born owing a debt of lies and corruption called "eternal growth and profit".
Why do we allow our children to be born slaves?
Easily denied eh? specially by the "free". lol, lol, lol, ...
Then there's the paradigm shift from "for profit", to, "Not For Profit".
A community owned Economic Win/Win based in time alone, backed by the abundance of "our" world and built on a foundation of Truth and Reality. Oh yeah, ... the paradigm shift is given freely and unconditionally. That alone makes it "suspect" eh? Then there's the cowards who drool "Commie". lol
Sorry for using your post to plant these seeds of Win/Win, ... but I learned from the win/lose and don't play fair!
Have a great one.
This was how to build a shitter not talk about it
@@mark-goldenrod Oh,oh, some idiot was coloring outside the lines again! And of course, another idiot has to point it put.
Turds and wee, along with a little paper, move along quite nicely at about 16.5mm per meters fall in a 100mm pipe.
It seems you have a good overview of the political nature of man. I view the win/lose competition to be a great hobbling of mankind. I would like to discuss these topics further and in more detail at a later date. Regarding compost toilet. This video showed a half pipe in each corner of rolly bin. Are they meant to have free air flow or forced air flow or is static air sufficient?
where can i find more info about this swedish model composting toilet?
That could be any of many plant materials, not just sawdust. Dry grass, sugarcane bagasse, cornstalks, rice hulls...
Thanks a lot. I live in a zone that need to be preserve. But careless people do not know how to do it. Im working in a ecology proyect. But luck o money stop me. Now I will process with you kindness work. God bless you.
Great topic!! Thanks for posting!
But it is a compost bin not a toilet. 😁 Show us your toilet Geoff 🙏💩 And do you add greens? I use the Joe Jenkins way.
I feel like there was a whole section of this video missing? It went from placing a drainage layer to adding sawdust to suddenly closing the lid and leaving for 10months. No in between of explaining how the actual toilet works and the inside toilet etc? Would love to learn all that bit too....can you make another more detailed version for us green learners pleasw:0)
Compost _toilet,_ (this is a bin ! for storage - it is is the next step in the process) ideally one of those toilets that separate urin and the feces or much more sawdust would be needed. They have them in campers (there is a lever and if you pull it, the whole in the back opens for number 2. If it is pee only it runs into an always open hole into the canister for urin, that can be emptied separately. And every shit must be covered by enough saw dust / wood chips that it will not stink (again people with nice campers use them).
When the container for the solids is full they empty that (I think camping grounds handle that), or one would emty the content in the bin like the one model that Geoff showed. Then they put the container back and people can use the compost toilet again (maybe giving some sawdust on the bottom as well so the walls inside do not get dirty.
Agreed. Needs so much more information. When to swap? How to store when full? How to handle smells?
It's, in It's simplest form, an outhouse. You build a box to set on that is placed over top the delivery pipe. You keep fresh sawdust in the same space. When you're done "depositing" you "flush" with a can or two of fresh sawdust. Whe. The wheely bin is full is how you know to move/exchange it. The beauty is, the sawdust added each time eliminates/blocks the odor. (I don't expect you to believe that, but it's true). The tricky part is realizing that you need a toilet space with a floor elevated to at least the height of the wheely bin. Hope this helps.
@@jasonb9652 There are lots of other humanure videos to answer questions about The details of the filling process. This video was about building this kind of system.
Look up the humanure handbook
If you’re new to this and not elderly, disabled or in very cold climates... the simplest toilet is a tiny garden shed that isn’t tightly built, built on top of a platform made from pallets screwed to posts on concrete footings. Put this near your front door, ideally in a spot that won’t get sun all day in summer. Line the composting chamber with black poly, and mound up soil or gravel as a base to keep surface runoff away from seeping through the bottom of your heap. Better than sawdust is rotted wood duff, but this is harder to find.
Don’t pee on the heap unless necessary. If you only have to go number one, you need to use a separate (much simpler) toilet that goes to a large camper plastic bag, whatever one calls those things. Put this in the same outhouse.
You want it enclosed in a shed for cold drafts in the middle of the night.
why do you not recommend peeing on the heap?@@przybyla420
For a better water tight thread through the bin for the ball valve. Go to reece irrigation and get a 20mm water tank adaptor. They screw together either side and clamp against the bin with water tight rubber flange either side.
This is so good.. Accessible... Affordable... Ethical... Thank you mate!
That's a garden hose you don't want to drink from
High in protein
I would like to see the actual toilet inside the house...Is it just like a long drop? Do you keep adding sawdust?
You add sawdust after every use until you have covered it so it has no smell. Sawdust is "flushing" basically.
Hang around as long as you like.. hey😆
Wow thats very tempting, a wheelie bin compost dunny that costs maybe 100 bucks per year or a council approved aerated dunny with an annualised cost of about 1500.
My brother Has a similar system without the air pipes. He uses black soldier fly larva which do a great job. You never see the adult flies Or smell much of anything.
Excellent, Geoff. Best I've seen using humanure.
Awsome. I totally agree with your point that this is the most ethical way to handle our waste.
Excellent. I use a bucket, old used compost for soak and a dalek composter for rendering the output.
Wish this was legal everywhere!
G'day mate, this is a really good idea I'm going to use this on my farm. Thanks.
Not sure where you live but I have a feeling you may need to do this on the down low to keep from having trouble with regulatory agencies.
when the lid is closed wouldn't that Block air ventalation and thus lead to anaerobic decomposition that we are trying to avoid?
I suggest have another smaller pipe way going upwards, or a ''crossroad'' of the main pipe at the top. The smell would go out there also have proper ventilation.
An better solution to this is one with a crank, soon as you are done, crank it so it mixes up with the compost material. Another old solution but effective if made properly. Look it up.
Love it, looks a lot easier to care for instead of a 5 gallon bucket. But... convince my local county to change the codes first so they don't make me tear it apart. Our society is all about "false Green"--they'd never allow natural poop to go where it's supposed to and cycle into the ground outside of expensive dug up septic leech systems. They're all talk and no real practical leadership-type action.
We have a septic... but if it ever goes bad I'm in no hurry to fix it cause I know how to naturally deal with this stuff like nature does(and Geoff teaches). I'd just never be able to sell my home until I fixed our septic if it broke.
droptozro, right!? I hear ya!
You can keep your normie toilet, just don’t use it and use a compost toilet anyways… wtf?
Thank you! Currently the only waste we produce in my house is my dogs & ours manure. I was looking for the next step, so im changing my bathroom to dry one, and i was thinking on putting a biodigestor, so probably im going to place this one, and the other 6months will gas them... Thank you for all the information
Worm medicine for pets is eliminated in their poop. It's non selective, so it will kill all worms in the soil.
Great information and nice presentation, thank you for sharing.
Truly a good system.
Interesting idea...just wondering if enough oxidation is coming inside the container ...the tubes in the edges???
crimerk yep he says they’re for airation
Providing the slots are not obstructed and they're less than 24 inches apart, the half-pipes don't need pressurized air to work. However, a pulse of air every half hour will definitely speed up decomposition.
did not show this collectors relation to the toilet which has to be on the second floor ?
May I ask how you vent this kind of compost toilet? Also wondering how you keep the "delivery pipe" clean. Would be great if you had a link to the plans for this in greater detail. Is that possible. Many thanks!
There is a book "Humanure Handbook" that may have diagrams.
make delivery pipe big like 8 or 10" diameter and it wont' get anything on it.
People commonly repurpose 5 or 6 gallon buckets, bottoms cut out, as a drop-pipe.
BUT…since this bin has a drain for liquids, he could technically just flush a regular toilet, & have the normal waste pipe feed into the top of the bin, or top side of the bin (referrence: “Solviva” book by Anna Eddy).
As long as the compost media is loose enuf, to allow fluids fast-passage to the bottom drain, the solids, + worms, do the work at the top of the compost media pile.
Fluids out the drain, can be routed right to the garden via a slotted or perforated drain pipe, under the surface (out of sight)-gardens love the extra nitrogen.
At the Solviva farm, they actually built a double chamber compost box at least 8’ h. X 2’x4’, insulated well against cold winters, w/a divider down the middle.
& they added worms to the top of the pile in the chambers.
Their old, high-flush toilet waste pipe was rerouted to the 1st chamber.
It worked great, even tho they had some weekend seminars with up to 30 (?) or so people using that toilet, it never had a problem. At 1 year, upon checking (thinking surely they’d need to swab sides), the 1st chamber was doing great, no need to swap chambers!
But that toilet was in there upstairs. Bins & tall compost chambers don’t work as well if there’s only a low crawlspace, & of course, no way, if house is on-slab.
One unit made in Africa, has an outside bin; waste lands on a big acme screw, which turns each time the toilet seat lid is opened or shut, carrying solids out to the exterior chamber, where worms compost it, & its lid gives access for cleaning out the compost. Worms can help that compost faster too.
Worms abate the coliform bacteria Code officials worry about.
I think this is the one-looking at the page, it’s the one on the left…waterless, picture shows a diagram of it. www.esan.co.za/off-grid-sanitation-solutions/
@@Chimonger1 Thank you for responding. I'm not having any luck finding the diagram of which you speak. Would you mind clarifying how I can find that on the link you've sent me? Many thanks!
Thank you. I wish everyone that has a lg yard make one. Special in the So. West water shortages places.
Best I've ever seen!, cheers mate!
im curing why you suggest directing the surplus liquid to a gravel trench or reed bed. cant you use it to fertilize trees/veg garden? if so, what dilution ratio should be used? same as urine?
So are you separating the urine from this build or that’s what the drainage aspect is for?
Gave the video a like, but I do feel like there were a couple of steps left out of the explainer video...?
I got to say that's not only humanure for me Since I started doing it, my physical, mental and spiritual health inproved a lot. I recovered from a very hard and difficult to cure disease. Because of this, I could start doing in my life and invent many new things that I could not before due to poor health and poor general condition. Beacause of this, I was able to start working a lot physically and intellectually. I also feel better spritually- happier and freer to do good and generally as me and I can also give this happiness to others. The very sad thing is that people do not want to see that the changes that have taken place are the results of working towards humanure.
Could you also stick a bunch of pipes with holes in it like Johnson Su?
So, that hose thing... it's ok just to drain that out into the open? If i'm not missing something, would that be urine and "poop juice" that's being drained??
Thanks very much for the information, I'm hoping to build one of these.
I heard from someone who made one that he drained it into a bucket and dumped that on the compost heap.
Without sounding disgusting or cruel, can you add compost worms?
Living in the suburbs what would you do with the liquid, my neighbour is down hill from me, i wouldn't be asking if I didn't like him.
I didn't see if Geoff had a video on it but look up "Botanical cell sewage treatment" on Google. Might be helpful.
I was looking at a wormery site yesterday and they had wormeries for pet poo, so I assume yes? The important thing about humanure, though, is that pathogens can last for (or so I've read) about two years, so you shouldn't really use them before that, and it would just be safer in general not to use them around salads, where the bit you eat is in contact with the humanure.
As for the urine, it would be better in the suburbs to separate urine from solids. Urine is clean and sterile when it's fresh, as long as you don't have a urine infection, but it quickly turns into a breeding ground for microbes if you don't use it quickly, be that on a compost heap or mixed with water as a fertiliser.
Yes, I just found this video where a guy is talking about combining a composting toilet with worms and with bokashi composting all in one system. No idea if it's a good system though, but it seems to work for him. ua-cam.com/video/L1H7Wb35isw/v-deo.html
i have just started one like this an i use turkey nest instead of saw dust i am adding worms to help brake it down .i am hoping the nest materal will work better than saw dust as it is allready acataved
no smale so fare
@@ashleighcash4681 Thanks for the reply. My local council won't approve this where I live, I was just wondering. Do worms eat saw dust?
Hello, tell me please, do you pour more sawdust and how often?
Александр Костин after you are doing pooping or peeing I’d suggest pouring in a few cups of sawdust. You want to cover your poop with it so there’s no flies trying to get to it.
Add it each time it’s used, just a cup or a couple handfuls. It must be fine “browns” to have a lot of surface area to prevent anaerobic digestion.
Does anybody know if tree/bark chippings would be ok. I fear all the saw dust from saw mills etc will be contaminated with rot preventing chemicals. Any thoughts?
@@joejolly3430 Chemicals are not a major issue in compost, the process will break down anything from pesticides to fucking uranium
How many bins do people use? I have six bins, live with my husband and four dogs and am constantly running out of space… been doing this for two years and had to transfer unfinished compost into big bags on the land… any help appreciated!
GREAT MAN GEOFFF GOD SAVE BLESS YOU 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏PERMAKULTURE is the life👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
I'm thinking about doing something like this - but on a much larger scale.
Permaculture FTW! ✌
We are in process of building one that should make Mr. Lawton proud. Question, does sawdust have to be added after every solid use, or just put the 20L sawdust on the bottom as described in the video?
Having visited Zaytuna farm I can tell you that you need to add sawdust or whatever after each deposit. Basically if you don't cover what you did then it will smell.
@@eg6308I think the sawdust is more for the C/N ratio, not to stop any smell. The fan taks care of that.
Question. Why don't homes with indoor plumbing use the vented methane as a renewable heating and cooking source?
There is not a Good business
It’s really great design! ….except it only works for bathrooms that are up off ground high enough to give clearance to put the bin underneath to catch the waste.
Could work as a compost bin to empty smaller containers into
@@katesaffin4148 Try getting ahold of a copy of book, “Solviva” by Anna Eddy (sp?)
She invented a multi-bucket potty that uses a big bin full of loose mulch & worms.
As each bucket is filled with wastes+ cover material, it gets overturned onto the mulch + worms, & left there.
By the time the last of maybe 10 buckets gets turned over onto the mulch, the 1st bucket has been nicely cleaned out by the worms.
Worms abate the disease-causing bacteria that permitting agents worry so much about.
If you used a wheelie bin as a worm compost container, you could actually adapt that to use for a flush-toilet, too….(also see Solviva’s 2nd system).
Dog looks happy as
2011 post on Milkwood website, the exact same thing. They are also permies like us !
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 down some small bags of kitchen waste would that work in your opinion?or would the mixture be too dry? I could possibly lead the urine down into the same bucket via a separate pipe system. even if it sounds silly. but I think that the bags will be dumped in a waste shaft with a 12v ventilation installed and the urinary system will be fitted with a valve. I expect it will be both odor-free and easy to clean
Hey mate - how many bins would one need for 2 people? Surely one bin would be full every 2 months? So 6 bins? thanks
I'm curious howany of these bins you would need, given they have to decompose for 6-7 months?
@Ripeka Tango It will take at least 6 month to fill the next so 2 bins in all should do it - 3 for big family
we use these - four adults - 7 bins a year needed
What happens if the evacuation of the human processed food is explosive? If the thing gets on all the walls of the bin, will it disapear with the compost?
Great information, thank you for sharing.
Would you have any idea how to build compost toilets for a house please ???
What does the toilet look like, that has the pipe to it to the wheelie bin
Humanure... absolutely brilliant!
What do the pipes (half pipes) in the corners do? I see that they help with air and ventilation but they are under the lid, so is there air in the pipes but not much air flow? How does this help? Does it help air get down under the level the bin is filled to? I guess you're adding wood chips every time you make a deposit?
They help siphon liquids to the bottom of the bin where they can be emptied through the tap
I made some research. They permit all the gases to get up the delivery pipe, and you have a chimney with a ventilator just above the pipe. Like this you catch the gases before they escape the toilet. The chimney is on the toilet, above the pipe.
Hi Geoff. It been a really long time since "hearing " from you. Excellent Video.
That's the shizzzzzz! ;- ) and even the pizzzz!
Seriously, that is cool, and so simple.
But, you did not really show us the full process.
The bin you showed us at the end did not have a hole in the top.
How did it get there. Can you do a full video that includes the complete process?
And you illustrate the "cleaning process".
I like the idea that this can be in the room underneath the toilet.
I've seen huge composting toilets at campgrounds and they did not smell at all.
Currently my toilet has a leak and I am wasting water until I get it fixed, so this
would be much cheaper and simpler.
the cleaning? dump.it in a compost pile and wash it with vinegar.
Start with a bucket and saw dust . I that is what i am using.
Can you please explain the toilet system and how it connects to the compost bin.
Lol just thinking how to explain it made me laugh.
Visualize your ass seen from inside the bin. connect a tube between the 2 and a seat.
Gravity should do the rest.
If you don't like smells put a side tube on the main tube with a fan.
You kinda need a height difference for this system to work.
So with a wheelie bin you'd need at least 3.5 to 4 m for it to be comfortable
From you anus to bottom would be around 2 m and then you need headspace.
The half pipes in the corners of the bin, do they need ambient air flow, forced air flow, or is static air pocket sufficient to induce good composting?
Providing the slots are not obstructed and they're less than 24 inches apart, the half-pipes don't need pressurized air to work. However, a pulse of air every half hour will definitely speed up decomposition.
Hello, do you put toilet paper in it?
What happened to the director's uncut video? It was about 20 minutes of detailed info..this is severely edited. Is there a link? 🙏🙏🙏
Um trying to understand how the delivery pipe hooks into the toilet… very new to composting type systems and trying to figure out how to implement in my off grid journey! Any advice would be appreciated
What are those corner PVC pipes for?
Can you use the round American style plastic garbage cans about 84cm tall in the place of the wheeled bins? I'm thinking about building a outhouse, and worried about the height requirements. If I used the wheeled bin I'd have to build the outhouse 1.2 meters + off the ground on a dirt mound? I know it have to be emptied more often, than if not. Thank you.
Amazing ! but I am curios why wasn’t the original green lid unacceptable to use ?
it looks like the white has a hole while in place and filling, the original lid will be flipped out of the way. After full, you would move to allow to sit and 'compost' for the timeframe mentioned, months - during that time, the white lid would affix to the next wheelie bin and the filled one would just close the original lid.
I don't see the actual toilet, the part you sit on, is it all built above this unit???
Will toilet paper break down in the compost?
sure. It's just like paper
It's a great idea. But how do I get the binmen to collect it?
🤣
can you use the compost on vegetables? or only trees/bushes??
What size piping? 3", 4"? Thanks!
Is it better to have a vent pipe? Something like Paul Wheaten has built at his place
do i have to clean the "delivery tube" ? in this elevated set up
@Joel Cowley Being an Aussie, what do you recommend as a medium that a city person can get almost anywhere like say Bunnings?
@@jedics1 saw dust or wood chips, they have a high carbon content and will compost well with your own shit.
What about medications excreted by the body?
is this a portable septic tank?????? this is soo smart!
I am wondering, is it fine to dig a hole and make the humanure in there? On a property, a designated place for this purpose. It's my dream to build that for myself in a sustainable home, in the future.
I imagine in a deep hole manure and food waste will still become into a fertilizer, with time.
If you strictly keep urine and feces apart then probably yes..
But if the feces are in a hole in the soil and it rains bacteria can wash down into the groundwater and end up in peoples drinking water.
So: if you live in a very dry place where people dont drink the groundwater yes you can do that if you put the urine in a seperate place.
It is kind of important though to have the feces sit in a closed bucket for a few months so the content heats up in the sun and the bacteria die.
Be careful and good luck
that's called a long drop- so-no!
Is it not a problem that the "surplus liquid" is not just sterile urine, but urine that has gone through shit? What are the requirements for the gravel trench to make sure that the black water coming out of the system isn't unsafe?
Its gone through shit+several layers of compost and wood chips/sawdust with no solids coming through with all of the filtering. My understanding is that health wise and regulation wise its not much worse than a dirtier (i.e. kitchen) grey water system, meaning yea you'd want the reed bed or otherwise ensure that the water never comes up out over the surface of the gravel trench and instead just sinks down
No you use a urine diverter so they stay separate
Has any 'professional' criticised this idea?
I like it a lot.
why do you put 4 pipes on the sides ? Please someone explain, i need to make this.
This is the video I relied on to start making humanure, but two years later, I’ve got a big issue. The bins just aren’t composting and the taps are clogged so I can’t get rid of all the liquid. We are a family of two adults and 4 dogs but only put a bit of their poo from the patio, when they poo on the land, I don’t pick it up. We have six wheelie bins, and I’m at a point where I’ve had to transfer unfinished poo compost into big white bags because I need to make space for new poop coming in. Any suggestions? Anybody else have sissies and are stuck in a really bad position now? We have no more space for more bins and it seems silly to do that anyways since I’m trying to make this work, not end up with 100 bins on my land with nothing composting ever… any help appreciated!
is there a materials list for this?
Hi there, I live in a place that unfortunately is forbidden because the neighbors made and gave a lot of flys. Whether it's on the covered part of my backyard or inside the house, is there any way to compose my poop in a closed/sealed box? What would you have to do? Put extra bacterias? Put a humidifier in it? - A oxygenator? Helppp
God bless u guys ❤️🙏🏼
Im thinking of making this for our ne toilet area, i am having trouble finding the pipe that goes from the actual seat to the bin, can anyone help me with this. tia.
Every time you use the toilet do you put sawdust in it or just that one time
After every use, put in sawdust
Why does this method work without a separate compost pile? I know it doesn't work inside 5-gallon buckets because there isn't enough mass to create the heat necessary to destroy the pathogens. How much mass do you need for hot composting to happen? And how does the plastic of the wheelie bin handle that heat?
This would be considered slow composting as you adding mass slowly to it and then letting it break down over about 10 months. So it wouldn't generate much heat. The initial chips just help kick start the system
Hey Geoof, thanks for the video, looks great!
Doesn't the humanure require air to compost in the proper way? Will stinky air get out of the toilet with such a system?
No the is drawn up the exhaust chimney so no bad smells.
@@DiscoverPermaculture What exhaust chimney? I didn't see anything mentioned about the exhaust chimney. Where is this attached?
@@petroskronis the four big ass white pvc pipes in the container
@@khandam7709 But the way it's shown, it looks like the four big ass pvc pipes are closed up under the lid ?
I guess the toilet bowl incl. urine separation (if it has that) and the exhaust chimney is just not covered in this video. Judging from compost toilet designs frequently used in campervans, an exhaust chimney is a long tube extending behind and up over the toilet, going through the outer wall or roof. It is often supported with an extraction vent and removes any smells by creating a slight underpressure in the toilet bowl.
Dunno if it has been asked before, but about how long does it take to fill up one of those homemade toilets. Also, is that just for solid waste or solid and liquid?
the drain at the bottom implies it is for wet pee as well. Personally I thinkit makes sense to seperate at the source.
Maintaining ideal conditions is much simpler if you separate the urine.
so you need to make more than one bin then when one fills up you switch it with a new one let sit for 10 months then empty and put back in line for refill? even if you make more than a couple its still cheaper than the others at 2000. usd
Anyone got advice for starting a permaculture plot near Valencia?
The liquid waste coming out of the hose at the bottom is raw sewage and potentially a heath risk. It can't drain as you describe.
I believe human waste is a valuable resource that should be used for this purpose. However, most amateurs are far too lax with safety precautions. My opinion as someone who has studied soil, composting and biochemistry.
Well, Joe Jenkins, author of Humanure Handbook, recomends the use of bucket toilets that from time to time are discarded in larger compost bins enveloped with a thick layer (25cm to 30cm, 10 inches to a foot) of hay or straw. The idea is to compost the human excrements via thermophilic process (if that makes sense) and says that, in a compost bin that is able to retain temperatures over 55 degrees celcius, it needs only a week or so to kill all or the majority of the pathogens. In a bin that don't use thermophilic process, it will take something around 2 years to eliminate the pathogens.
So, my question is: do you agree with him? Can we safely use your (or his) method to build soil in a garden?
Geoff uses this only under tree crops and stuff that wont touch it, stuff that generally wont get harvested for a couple weeks after application anyway. This process, interestingly enough, is in line with EPA regulations in the US. IF you wanted to make this totally safe for all crops, you would do it like he does for maybe 6 months, then dump it into a at least 4X4 ft cube covered with some more carbon material and either let it sit for about another year or make absolute sure the whole thing gets to temperature for over a week like Joe Jenkins does. That's probably the best balance between full versatile use, safety, and minimal handling of buckets and poop.
This Valentine's day i am thinking of making myself a compost toilet, here in UK 🤔
Does the feces and urine sticked to the walls of the pipe smells bad in the bathroom? Im in a warmer country, it might rise easily.
What machine does he use?
I can't understand - if you should keep the bin locked for 6 to 10 months - where you should store you waste in this period? It seems you should have more bins.
I am wondering how many bins you will need
you keep it locked for such long period without aeration? so the waste breaks down anaerobically?
Yes, you'd need more bins. People using IBC containers for collection also have several of these. Human solid excrement is ca. 100 kg/(person×year), so minus drying and plus sawdust maybe 120 l. So get two such 250 l bins for every two people using the system. One to collect the waste, one to compost it.
Will bugs crawl up and bite me on the bunghole though?
Would it take the same time in the UK? How about Mediterranean countries?