On Composting Toilets and Humanure

Of all the things to get excited about here, the composting toilet  and humanure system probably certifies me as crazy.

I’d never used anything but a flush toilet, although I’d heard about alternatives. And much like beekeeping, it retained a place in my mind as intriguing but way beyond my comfort level.

Composting Toilet

After my first experience with their composting toilet and humanure system, I was pretty impressed. It definitely seemed a more sustainable option. But after getting my hands on Chris’ copy of The Humanure Handbook: A Guide to Composting Human Manure*, I’m so fully sold on the idea that I cannot imagine ever going back!

The world is divided into two categories: those who shit in drinking
water and those who don’t. We in the Western world are in the former class. We defecate in water, usually purified drinking water. After polluting the water withour body’s excrement, we flush the once pure but now polluted water “away”, meaning we probably don’t know where it goes, nor do we care. – The Humanure Handbook

This paragraph gave me an imagine of a snobbish, over-privileged society opening up a bottle of Perrier to take a piss. Except it’s a 3-7 gallon bottle of Perrier. Yes, this was the paragraph within the two chapters of disturbing and eye-opening citations that clenched it for me: Flush toilets are weird.

On the other hand, the benefits of a composting toilet are amazing. Some of them include:

  • No water. Zero. Zilch. When you consider that, at best, you are flushing 3 gallons of clean water down the drain several times per day and when the lack of such sanitary water is attributable to 25 million deaths a year, 60% of whom are children…well, flush toilets seem pretty pompous.
  • No smell. Seriously. If done properly, there will be no discernible odor. Which is more than I can say for some flush toilets.
  • Less cleaning, which means less harmful chemicals. How many environmentally-conscious people out there still resort to something nasty to clean their stained toilet bowls? Especially if you “let it mellow”, the ring around the toilet can be disgusting to look at and impossible to remove without bleach.
  • No splash back. Because could there be anything worse?
  • No flush. The composting toilet is quiet when you’re worried about waking a household…or alerting guests as to what you’re doing.
  • Compost. After proper, easy composting you’re left with rich humus for the garden.

Why Humanure

The reasons are pretty amazing and cover a broad spectrum. Rather than quote the entire book for you (and oh man, it is good stuff), let me run down a few of the book’s citations:

  • We are the only species on Earth to create waste. Other species create resources. Manure – from any creature – is a resource. Would we throw money away? Then why throw away good water and good compost?
  • The foods that animals eat help to nourish the land that provided it in the form of manure. Food grows > Food nourishes > Bodily excrements are left behind > Those excrements grow more food. We are the only part of nature that does not work within that cycle of life and growth, choosing instead to create a broken cycle of mostly synthetic inputs and wasting important outputs.
  • Half of the 250 million+ tons of waste per year is valuable as an agricultural resource. Instead of composting it ends up in landfills, creating an excess of methane. Landfills are considered “‘among the single greatest contributors of global methane emissions’, according to the Natural Resources Defense Council.”
  • When considering that 1 in 3 people on every continent do not have access to clean water it makes it utterly ridiculous to crap in ours.
  • Composting humanure by impoverished areas gives sparse or stripped land an ability to flourish, thereby feeding and sustaining life.
  • Compost, including humanure compost, has the ability to degrade toxic chemicals. The book cites an Austrian farmer who owned the only farm not affected by the radiation from Chernobyl, believed to be due to the abundance of microorganisms in his soil. Also, the Umatilla Army Depot munitions site heavily contaminated with TNT and RDX restored the soil to “a better condition than before it was contaminated” after composting the soil. This also saved approx $2.6 million in incineration costs. (It’s estimated that if all such sites were composted it would save $200 million of taxpayers money. Hmm…) Could compost – something we could potentially have an abundance of, help restore other polluted areas?

But most of all, it’s sustainable. In a world of rising oil prices and depletion, we need to find alternatives to doing the things that simply don’t make sense. As food, sanitation and sewage costs continue to sky-rocket, I foresee more and more of us needing to “return to the land”, grow our own food without endless synthetic inputs and put an end to waste of any kind. Animal and human manure are a valuable resource that we will not be able to afford to lose in the future.

What About Germs?

We’re probably hard-wired to be disgusted by human waste. This mechanism helps keep us away from harmful pathogens and stay healthy. Not necessarily a bad thing. But those of us who wouldn’t bat an eyelash at using composted animal manures would be more than a bit concerned about using composted human manure in the same manner.

Properly composted human manure is free of pathogens or bacteria. It’s a process and not at all difficult, but describing how is worthy of its own book. And thankfully The Humanure Handbook* fills that void. It covers a broad spectrum of information from microorganisms to maintenance and even some philosophy. I dare you to read it and not reconsider your habits.

The Ironwood System

It’s pretty simple: A wooden box with a lid that lifts and a toilet seat on top. Inside is a five gallon bucket. Chris also has a fan installed inside the box that vents outside but we’ve yet to really need it. Beside the composting toilet is a bucket of wood chips. (You can also use straw or sawdust.) When someone uses the bathroom, they simple sprinkle material over the top. When the bucket gets full it is dumped into a humanure composting bin, which sits for a year before use. Chris has been using a composting toilet and humanure for about 8 years without issue. And it’s been feeding his gardens and his family for just as long.

I Won’t Go Back

I’m thankful that in the RV we use a measly cup or two of water to flush. If it’s just for #1 and the water pump is off, we can actually get by without using any water (by opening the hatch while we go, we don’t even need to rinse the bowl). If we had the room and a place to compost it, I’d set up a humanure system in a heartbeat. (I have heard of RVers using composting toilets with a trash bag that can be tied up and dumped normally, as well. It’s really not much worse than throwing away disposable diapers, just in larger quantities.)

But when we settle back into a home, I will not be using a flush toilet. I’m a convert, I love it and I’m not going back.

What about you? Have you used a composting toilet? Or would you try it?

*This is an affiliate link to Amazon. If you are considering buying this book, please consider purchasing it (and any other books) using this link. All earnings go toward supporting our family.

Adobe Flooring and a Workshop

Exfoliating Farm Treatment

One of the most intriguing parts of Ironwood Farm is the sustainable building. Chris’s home is strawbale with an adobe finish on the walls and adobe flooring, just to name a few of its great features. Adobe is amazing resilient, water-resistant (in dry climates) and in most cases, more affordable. It’s made of sand, clay and an aggregate (such as fine gravel or straw) to hold it together. He was able to obtain most of the materials right from his own land (while at the same time creating a hole for a pond).

It’s something you can read about all day but until you see it yourself – and better yet, do it yourself – it’s hard to get a grasp on it. Thankfully, Chris has been more than obliging to introduce us to everything he can; over the weekend, we helped with an adobe floor in his workshop, filling cracks and oiling it with raw linseed oil. It was an amazing – and exfoliating ;) – experience. We’re looking forward to more next weekend.

Handmade Adobe Floor

If you’re in the Albuquerque area, and interested in learning more about the adobe flooring or enjoying a tour of his home, he’s holding a workshop (we’ll be there!)…

Adobe Floor Installation
(Albuquerque, NM)
Saturday, March 27th 10am to 3pm
Hands-on experience in prepping, mixing, applying, leveling and finishing
Including a tour of the other sustainable housing features
Cost: $35, including a homegrown lunch (discounts for students)*

Contact Chris at (505) 363-0074 or ironwoodfarm@comcast.com

(*I’m receiving NO compensation for advertising this. Unless you count more experience and great food. :) )

First Two Days At Ironwood

Hitchin a Ride

Wow! We’ve done so much and learned so much I don’t know where to start!

There are two other interns here with us – Erin from MN and Julie from Peru. We spent most of our first 24 hours just settling in and getting to know everyone before getting our hands dirty.

In the past few days we’ve observed cheese-making, woke up shivering to snow, made snowmen before it melted, built a chicken tractor and transferred chicks, fed a gazillion animals, eaten the yummiest food, moved hay, played with goats and kids, chased turkeys, been chased by geese, watered the greenhouse, sealed cracks in adobe flooring, asked a million questions, began learning Spanish and the coolest of all…

I Really Did Milk A Cow

I milked a cow!! (So did Zeb!)

So many more photos here.

Being here is amazing and I feel so comfortable, despite the learning curve. I was telling Justin how easily I can picture us doing this same thing, but how I can’t imagine doing it alone. Working with the others, joking and laughing and talking, all while being in such a serene (albeit noisy) atmosphere is beyond description.

I’m hoping in the coming weeks to share more from Chris (the owner) about the sustainable housing, animal husbandry, alternative energy and all the other sustainable features of Ironwood.

For now I have some homegrown/raised food to eat and a bed calling my name. ::yawn::

City of Rocks Stole My Heart

Grassy Run

Okay, City of Rocks wasn’t quite the spot that takes my breath away and although I’m told it’s the place for star-gazing it was too cloudy to see the most stars I’ve ever seen (both on my list), but it was so gorgeous we will most definitely be making our way back in the future for a longer stay. We spent our short day there scrambling rocks and staring out over the valley below.

You can see more photos from City of Rocks here.

Unfortunately we left the peace behind. The trek from City of Rocks to Albuquerque wasn’t the best. Apparently we need to have a talking to with our GPS about not navigating us through steep, narrow mountainous roads covered in ice and snow with sharp drops. An early morning panic attack pretty much sets the intention for the rest of the day and it was hard to recover from there; we had numerous mishaps and bad moods and one ridiculous incident we’ve agreed never to speak of again.

We’re now settling into the farm, Zeb is making FAST friends with the two unschooling kids here and we’re all catching our breath before the real fun begins!

Possible farm duties: the usual feeding (of animals and humans) and garden care, sheep sheering, milking and if we’re lucky we’ll see the birth of goats and cows! :D

My First Bench Monday

My First Bench Monday - Moving

I’ve been wanting to play along with Bench Monday for awhile now, but lacked the time and creative juices. But I must admit that through all this craziness (packing, purging, refurbishing) and with the impending journey (we leave two weeks from today!) I’m feeling freer and um, juicier (!) than ever.

This week is crunch week. Tagging, arranging, selling and giving away 95% of your possessions may be the most liberating thing you can do…but you still have to get through the actual process. So, if you don’t see me online much this week, you’ll know I’m kicking butt. (If you do see me online, it might mean I need my own butt kicked).

So I leave you with some linky love to share:

What awesomeness have you been enjoying?

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