Humanure - The Perfect SHTF Sanitation System
Humanure - The Perfect SHTF Sanitation System
Humanure - The Perfect SHTF Sanitation System
Sanitation System
Tara Dodrill Survival Gardening 4 Comments
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When living off grid, during good times or bad, disposing of human waste is an issue.
Human waste is a massive disease spreader that can quickly cost lives when folks are
living in unsanitary conditions – especially when calling a doctor is not an option.
Horse manure has long been a covered natural fertilizer and used in gardening plots
and as a basis for composting piles in rural regions all over the country.
After the composting helpers digest the human waste, it begins to turn into a soil like
matter that is then mixed with other organic materials, like straw, grass, or sawdust, or
leaves. The addition of the dry matter helps soak up the moisture in the human waste
and draws away some of its nitrogen content the composting helpers do not like to
consume.
Instead of paying a few hundred dollars to have your septic tank pumped out every
couple of years, or having it overflow and back up during a long-term SHTF situation,
you could put in a humanure system now so you can vastly reduce the amount of raw
sewage at your homesteading survival retreat on day one and better protect the health
of your family.
VC pipe and some other common supplies and tools are also needed to construct a
humanure compostng system to attach to a dry or wet flush commode.
Until humanure completes the composting process, it can be deemed a threat to public
health and must be kept contained. It is illegal to put raw human waste on the soil.
Typically, two human sanitation rules cover the collection and use of humanure.
1. Excrement from humans should ever come into contact with the soil – I doubt any
of the people that made these laws ever went primitive camping!
2. Human excrement should not ever come into contact with any waterway.
In rural regions like where I live, there is no government permit office or even any
zoning laws (that little tidbit of information just shocked all you suburban and urban
preppers, right?!) so any regulations governing human waste composting would stem
from the county health department or be subjected to a blanket state law.
Homemade composting commodes have become legal in some states in recent years –
other states, like
Arizona,have embarked on pilot programs to further investigate the use of site-built
composting toilets. Even in states where homemade composting toilets are legal, they
may have to meet an approved guideline or be inspected before they are put into use.
Typically, a family who already lives inside the home where the composting toilet
will be installed and are not building a newly constructed home, can install a
composting commode without going through any permit process if they maintain at
least one conventional commode that is attached to either a septic system or public
sewer – whether or not they ever use it.
The humanure created by the composting commode cannot be transported off the
property nor can it create any public nuisance via odors, leaching, or similar types of
issues that could pose a health risk or cause a complaint to be filed by a neighbor.
1. You will have to go outdoors in the bitterly chilly and rain to use the outhouse. This
is not a fun prospect and could make your more susceptible to catching a cold, the flu,
or pneumonia. When you cannot call a doctor, even the common cold could become
deadly if you become dehydrated from repetitive diarrhea or cannot bring down a
high fever using stockpiled or natural medicines.
2. Going to the outhouse at regular interviews, like in the morning after you get out of
bed or in the evening before laying down for the night, potential attackers can easily
track your movements and move in when you are in a very vulnerable position – or
shoot you on the way to the outhouse.
Is Humanure Safe?
The use of human waste is still a hotly debated topic and likely still strictly frowned
upon by your local health department. But, why? If you own survival livestock, you
already know how beneficial using their manure is for your compost pile and
ultimately – your garden.
The controversial aspect of using human waste for composting stems from the ability
to separate urine from feces. Some experts staunchly content humanure is not safe for
use around edible plants, fruit trees and bushes, or in the vegetable garden. The waste
is rich healthy nutrients, but is also contains bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens..if
they are not removed properly.
Many so-called experts on human waste compost use believe it is not either
responsible or sensible to process the waste at home, that such activities should only
be conducted in commercial facilities that are regulated by the EPA. Those are
probably some o the same folks who would wag their fingers in your face because
you make your own natural medicines instead of going to a pharmacy to help heal
your body. Since I have not had a reason to go see a doctor in over a decade, I think I
will stick to my natural medicines routine.
Some recent studies have proven that human urine is a great and safe fertilizer for
tomatoes, cabbage, cucumbers, beets, in particular, but just about any other crops that
grow in most gardens. Human urine typically has a nitrogen-phosphorus-potassium
ratio of about 10:1:4 – and also boast other beneficial trace elements that can help
plants thrive.
If you are separating urine from feces via your off (or on) grid sanitation system, mix
up to 10 parts water with a 5-gallon buckets of collected urine and then spray it
AROUND the garden plants. Some gardeners are so pleased with the results
stemming from the use of human urine as a fertilizer, they refer to it as “golden
irrigation.”
Still, you really shouldn’t start peeing directly onto the plants in your garden. The
high concentration of nutrients can harm the microorganisms in the soil and actually
burn the plants. You can, however, urinate directly onto your compost pile and onto
straw bales you are going to use to cover or condition planters.
The diluted human urine should only be sprayed or poured onto the garden soil or the
compost pile when it is at least 50 degrees outside. The beneficial microbes in the
urine are not really “active” and capable of soaking up excess nitrogen in the soil
when the thermometer sinks too slow. You can stockpile human urine during cold
weather and keep it in a bucket with a firm-fitting lid until warmer temperatures arise.
If someone in the household has been ill, quarantine the urine for about 14 days to kill
any possible pathogens in the waste before using it in the garden or on the compost
pile.
The rich nitrogen content in human urine makes it a great fertilizer for both leafy
crops and seedlings. The urine does not usually possess a high potassium count,
making it a less effective fertilizer for fruits, flowers, and roots of many plants. If you
toss some wood ash into the urine bucket, it usually will pack the boost it needs to
make it a better fertilizer for fruits and flowers – and can even make tomatoes taste far
more sweet. Wood ash is rich in calcium.
Urine commonly also contains substantial levels of salt that can harm plants during a
dry season – stunting the growth of the plants and causing its leaves to wilt and appear
scorched. Adding more water to the urine bucket should alleviate this potential
problem.
Using worms to process waste into safe and viable composting material is called
vermicomposting. Red worms are used for this type of composting because they
thirve in 55 to 77 degree temperatures and are well-suited to live inside a “worm bin.”
Red worms are also commonly referred to as manure worms, tiger worms, red
wiggles, or red hybrid worms. Typically, one pound of worms per a ½ pound of waste
are considered a prime composting ratio.
You can dig up your own red worms, they are common in most regions of the United
States, or purchase them from most gardening, agriculture, or bait stores. Once you
make or buy a simple bin for the worms to live in and fill it with some bedding,
simply take the worms in your hand and scatter them on top of the bin. The worms
will instinctively burrow inside the bin once sunlight beats down on their skin.
The bins inside the waste pile should be fairly shallow, about 1-inch deep, to allow
the worms to feed on the top layers and to prevent possible odor issues. The length of
the worm bin will be determined by the dimensions of the waste barrel or collection
container it is placed inside.
A plastic storage container from the local dollar store will work just fine as a worm
bin – or make a shoe-box size bin out of scrap wood. Drill up to one dozen up to a ½
inch in diameter holes in the bottom of the worm bin to allow for airflow and
necessary drainage and aeration.
A loose-fitting cover or lid must be placed on top of the worm bin to provide the
darkness the littler critters need and to conserve the moisture created inside the bin. A
piece of burlap will suffice as a lid if the worm bin is not directly exposed to the
outdoors.
Shredded Paper
Peat Moss
Shredded Cardboard
Once the bedding is placed inside the worm bin, moisten the material and let is absorb
as much of the water as possible – this process typically takes about 24 hours. I use
peat moss in our worm bins. Ring out the moistened bedding like you would a wash
cloth and dump any excess water from the bin before filling it with worms.
When we somehow got involved in rescuing tortoises, they required some very
specific humidity levels in their enclosures to get them healthy and keep them that
way. Peat moss seemed to hold moisture better than any other material, even
commercially manufactured products designed for that purpose.
You need five basic components to compost human waste – or any organic material
1. Air
2. Carbon
3. Water
4. Organic Material
5. Micro-organisms
The composting commode described below – or any type of off grid composting
commode for that matter, functions almost exactly like the compost pile you are
probably (or should be) cultivating out of food scraps and livestock manure, for your
garden. Human waste almost always include more liquid than common kitchen
scraps, that is why a separate pipe diverts the fluid either from or through the bottom
of, composting commode systems.
Aerobic respiration is the very technical term who what happens to our poo when it
goes through a composting commode. It is the process of producing cellular energy
with oxygen. The cells in the organic material break down the food and/or waste in a
multi-step process. The first step in the process involves glycolysis, then come the
citric acid cycle and finally the electron transport part of the system.
Even if you opt against using the processed human waste in your garden composting
pile, the humanure should no longer pose a health risk to yourself and your loved
ones.
1. The flushing drains from the commode will filter through a waste pipe that runs
into an insulated container. A plastic agricultural tank or a 55-gallon plastic barrel (or
two) work great. A 1,000 liter livestock water hauler tank is the perfect size for a
system designed to house the waste from a three to five person household. You will
need approximately 5,000 worms to handle the processing of the human feces in the
tank when it is filled.
2. Dig a hole large enough to house your container and the rocks and auxiliary
insulation material that must go around the holding tank system. The red worms need
temperatures of roughly 55 to 80 degrees in their environment to survive.
The hole for the tank must be dug below the level of the commode and as close as
possible, to the toilet. Line the hole with rocks to form a stable rock wall and then use
polystyrene insulation to fill the space between the rock wall and your tank. Do not
forget to put insulation under the tank and attach a layer to the underside of the lid
you make to cover the hole the tank will fill – wood or galvanized metal work great.
3. Make an access hatch to allow you to get into the system for maintenance and
worm care by cutting half of the top of the stock tank away. Plastic 55-gallon drums
may or may or may not come with a removable lid. If your barrel does not, an access
hatch will need to be cut into it, as well.
The thick plastic used to make either container should fit back together quite snugly
when the hatch is closed – but the opening will still need to be screwed onto the
container to prevent excess water from getting inside and the smell for the goings on
inside the container, from getting out.
4. The PVC waste pipe coming from the commode to the tank must be secured onto
the tank, barrel, or similar holding container. You can run the waste pipe into the tank
via the hatch door, using standard hardware to secure it into place. Wherever you
choose to inset the waste pipe, keep the gravity feed necessary for the human waste to
flow, in mind.
5. The plastic container will house the worm bin filled with moisture-retentive
bedding and a significant amount of red worms.
6. The worms will thrive and dine upon the incredibly carbon rich organic matter you
also must put in the tank. A layer of sawdust, wood shavings, leaves, wood ash, straw
– or a combination of these or like materials, will be the surface layers inside the
plastic tank or barrel. They layers should comprise up to ¼ of the space in the tank.
7. Place material from your composting pile that is only about half processed, inside
the tank or barrel on top of the organic matter. The composting material should
comprise about 1/8 of the space in the tank.
8. When the conventional commode is flushed, the solid human waste will remain on
the surface layers in the tank and be consumed and processed by the red worms.
9. The liquids (urine and water) that flow through the drain and into the tank will filter
through the layers in the tank or barrel and exit at the bottom of the container through
a waste pipe – and into a green bed. The bed must also be layered with carbon rich
material so the liquids can either be processed by bacteria in the soil or plants you put
in the green bed.
10. The green bed will function much like a sponge and soak up the bacteria from the
black water (solid human waste and water) and also function as a carbon reserve. A
branched two to four pipe system coming from the holding tank will allow the black
water to gravity feed into the green bed. No liner should be needed on the bottom of
the bed because the waste will flow through the filtering material after being
processed by the worms and organic material in the holding tank, before it goes into
the ground.
Do not put the green bed in an area that floods, but even if you get a heavy rain, the
processed black water should act aid and not harm, surrounding trees, grass, bushes,
and plants. The growing or green bed should be dug large enough to hold up to 400
gallons of volume at one time. The green bed must be filled about one and half feet
deep, with organic matter – like straw, wood ash, sawdust, wood shavings, etc.
11. Back fill the green bed with quality topsoil. You can even place plants that thrive
on nitrogen right inside the bed.
You may notice a very slight smell coming from your humanure composting system
when it first gets up and running, but the stink should dissipate in a few days to a
week once the red worms get hard at work processing the fecal matter.
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