jinman
Rest in Peace
- Joined
- Feb 23, 2001
- Messages
- 20,387
- Location
- Texas - Wise County - Sunset
- Tractor
- NHTC45D, NH LB75B, Ford Jubilee
I have a neighbor who told me he bought some round bales of hay for his mules and later found out that human waste had been used to fertilize those fields. He said he rolled the hay off into a gully and will not feed it to his mules. Personally, I don't see what the big deal is.
Septic pumpers are supposedly allowed to chemically treat raw sewage they remove from septic tanks and then spread it onto surface hayfields. Of course, several cities sell what they call "rich soil" from the sewage plants to people to put onto their lawns. This all sounds like good practice to me, but some folks evidently have problems with recycled human waste.
I'm coming down on the side of the recyclers on this from my initial thoughts. What does the TBN braintrust think of this, and what problems might occur?
Septic pumpers are supposedly allowed to chemically treat raw sewage they remove from septic tanks and then spread it onto surface hayfields. Of course, several cities sell what they call "rich soil" from the sewage plants to people to put onto their lawns. This all sounds like good practice to me, but some folks evidently have problems with recycled human waste.
I'm coming down on the side of the recyclers on this from my initial thoughts. What does the TBN braintrust think of this, and what problems might occur?