Septic Pet Peeve

   / Septic Pet Peeve #61  
...
they keep a used toilet paper waste paper basket and nightly it is burned...

I knew that would get the conversation stirred up. :laughing::laughing::laughing:

In the boat world, some people do this as well. Some people put in "composting" heads aka toilets on their boats. The toilets are not really composting but desiccators. The "solids" stay in the toilet while urine goes into a different container. One of the better systems as far as I am concerned is sold by an Ex Green Beret and the urine goes into a normal one gallon milk jug instead of a specialized aka expensive container.

Anyway, smells are from the urine and if you keep that away from the solids things are not so bad. The "composting" heads require a media like peat moss, coir, wood chips, etc to dry out the solids. This requires turning a crank which mixes things up. :D What I do not understand is that some people will not put the used TP in with the solids. It would just help things dry out but instead they put it in a bag.

When filled, you empty the milk jug or "composted" solids in a legal way. Having said that, given the EPA regulations I really wonder how many people with the compositors are really legal in getting rid of the waste.

Apparently, it is common in other countries to have container in the bathroom to hold used TP. If you flushed the TP it could clog the system.

Later,
Dan
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #62  
Excessive water use in my opinion.
I predict water and energy will be precipitate (note the word play) the next "civil war" (not necessarily and armed conflict)
here in the US. That is if politics doesn't get in the way ;-)

Act responsibly! 150 gallons a day is NOT responsible, it is reprehensible.

My "Pet Peeve" is toward those who would accept that level of use as sustainable.

I know here in Nebraska domestic water (Around 5%) use is just a very small fraction of what irrigation uses (around 90%). Ultimately that is going to be the issue as water will either go to people or to farming as there is not enough to satisfy both. My guess is farmers will win as they have an amazing amount of political pull. People will be forced to treat sewage and reuse as drinking water which is already happening or desalinating ocean water which is also already happening on a huge scale in places like California.
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #63  
Well I must be full of something because here is my third post in a row about septic systems. :laughing::laughing::laughing:

It is an election year and there fore time to pump my septic tank. I got us on a pumping schedule that lines up with the presidential elections to remind me when it is time to pump out the septic tank.

:D:D:D

Later,
Dan
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #64  
... People will be forced to treat sewage and reuse as drinking water which is already happening or desalinating ocean water which is also already happening on a huge scale in places like California.

When I am at work and flush the toilet, it is treated and dumped into a lake. That lake is used for drinking water for many of the people in the region. People are already drinking treated sewage but they don't know it. I heard/read years ago that the water in the Thames river is "used" 6-7 times before getting into the English channel. I have not idea if that number is correct but it is believable.

Years ago into FLA, there was a big water shortage and the Sugar Cane bandits tried to blame the people of South FLA for using up the water. I think it was 75% of the water in the region was used by the Sugar Cane "farms."

One of the counties was pumping treated sewage water underground. :shocked: The EPA would no longer allow them to pump the water offshore in to the Gulf Stream so they had to pump it underground. THEY said that the waste was being pump well below any drinking water supply and the water tables were separated by leak proof rock layers.... But where is that water going? Hmmm?

Later,
Dan
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #65  
It wasn't that long ago toilet paper was a luxury... still remember when US travelers would pack toilet paper.

Also the days of newspaper or catalog pages is not all that far back in rural areas.

Working in medical I see how toilet paper is treated... many elderly are very sparing... even down to the number of squares... younger people not so much and I have seen kids use an entire role and try to flush.

Had a septic for 25 years in Austria... never an issue except when young American College kids would visit... never failed the toilet would be stuffed and would have to make a quick "Run" to pick up more.

In 26 years I have never had a clogged toilet in the Men's lobby restroom... Women's is about once ever other week... go figure?
 
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   / Septic Pet Peeve #66  
It is my opinion that many folks are way obsessive with their septic "usage". Not flushing TP? Really? If you're that concerned about "excess" solids, have it pumped a little more frequently. But then I acknowledge that for every overly obsessive septic user, there are probably 5 that don't give it a thought and abuse it.

We have a 2-chamber 1000g concrete tank and about 250 ft of leach line in soil that drains just ok (rock layer under it). Due to medical issues, we frequently use the ghastly, horrid "flushable" wipes, maybe 50 per month, and we occasionally put a small amount of food waste down through our disposal. No lint filter. I don't worry about what kind of laundry products we use. After about 4-5 years of use by the two of us, we had it pumped and its condition was just fine - normal scum layer and normal or less amount of solids. Maybe we just have super-good biologic "digestion" going on in our tank? Isn't a normally functioning septic system SUPPOSED to break down and biodegrade stuff?
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #67  
I don't think textiles break down easily... 1600's Jamestown settlement excavation is still turning up textiles from 400 years ago.

Many that are cautious do so because to replace would require just about a full blown sewage treatment plant... pumps, electricity, professional inspections/ongoing engineering contracts...

Those where none of this is required can be more cavalier... just send the effluent in a new direction/leach field...
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve
  • Thread Starter
#68  
J said:
Isn't a normally functioning septic system SUPPOSED to break down and biodegrade stuff?

Toilet Paper is probably the hardest thing to break down in the tank. Anaerobic systems have bacteria that eats the waste (poop and toilet paper) but it is a very slow, very smelly (methane is the by-product) process.

An Aerobic system introduces OXYGEN into the tank and this creates a digestion process by the bacteria that is 10x faster and more productive. In addition, it doesn't have the same smelly by-product of methane gas. The oxygen also stirs up the solids and breaks them apart making them easier to digest for the bacteria.

If you open the lid to an aerobic septic tank, there is very little to no smell. The same cannot be said for anaerobic. The methane gas is bad and can kill you.

Anyone who owns a pond, large fish tank, knows the benefits of adding oxygen into the water supply. It helps tremendously in the cleanliness and health of the system.

The same thing applies with septic systems. Changing the septic from anaerobic to aerobic makes a big difference.

SludgeHammer latest advance in septic wastewater treatment

There are other aerobic systems out there. Sludgehammer is expensive ($2k) but there are less expensive ones. Not as good but still better than nothing.
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #69  
The residential unit would cost about $350 annually to power... which is $3500 over 10 years based on current rate of around 30 cents kW.

This is in addition to cost of purchase, installation and maintenance.
 
   / Septic Pet Peeve #70  
In NC, the septic system is sized by the number of bedrooms with the assumption that each bedroom holds two people. We have a three bedroom house with a study than can be turned into a bedroom. Per code we could have just put in a septic system for three bedrooms but that would have been short sighted so we have a four bedroom system. I did not bother to get quotes for a three vs four bedroom system because the cost would have been minimal.

But how many houses these days have two people per bedroom? Danged few. So our septic system is sized to handle eight people and we have four in the house. I think most of the new construction is going to have systems that are well over capacity than actual usage.

Best I can tell our water usage is about 50 GPPPD. We have low flow toilet and shower heads. The dishwasher and clothes washer uses very little water, something like 10 gallons per load. We spent two weeks on a boat this summer and I was filling up the fresh water tanks. Doing the math it looked like we were using about 20 GPPPD. We did some laundry and the boat used fresh water to flush toilets. We would have used less water if the shower heads were a bit more restricted.

Later,
Dan
When I built here I questioned the septic people about the possibility of "over-sizing". They assured me that it can't happen with a 3 BR system vs. a 4BR system because what they call "bugs" (bacteria) will multiply. The incremental cost made it a "no-brainer"...nobody will have to worry about it if this house gets sold. I've been burned too many times on houses I've bought where the # of BR's somehow shrunk from when I bought it to when I tried to sell it (real estate agents technically represent the seller so as a buyer you are really on your own). I paid the cost for a 4 BR system which is baked into the permit cost and in the cost of the septic system and is all a matter of public record on the county records.
 

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