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DIY Composting Toilet and Humanure Experience- Ethan Waldman

Ethan Waldman is a Tiny House author, speaker, and teacher.ย  He has been using a Composting Toilet for almost ten years while living in his Tiny House, and he is using a Humanure composting method.

Find his work and listen to his podcast atย thetinyhouse.net.ย 

Photos byย Rikki Snyder.

What sort of space do you have?

We have an on-grid 22โ€™ tiny house on wheels completed in Fall 2013.

What kind of composting toilet do you have?

We use the Humanure Handbook’s 5-gallon bucket method.ย  Our toilet is built into a cabinet that matches the interior of the house, no fan or anything. Everything goes into the one bucket. We donโ€™t separate urine from solids. I get sawdust from a sawmill about 20 minutes away for cover material. ย For two bucks, you can fill an entire trash can full of sawdust.

Why did you choose a composting toilet?

I didnโ€™t know where I was going to park the tiny house, and I knew that trying to find a spot that had sewer access was a lot more difficult.  Even though Iโ€™m not off-grid now, I wanted the ability to be off-grid, and I saw the composting toilet as the best option for that flexibility.

I read the Humanure Handbook and I really dug it! I was inspired by the idea of saving a lot of water, and not putting waste into the water. I bought into the composting methodology and philosophy.

What is your routine for managing your toilet?

Itโ€™s pretty simple. Once every 2-3 days when the bucket is about half to three-quarters full, weโ€™ll just lift the lid to the toilet enclosure, pull the bucket out, and take it to the compost pile.

I remove some cover material from the pile, make an indentation in the top, pour in the contents of the bucket, then recover it with some straw or hay. I bring a mason jar of warm soapy water out with me, and use a toilet brush I keep by the compost bins to scrub the bucket a little bit, then pour that water on the pile. I make a stop in the garage to add some sawdust to the bucket, and put the bucket back in the toilet enclosure.

What do you like most about having a composting toilet?

I like how self-contained everything is, and the simplicity of not having another thing in the tiny house that has plumbing. If we were to travel or move, we wouldnโ€™t have to look for a place that had a sewer connection to hook the tiny houseย up to.

Is there anything that you would change about your toilet?

We go back and forth on this. A lot of the commercial composting toilets separate urine and solids. Not that our toilet smells, but it can smell if you donโ€™t put enough cover material on it. And if you go away for a while and leave a bucket in there and itโ€™s not really well covered, it can be kind of stinky when you come back. Sometimes I consider that maybe it would be better if we were separating, but then again, having to empty a container just full of urine just doesnโ€™t appeal to me. If I were doing a urine diverting toilet, I might look at rigging up a way to percolate the urine into the ground separately so I wouldnโ€™t have to empty it from a bucket.


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