Benefactor
Enthusiast III
Same toilet I have been using for years. Easy cleanup, folds small, bring plenty of WAG bags. National Parks are requiring them for any backcountry trips now. Digging a hole is not cool nowadays...Hahahaha
I use this. Sturdy comfortable. Folds up small no mess. I bring some kitty litter too
Off-Road Ranger I
4045
Off-Road Ranger I
Advocate III
Glad you asked - I was going through the thread from the beginning and wondered why it hadn't come up yet.Interesting stuff. Any thoughts on those who are on the road more "long term"? Looking at the cost of the bags/chemical packs, vs a composting system. (Portapotty cartridge is not an option for me - been there not going back). Yes, a composting system is way more expensive initially, but it looks like the break even point is less than a year of use (continuously).
I realize most people would take a long time to get to that amount of use... I'm lookin down the road, when I hope to be able to take some seriously long extended trips.
Thoughts on composters?
Off-Road Ranger I
4045
Funny, that's exactly the one I was looking at... Watched a bunch of videos. and it looks good. Have yet to figure out what part of it is so expensive to manufacture though! (Sometimes I guess you are paying for the good idea!)I bought a US made Nature's Head for longer term road trips and base-camping.
Advocate III
Yeah, paying for the R&D, a facility that can consistently manufacture a large number of units, work force, workmen's comp, other insurance, shipping, and on and on and on. Having owned my own small businesses, I would actually not enjoy trying to make a living owning and running a manufacturing business.Funny, that's exactly the one I was looking at... Watched a bunch of videos. and it looks good. Have yet to figure out what part of it is so expensive to manufacture though! (Sometimes I guess you are paying for the good idea!)
Member I
Enthusiast III
I've researched this pretty well. We full time RV and dealing with the black tank is not ideal. I'm about at the point of rippin out my toilet and building a composting toilet for the trailer. It took me awhile to be sold on it but after seeing and using it in real life, I was very impressed. From what I understand the biggest issue is the medium you use to cover the waste. You have to be careful what you put on it or it can smell. The other issue is air flow. You have to be able to keep the air moving to allow it to dehydrate. And thirdly segregating the liquid from the solid. There's a couple good books on this subject. Humanure Handbook is one.Interesting stuff. Any thoughts on those who are on the road more "long term"? Looking at the cost of the bags/chemical packs, vs a composting system. (Portapotty cartridge is not an option for me - been there not going back). Yes, a composting system is way more expensive initially, but it looks like the break even point is less than a year of use (continuously).
I realize most people would take a long time to get to that amount of use... I'm lookin down the road, when I hope to be able to take some seriously long extended trips.
Thoughts on composters?
Very informative! Thank youGlad you asked - I was going through the thread from the beginning and wondered why it hadn't come up yet.
After many years of extended road trips with both back-country camping and urban exploration, depending on self-dug catholes, 5 gal buckets and bags, camp toilets and truck stops, I bought a US made Nature's Head for longer term road trips and base-camping. I'm setting it up so it can either stay mounted/vented in the van or be used in the Ozark Trail double room shower tent I got at Walmart (for around 80 bucks, I think, when I ordered mine). Or, just sitting around the other side of my trailer when base camping out in the willy-wacks and not worried about privacy as much.
The key to reducing or eliminating odor with whatever potty system you use--if not disposing of things immediately--is separating liquids from solids when you do your stuff. It's storing those two together that creates the offensive odors we associate with outhouses and port-a-potties. The Nature's Head, The Separett mentioned above in this thread, and a few others make separating liquid from solids easier and more convenient to dispose of than you might think. You'll need to empty the urine container (non-composted) a lot more frequently than the solids container, which mixes the solids with your choice of peat moss or cocoa fiber, usually. I know of couples who use a Nature's Head in their vehicle and only have to empty the solids once a month.
I wander in a long wheelbase van, so easier to use something like this. Would be harder and take up more otherwise valuable space if in a Taco or LC, I'm sure.
As mentioned a few times in this thread, cat-holes and dug latrines are less and less favored or even allowed. I've been to otherwise pristine back country campsites where the only thing marring the landscape is not trash and bottles and beer cans or shotgun shells but poorly dug holes (some places are just too hard and rocky) and way too much used toilet paper stuck to cactii or underbrush. Discouraging, really.
For me, just makes more sense to not contribute to that and make it easier to haul my own waste out in the most-efficient, least odorous way I can. The "well, just this once isn't gonna matter much in the bigger picture!" when leaving waste behind doesn't cut it, as it only takes less than 1% of people thinking that and you have a royal mess. An add'l advantage of a Nature's Head type system for me is that it can be easily transferred for use in a longer-term off-grid living situation or back-country cabin, too, without having to dig a deeper pit for outhouse.
We used the mentioned separett rescue camping 25 on our last 6 month trip and we will use the same system on our upcoming 1 1/2 year journey too. It's possible to "reuse" the bags multiple times, with a bit of saw dust on top of every usage it's not so disgusting and the saw dust also helps against the odour too (which is non existent compared to a portapotty anway).Interesting stuff. Any thoughts on those who are on the road more "long term"? Looking at the cost of the bags/chemical packs, vs a composting system. (Portapotty cartridge is not an option for me - been there not going back). Yes, a composting system is way more expensive initially, but it looks like the break even point is less than a year of use (continuously).
I realize most people would take a long time to get to that amount of use... I'm lookin down the road, when I hope to be able to take some seriously long extended trips.
Thoughts on composters?
Enthusiast III
Influencer II
We have no issues here now. My girls have been squatting outside for as long as they can remember, lol. We've been camping in the woods since they were 5 or 6 I think....?For all of you with kids, how is your method working out for you? Being a divorced dad with 2 girls, I think this is my biggest obstacle.