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Composting Worms Article

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Flush Down Your Waste With A Composting Toilet

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You may have heard of the importance of composting your household waste, but have did you ever think that some are taking it a step further by using a composting toilet? This may be newer thinking for some countries but many areas use this as a regular practice and it may find its way to your home.

What Is This All About?

What is a composting toilet? Well, it would be any system that can convert human waste into organic compost that would be usable in soil. This occurs through a natural breakdown of organic matter into its essential minerals. Micro-organisms and macro-organisms do this over time through various stages of oxidation and localized pockets of aerobic breakdown.

Can This Be A Safe?

Even human waste can break down to compost, eventually, but is it safe to use a composting toilet? Well here are some concerns that may require further study:

• Coming into contact with human waste that has not been composted properly or is composted incompletely may be dangerous. Bacteria other disease carrying pathogens may be present.

• Human fertilizer should not be used for food crops, but may be okay around non fruit-bearing trees and shrubs. This fertilizer should only be used when it is completely composted. However, there are different schools of thought on how much time is truly needed.

• While composting, human waste can reach temperatures of 104-122 degrees Fahrenheit (40-50c). In some situations, the compost will need to be pasteurized and sterilized before use.

A few other interesting facts to examine are:

• Why many developed countries would not be comfortable with the this idea because of some of the concerns, it is a known fact that when the process is done correctly, then it does not pose any more risk then the waste removal systems already in place. Education would be the most effective way to convince people of the benefits of a composting toilet.

• Many areas may not allow a composting toilet without a septic field. The gray water would still need a place to be treated, however many reputable manufacturers of composting toilets would be able to help navigate the regulation concerns.

• A properly designed composting toilet system that does not require water would completely reduce the waste to a mere 1-2%, in about 4-6 years; with a variety of processes involving bacteria, fungi, worms, and other micro and macro-organisms.

• The amount of electricity needed may outweigh the benefits of a composting toilet. However, if a community is in an arid climate then water conservation would be the main concern while a community that has limited electricity capabilities may not think that a composting toilet would be a good idea.

A compost toilet system is not a new idea. Historically there are designs from the 1800's. There has always been a need to find a proper way to dispose of human waste and maybe the technology of a composting toilet is not a bad idea.


Other Composting Worms related Articles

Sheet Composting
Composting At Home
Composting Tips
Composting Horse Manure
Worm Composting

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Composting Worms Specific links

Composting Worms News

Students taking part in classroom composting - Standard Freeholder


Students taking part in classroom composting
Standard Freeholder
Rose O'Dair feeds the composting worms in the "worm hotel" in the junior kindergarten and senior kindergarten mixed class at Gladstone Public School in Cornwall, Ontario. The vermicomposting was made possible by a grant by the TD Friends of The ...

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New free NOLA food and farm exchange listings are online - NOLA.com


NOLA.com

New free NOLA food and farm exchange listings are online
NOLA.com
Categories are: Produce/Food Products (vegetables, fruits, preserves, etc. to sell, trade, or buy); Soil/Compost (soil, manure, compost, worms, etc. to sell, trade, or buy); Services (lot clearing, tilling, etc. to sell, trade, or buy); Equipment/Tools ...

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Worms help garden flourish, household garbage disappear - Tbo.com


Worms help garden flourish, household garbage disappear
Tbo.com
Worms can transform kitchen scraps into rich organic fertilizer, reducing household waste in the process. William Delmoral gets his compost in order at the Hillsborough County Extension office. A class in vermi-composting was held at the Hillsborough ...

and more »

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Decatur Public Schools foundation instrumental in aiding districtl programs - Herald & Review


Decatur Public Schools foundation instrumental in aiding districtl programs
Herald & Review
The students had a garden last year, said Principal Aissa Norris, and digging in the garden led to curiosity about worms. “They raised a few worms in a tub in the classroom and that led us to composting because worms live in compost and help break it ...

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ECO to hold composting, worm bin workshop - BlueRidgeNow.com


ECO to hold composting, worm bin workshop
BlueRidgeNow.com
The Environmental and Conservation Organization will host a composting and worm bin workshop in conjunction with the NC Cooperative Extension Service on Saturday, May 12 as part of ECO's Sustainable Living Series. Participants will meet at the ...

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Making dirt Students experiment with worm composting - Casper Journal


Making dirt Students experiment with worm composting
Casper Journal
By Amanda Huckabay CasperJournal.com | Posted: Monday, April 30, 2012 1:52 pm | (0) Comments Photos by Amanda Huckabay Makala Nelson holds a cluster of red wiggler worms used for indoor composting. Oregon Trail Elementary School 4th graders are making ...

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Celebrate International Compost Awareness Week - Care2.com


Care2.com

Celebrate International Compost Awareness Week
Care2.com
Even if you don't grow a garden or have a yard, you can compost. You can do so by setting up an indoor worm bin (see How to Make a Worm Bin), or you could participate in community-based composting initiatives. Some cities will provide bins you can fill ...

and more »

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Gardening Etcetera: Worms: Night monsters become horticultural heroes - Arizona Daily Sun


Gardening Etcetera: Worms: Night monsters become horticultural heroes
Arizona Daily Sun
I've become embroiled with worms once again. I plan to pick up some red wrigglers soon to start a new worm compost bin. I'm excited, a little nervous and determined to ease my guilt. My relationship with worms has not always been a good one.

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