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John H[_2_] John H[_2_] is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,637
Default dealing with ****

On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 18:33:34 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote:

On Mar 2, 8:58*pm, Harryk wrote:
On 3/2/11 7:58 PM, Tim wrote:



On Mar 2, 6:47 pm, *wrote:
On 3/2/11 7:43 PM, Tim wrote:


On Mar 2, 9:31 am, wrote:
On Wed, 2 Mar 2011 07:13:13 -0500, * *wrote:
In ,
says...


On Tue, 1 Mar 2011 20:28:38 -0800 (PST),
wrote:


On Mar 1, 7:50 pm, * *wrote:
Maybe there is a better way than just dumping it in the bay. People
keep trying to make solar hot water work but maybe we should instead
use solar collectors to heat ****. Really, liquefy it(a macerator)
and then pump it onto your roof where solar concentrators evaporate
the water (and kills bacteria) and a worm screw gadget feeds the dried
powdered "effluent"into a box. Once a week, a truck comes by and
carries it away for use as fertilizer.
Why is this better than sending it to a "treatment plant"? It avoids
the necessity of running sewage lines and uses on-site resources. A
home could be completely off-grid without a septic tank.
So, how much are we talking about drying anyway? If we all use low
flush and front loading washers, the amount would be well within the
ability of a rooftop solar concentrator. On cloudy days, you'd use
electricity to dry it.
OK, the thought of "a mess of steaming ****" on my roof don't sound so
good but it could work.


Wouldn't' a simpler solution be to go tot he back yard with a spade
shovel, strike deep and turn the sod. Take a dump and re-cover paper
and all, next day, different location. *That would cut sewer costs and
help your lawn.


It works for the dog and Ed ****s more than a family of 4.


You need to buy the high quality dog food. The higher the quality the
less the ****.


Ed is on a high fiber "diet" dog food. It isn't exactly cheap.


Amazing how much corn and soy meal costs now days.


We spend about $70 a week on...kitty litter.


Cats...they eat, they sleep, they pee, they poop, and then they eat
again. :)


70 a week?????


good Lord!


It all started when we decided to rescue some kitties...

Six tubs of litter a week, at about $12 a tub.


Well Harry, we agree on one thing, we both seem to like cats. We got
4 of the critters, down one from last year.


Sounds like Harry could use some help in the money saving department.

"Get rid of five litter boxes!"

We've never had more than one for up to three cats. No problem.