Sustainable living
Wolfe Island’s Wind
Wolfe Island Wind farm is a an omnipresent part of life for some people on the island, but for other’s it is simply a part of the landscape. Do you think it is an environmental move forward, or a mass of metal that pollutes with sound and size? So many quixotically charged these giants before they were there and others invited them into their hearts.
Love them or hate them, the wind farm is now a part of the everyday visual intake of those who live on and around the island. Looking South from Kingston these giants are pretty hard to miss.
Painting 8×10 acrylic of Ian MacAlpine’s photo.
Building a urine separating composting toilet
As you all know, last year I did my business in the woods. This year I am building a small bathroom addition to Tiny House Ontario. Initially, when planning the build I had intended on putting this on the East side of the house. Then I changed my mind and decided to put it on the North, but I am back to wanting it on the East again because I already have a small exit in the tiny house (an old window) which will be removed and become a very small door, to a very small bathroom with a composting toilet and running (rain water) sink and shower.
The Sparett unit, Privy 500 came in. I am happy that it came in so quickly. I like the separation unit idea because I believe that urine creates a lot of STINK. I really do not want stink.
I was super easy to do! Took about a 45 minutes start to finish and that included finding the tools and getting photos. The template came on the box the unit are the three articles in the front, these cost $157.06 (including shipping). The 1970’s end table was $7 at a thrift shop, tax included and the bucket was $8. Total $172.06. I also required to use my jig saw to cut the hole.
I marked the template and cut the hole. Perfect fit! I also cut the surface overhang off the back so that I can put this against the wall to vent it out.
With that done, I put the four screws in place and attached the Privy 500 to the end table. I attached the urine hose to the Privy 500 and drilled an exit hole in the bottom of the cabinet because I will have this drain outside into a filtering bed. The hose is ridged only on the outside. I worried about this before it arrived because a smooth surface will make for a cleaner surface, right?
So far I am not sure what I think of the unit. I like the idea and keep in mind that I have not used this yet; but if I was designing it I would make a few changes already just looking at it. Sigh. The problems that I see are that the separation section in the middle does not come up very high. This is a problem for two reasons. First the urine can get into the collection bucket. But the bigger problem is that the bucket cannot go up to meet the plastic where the back drops down. I would also have dropped the back (interior) down farther too, so that it goes fully into the bucket.
See? There is a gap, if these two things were ironed out, then theoretically a person could put a top on the bucket, put a hole in there and the blue plastic privy 500 could be enclosed right inside the bucket. The bucket could then be lifted right up tight to the unit so that no air or dirt leakage is possible inside of my 1970’s reused end table. Further, a VENT could be then put into the bucket lid and let out behind the unit. There is LOTS of room for a vent and lots of room for improvement on this unit too.
The “insulated seat” that is included is nothing but a piece of styrofoam with a lid. Cheapo! The toilet seat version is not available in Canada but as the fellow told me on the phone it can be changed up to a regular toilet seat. I am not sure really what to do yet. I will know better after I use it a bit.
So here is what it looks like right now. I think I will add a toilet roll holder to one side and a container to hold my coconut fibre. Still not sure what colour to paint it. Possibly just plain old white.
No matter, it will be GREAT to not have to venture out to the woods in the dark!
___________
Just cut a little bit out of the bucket and put the bucket on the board that was cut out for the Privy 500. Made the fit a little tighter but did not resolve any of the issues above.
Shit happens
I purchased a copy of the Humanure Handbook the other day, and a minute ago I ordered the Privy 500 in Canada they are ordered from Canadian Eco Products. The dealer who I spoke to seemed to me like a pretty good guy. He says that the unit should arrive here in a couple of days, (depending on the Family Day Holiday), I will let you know how long it takes to arrive. I plan on building a box to hold the unit up and will take some photos of this process when I do. I had intended to buy the Privy 501 but the Canadian dealer says that the toilet seat addition made the cost of shipping high and if you want a toilet seat for it, you can add one later. Seems sensible.
Basically, my plan is to make something similar to this:
or this:
The difference is that I will have a drain for urine which is why I bought the Privy 500 unit. Urine is what makes outhouses so funky, because it makes the pile o’poop wet.

The thing is, all you need to do is keep your poop bucket dry for it to be stink and pest free. In the reading that I have done (I have not read the Humanure Handbook yet), I understand that many people vary on what they use. Wood chips, peat moss and coconut husk fibre are the materials that seem to be favoured. I intend to use coco fibre at least initially, because I understand this to be a renewable resource.
What would you do?
a) Wood chips
b) Peat Moss
c) Coconut fibre
d) Poop in the woods
e) Are you kidding? I would never consider any of this as an option!
The Trees: Speaking to the Issue
My friend Colleen and I were chatting this morning, as we do from time to time. Our chats are filled with banter about animal ethics, environmental issues, and we also very often speak about the problematic ways in which human beings behave. There is often an emphasis on sheeplism and our frustrations in dealing with this.
During our banter, she mentioned a song called The Trees which is both written and performed by the iconic Canadian rock band Rush. Since I have always been about as far away from the mainstream as possible, I had never heard this song. My loss. It is really great; meaningful on a lot of levels.
The way that this song connected to something that has been on my mind for the last bit was timely. For the last few days I have been thinking a lot about the rules. Not the dating book series, but the rules of society. These rules, while put in place for the good of the whole, lost sight of a lot of things that are perfectly sensible. Specifically, I am speaking about Tiny Houses and the Bylaws that prohibit people from making choices that are better for the land, environment, mental health and in a million and one ways are greater than any McMansion can ever possibly be.
I have for three days had the story on my mind about the fellow who bought some acres in the US and whose neighbour harassed him from the day that he moved there. The story* messed up on so many levels, sort of Deliverance meets the Tiny House movement. The post is interesting but here is my synopsis of it this Deliverance story, the blogger bought land and put a tiny house on it. He hoped to live there for two years but made it only 5 months, in the time that he lived there he was constantly harassed and subjected to all sort of crazy from a weirdo next door (my words, not his).
The question is, who would you rather have for a neighbour? A quiet person whose house is so small that you can’t see it and who leaves the land as natural as it was when the planet formed, or a lout who blares his music, lets his kid, big scary dogs and insanity into your life every day just because you happen to live next door? You guessed it, the lout called the government and they are making him remove his Tiny House from his land. It seems wrong that an innocuous Tiny House can be considered wrong in anyone’s mind.
I am of the opinion that the legality of Tiny Houses should not be questioned. This should not be an issue. If indeed laws are put in place to protect people then who exactly is this law protecting? Why would anyone think that a Tiny House is dangerous?
Is this because refusing to participate in a consumer lifestyle is not acceptable and therefore a crime?
Here are the wonderful lyrics to the song that I think speaks to this issue.
“The Trees”
There is trouble with the trees
For the maples want more sunlight
And the oaks ignore their pleas
(And they’re quite convinced they’re right)
They say the oaks are just too lofty
And they grab up all the light
If they like the way they’re made
And they wonder why the maples
Can’t be happy in their shade
And the creatures all have fled
As the maples scream ‘Oppression!’
And the oaks just shake their heads
And demanded equal rights
‘The oaks are just too greedy
We will make them give us light’
For they passed a noble law
And the trees are all kept equal
By hatchet, axe and saw









