I stumbled into this video and wanted to share it.
Households really have a huge impact on the environment because the bigger your house is, the more you pollute.
I stumbled into this video and wanted to share it.
Households really have a huge impact on the environment because the bigger your house is, the more you pollute.
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!
I found a Tiny House, obscure Beatles recording from 1969 (now removed from You Tube sorry folks!). It is hard to make out the beginning few seconds but you can read along at 0.34.
Sounds like they are having a GREAT TIME with Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen by the Sea, by Al Hoffman and Dick Manning. The Beatles would have been working on Abbey Road. I understand that they were having a tough time as a band during that period but, even so this Tiny House song seems to have brought them some much needed distraction.
I wish I could say that it was written for me, but I was only 4 when this recording was done.
Here are the lyrics:
There’s a tiny house
By a tiny stream
Where a lovely lass
Had a lovely dream
And her dream came true
Quite unexpectedly
In Gilly Gilly Ossenfeffer Katzenellen Bogen By The Sea
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”
Ordinarily in February, we who live in Ontario are hiding away in our homes. Currently we are enjoying spring like temperatures. Birds are singing and the squirrels are mating; even the groundhog says that it is spring here.
All of this warm weather has me twitching to get to Tiny House Ontario and start the work that needs to be done there. With my husband away and nights still below zero, I think that I better stay here with the pack of dogs in Hamilton where the house is heated.
Today, I decided to use the Photoshop program to paint siding on the house. I am NOT an expert at this but a beginner, but with the risk of being made fun of I am going to share with you what Tiny House Ontario looks like with the Typar covered.
I still think I want to cover the house with cedar. I have some algonquin coloured milk paint which I would paint this with once it is on. I guess that this depends on the local saw mill…