How Do You Install A Composting Toilet With Maintenance?
Composting toilets used to be the sole domain of survivalists and backwoods campers, but they are becoming increasingly common in areas where drought conditions and water restrictions are a fact of life. Commercial models are more expensive than traditional flush toilets, but their design makes the transition to a composting toilet easy and inoffensive. You can save a significant amount of money by building a composting toilet yourself. A homemade model can be as simple as a toilet seat mounted on a 5-gallon bucket, or you can build it into a cabinet structure to hide the evidence of decomposing waste. Assemble the composting toilet, following the manufacturer’s instructions. Commercial units are self-contained and do not require special installation. Homemade versions can be self-contained, or you can build them to vent odors outside, depending on the design. Fill the 5-gallon bucket with sawdust. Place this near the composting toilet. Sprinkle a handful of sawdust into the solid wast