smackiesmommy
Power Conserver
if someone wanted to go off the grid, how far away from your home are you supposed to put an outhouse? and how ofter are you supposed to move it?
What and where is your water source? That is one waste stream that you don't want to recycle. Other things are weather based. If you have a lot of hot still days you want it farther from the house, under a shade tree is nice. wind or breezy down wind for sure. winters cold or deep snow Close to the house you don't want to freeze to death or use snow shoes when nature calls. Moving it?I can't help because we had a brick outhouse and it was never moved. When the solids built up we would call the same guy that pumped out septic tanks for others. High pressure hose and a mucksucker pump handled our waste the same as a septic tank. If you do move it remember to check the old hole yearly be cause the fill will sink as the muck rots. Nothing but common sense!smackiesmommy said:if someone wanted to go off the grid, how far away from your home are you supposed to put an outhouse? and how ofter are you supposed to move it?
animalfarm said:I grew up with an outhouse only.
My dad dug a 15' deep hole. He dug a new hole next to the old hole every summer and used the dirt to fill in the old hole. Our outhouse never smelled but it got further away from the house every year.
My dad was not stupid. He also located the outhouse so that the wood shed was between it and the house. No one was allowed to use it unless they chopped an arm load of wood and hauled it back to the house. No wood, no getting back in the house. Didn't matter if it was 40 below.
Our house was dug into the side of a hill overlooking a beaver pond. For some reason he also like his outhouse to hang off the hillside. He told us it would be harder for the bears to knock it over. ???? I hated going out there in the dead of night and imagining all the bears just waiting to knock the outhouse down the hill with me in it. Us kids never wasted anytime sitting out there and chopped that wood pretty darned quick too.
Our parents never had to nag to get some stove wood in the house although we did get pretty adept at holding our bladders in the winter.
Think so ? our wood shed was attached to the house and the way I remember it most peoples were. The woodshed was where punishment was delivered, Sort of a giant mud room/ secure storage space.Beekissed said:animalfarm said:I grew up with an outhouse only.
My dad dug a 15' deep hole. He dug a new hole next to the old hole every summer and used the dirt to fill in the old hole. Our outhouse never smelled but it got further away from the house every year.
My dad was not stupid. He also located the outhouse so that the wood shed was between it and the house. No one was allowed to use it unless they chopped an arm load of wood and hauled it back to the house. No wood, no getting back in the house. Didn't matter if it was 40 below.
Our house was dug into the side of a hill overlooking a beaver pond. For some reason he also like his outhouse to hang off the hillside. He told us it would be harder for the bears to knock it over. ???? I hated going out there in the dead of night and imagining all the bears just waiting to knock the outhouse down the hill with me in it. Us kids never wasted anytime sitting out there and chopped that wood pretty darned quick too.
Our parents never had to nag to get some stove wood in the house although we did get pretty adept at holding our bladders in the winter.That was a great idea of your dad's....wish I had thought of something like that.
![]()
Surly you have heard the expression of taking someone to the woodshed. I don't know to this day how the girls got theirs but us boys it was bare bottom.Beekissed said:Punishment was delivered right in our house....we didn't have a woodshed.Our outhouse was a goodly distance from the house and our wood was stacked right against the cabin.