Tour Bonus Coverage

September 14th, 2007

An Ode To The Commode

Most of the campgrounds that I’ve been staying at lately have had only vault/pit toilets, which is basically a glorified hole in the ground that you poop in, with no running water involved. The interesting thing is that every vault toilet I’ve used from the Black Hills on west has been of a very similar design. It doesn’t matter if the campground is National Forest, National Park, Wildlife Management, or Bureau of Land Management, they must all use the same toilet designer.

img_0788.JPGWhat makes that very exciting is that the toilet designer did an excellent job. In the Midwest and East, a pit toilet often means a ramshackle wooden structure filled with flies that smells really bad. In the North Woods I even had one that was just a wooden box with a hole in the top of it, right out in plain view!

img_0790.JPGIn contrast, these are concrete-walled structures with solid, locking steel doors. They’re painted white inside for visibility, have a lot of room (they’re usually ADA-compliant), and they all even have a nice hook on which to hang your jacket. The toilet seat is comfortable, and the lids are used as the signs direct. They have no odor at all, except for perhaps the nice smell of an air-freshener placed inside. The last couple I’ve used have even been dual-units, with a central hall between them that shines electric light through internal windows. They have a curious built-in sign that reads “PLEASE… DO NOT put trash in toilets. It is extremely difficult to remove. THANK YOU”. “Difficult” is probably not the exact word I would have used to describe it, but hey, if it keeps people from throwing trash in there, then that’s super. As perfectly as everything else is designed, I’m sure they researched that sign very carefully to determine the most effective deterrent.

On the last couple of windy days, I’ve noticed one unexpected surprise of the vault toilet: a good breeze will blow into the external vent stack and give your bottom some nice air-conditioning from below. For free!

An Ode To The Commode

O, my wonderful Western toilet
Not even the most fearsome log can spoil it
Some call you pit, some call you vault
By any name, you are a can without fault

Smells sweet
Cool seat
Made of concrete

We all must heed nature’s call
So this is a stall that can handle it all
And when you’re in a rush
You need not remember to flush

[Editor’s Note: The main text was written several days ago, but the poem was only composed when inspiration struck, which was yesterday, during the 2000-foot climb up to Ochoco Divide]

4 Responses to “Tour Bonus Coverage”

  1. Chika Says:

    Wow, we are very excited that you will be arriving in a couple of days. We just got from Costco, so we are ready for you! However, you will not be able to enjoy a free butt-breeze at our place, that will cost extra.

  2. Dana Says:

    LOL. Who knew we were kindred spirits when it came to poetry? I will have to share some of my “Odes” w/you someday. (I think the last one I wrote was about chili.) Good work on a rarely appreciated topic, Neil! Furthermore, I’m very happy you don’t have to deal w/those smelly port o’potties!

  3. Tim Says:

    Mmmmm…. Do they really smell OK? Or could it be that after several days without showers, your olfactory organ is failing?

  4. Monte Crippen Says:

    Neil,
    You are seeing what I call, “outhouse built to nuclear standards”. What you didn’t see is the large concrete tank underneath it. The tank accumulates all the droppings but only has an access port in the top. A time or two per season, a septic service tanker truck comes out from town. It has a vacuum system on the top of it and a flexible 4” hose on the bottom. The driver activates the “sucking pump”, lowers the hose to the bottom down the access port, opens the valve, and all the contents are sucked into the road tanker untouched by human hands. Then drive (with probably several other stops on the way) to the local treatment plant and dump everything. The bottom (no pun intended) line is that all the waste goes thru a treatment system, none of it gets into the local ground water at the camp area (often rather fragile sites) and it doesn’t cost too many $ to operate. Bad news it that if some twit puts a stick, wad of plastic, etc into the potty then it clogs the flexible hose and the driver has a real ugly mess to undo.
    Monte Crippen, PE