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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!menudo.uh.edu!ccsvax.sfasu.edu!f_speerjr
- From: f_speerjr@ccsvax.sfasu.edu
- Newsgroups: misc.rural
- Subject: Re: Septic systems and toilet paper
- Message-ID: <1993Jan1.081319.2311@ccsvax.sfasu.edu>
- Date: 1 Jan 93 08:13:19 CST
- References: <HALLINAN.92Dec30132803@zeus.harvard.edu>
- Distribution: na
- Organization: Stephen F. Austin State University
- Lines: 29
-
- In article <HALLINAN.92Dec30132803@zeus.harvard.edu>, hallinan@zeus.harvard.edu (Peter W. Hallinan) writes:
- > All the posts on septic systems have me wondering...
- > Does toilet paper actually degrade in the septic tank, or
- > is it really the main ingredient of the solids that have to be
- > periodically pumped out?
- > Cambridge, MA 02138
-
- If our experience with one septic tank these last 13 years is any guide, toilet
- paper is not a problem, and, properly used, the tank need never be pumped out.
-
- We have used the present septic system for 13 years. It has never been pumped,
- but it was opened last year to replace an input line that had failed. We found
- only about 6 inches of solid material in the bottom, suggesting that most of
- the solids we have dumped this past decade+ have been converted to liquid by
- bacterial action and transferred out of the tank and into the drain field.
- This, I thought, is how a septic system is SUPPOSED to work.
-
- We freely flush toilet paper, but we carefully observe two rules: 1) NO GREASE
- of any kind into the system, and 2) NOTHING that would kill bacteria
- (prominently including chemical drain openers, bleach, etc.).
-
- We are located in the woods of East Texas, and our drain field was properly
- designed with appropriate fall, and drains into the red clay/sand soil that is
- typical of the southern pine forest.
-
- Cheers and happy new year!
- Jim Speer
-
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