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I don't disagree with your premise, but the actualization would mean carrying a "what if" or "might need" item and for me, that's just not going to happen.Well at least you know how to deal with the TP.
Now, how many thousand people per year walk the CF? If each one has one poo then how many poos openly litter the countryside of Northern Spain.
Surely two minutes to scratch a hole and leave it buried and allow it to degrade more quickly is not too much bother, or is it. Also keeps the niff down in the more popular places, which has also been mentioned a few times.
P.s. I am attempting to get my body trained to Camino time, but dagnabbit I hate having to get up at 5 each morning, my wife has suddenly taken to mentioning that I should maybe be taking a trip to the docs as she is unaware of my training regime in its finer details. She has also totally refused breakfast in bed at that time, also and cannot understand why I am eating lunch at breakfast time
Yeah, taking the proverbial dump outdoors on the Camino is a delicate matter, but it is reality and there are a lot of delicate inquiries about it. I never had to. I always did my business at the albergue or pensiones. If at an albergue, I'd just wake up before everyone else did, and go to the toilet then. Easy peasy. and bring some toilet paper with you nonetheless. Not just for in case you go outdoors, but also for use in the albergue. Quite often the toilet paper gets used up before morning. You go in the stall, and there's nothing on the TP roll. I kept half a roll in my pack, with the cardboard removed, and scrunched down in a plastic ziplock bag. Lasted me the entire CF.Hi Mark Lee. Not been on the Camino yet but I think, having avidly followed it for a couple of months, that you may be correct. Hopefully this bit of reading may help them mend their unintended ways.
My last remaining paranoia about the Camino remains (and probably will remain so til I've finished) to be bed bugs. Oh, No amount of advice that they don't happen is going to drive that from my mind!
I forgot to mention ticks!
yeah, what she said....don't carry "what-if's" and leave the "what if" thinking at homeWhat if a stick was nearby which you could also use to scratch the hole then leave it where it had been found? Hey presto no carrying required, and the same effect on the land , i.e. your back yard.
in the 480 miles (give or take) from SJPP to SdC, I only had one emergency poo stop and no, I didn't take it with me. I did take out the TP, as I did after my multiple pee stops. I plan ahead for my biologic needs which are fortunately usually consistent, and I have no intention of carrying trowel or tent peg (although I do think the tent peg is brilliant if one chooses to cathole). Bring it on..that's my story and I'm sticking to it!!
A proper cat hole is 6 to 8 inches deep. If someone is burying waste under an inch of soil, they are doing it wrong.buried under an inch of loosely tamped earth
Dude, I commend your dedication to the environment and greenness and I raise the Heineken currently in my meathooks to you for that dedication, but one thing I have never done, nor will I ever do is carry around a turd in my pocket. Not my turd, nor any other turd. cheersThe sight of tissues strewn about near bush campsites always infuriates me . In some circumstances all around the only source of drinking water for miles . Those who claim they '' never need to pee'' while walking long distances are either lying , deluded, severely dehydrated , or all three and as far as '' training your bowels '' goes , well I wish I could train mine to be less disobedient .
Digging a hole is the last resort really , taking it with you is the responsible thing to do . Buy a roll of dog poo bags from a pet shop , less than a eighty grams for a hundred bags , half the roll would weigh forty . As avid bushwalkers my companions and I '' Only ever take photographs and leave nothing but footprints'' . Consider stepping onto someone else's deposit buried under an inch of loosely tamped earth , or seeing the same unearthed by a wandering dog or wild pig . It is no wonder local farmers become irate .
Well, Mark, I wouldn't like to tell you what I learned from an REI person who has spent some time in "the Canyon"........and she seemed to think it was the most normal thing in the world........ but one thing I have never done, nor will I ever do is carry around a turd in my pocket.
Good to know. I carried ziplock bags with me for rubbish and whatever, reused them after washing! I'll be prepared to lend (edit: Give!) to carnivores in future. You didn't specify ziplock, but I assume...I'm a carnivore Mike, but in 9 long distance walks through France and Spain I have never needed to poo anywhere other than in a toilet. Nor has my husband.
But if I did I would be carrying it to the next village in a plastic bag.
Not lying....took sips not gulps along the way. Took long drinks at rest stops and used the facilities before leaving. I've driven around Iceland 4 times. Rest stops, towns or villages are few and far between...even a tree for privacy....nil. Yes you learn to adapt. Hugs my friendThe sight of tissues strewn about near bush campsites always infuriates me . In some circumstances all around the only source of drinking water for miles . Those who claim they '' never need to pee'' while walking long distances are either lying , deluded, severely dehydrated , or all three and as far as '' training your bowels '' goes , well I wish I could train mine to be less disobedient .
Digging a hole is the last resort really , taking it with you is the responsible thing to do . Buy a roll of dog poo bags from a pet shop , less than a eighty grams for a hundred bags , half the roll would weigh forty . As avid bushwalkers my companions and I '' Only ever take photographs and leave nothing but footprints'' . Consider stepping onto someone else's deposit buried under an inch of loosely tamped earth , or seeing the same unearthed by a wandering dog or wild pig . It is no wonder local farmers become irate .
All the way around Iceland 4 times!! Desperation! Somebody should plant some bushes up there.Not lying....took sips not gulps along the way. Took long drinks at rest stops and used the facilities before leaving. I've driven around Iceland 4 times. Rest stops, towns or villages are few and far between...even a tree for privacy....nil. Yes you learn to adapt. Hugs my friend
Leave no trace practices are relative to the environment. On our Grand Canyon trip, you peed in the river and solid waste was removed. There is not enough rain to help dissolve or wash away the pee or help with the compost of solid waste.Well, Mark, I wouldn't like to tell you what I learned from an REI person who has spent some time in "the Canyon"........and she seemed to think it was the most normal thing in the world.
While walking the CF, on average I would consume about 5-6 liters of water a day. Some, cooler days less of course. Happy thoughts and tunes weren't gonna make the waters recede.I truly couldn't understand this seemingly right of passage to go on the trail. I've birthed 5 children and have an over active bladder...and still never felt it couldn't wait till the next town. Truly baffled me . Seriously if you feel the urge ...think about something else...hum a tune....and take sips not gulps along the way.
Good, albeit smug post there.No catholes necessary for moi. I've been a vegetarian for almost half a century. There are outcomes (sic) other than ethical smugness. Regularity of peristalsis is a joy. I get death threats from prunes. Every morning make a move from horizontal to vertical and voila. If there's a slight delay, no worries, eat breakfast and peristalsis will trigger and an alternate voila. On my CF this year I watered the petunias many times but never not once had to even think about holes of any kind.
Buen Camino you godless, low-roughage carnivores.
bless her heart....Well, Mark, I wouldn't like to tell you what I learned from an REI person who has spent some time in "the Canyon"........and she seemed to think it was the most normal thing in the world.
Good to hear! I'm very glad to see that you are, and hope to continue to be, selective about where you, um.....go ..... on your time off.bless her heart....
I sure hope that I never reach a point in my life where expended turd transport become a normal thing to do.
bless her heart....
I sure hope that I never reach a point in my life where expended turd transport become a normal thing to do.
In more than one park in the Canadian north that I've visited, where the environment is very delicate and there are a lot of visitors, bodily waste is deposited in large above ground outhouses, and flown out periodically by helicopter. Helicopter costs being what they are, I was told by a park ranger that each visit to the outhouse is worth about $40.Leave no trace practices are relative to the environment. On our Grand Canyon trip, you peed in the river and solid waste was removed. There is not enough rain to help dissolve or wash away the pee or help with the compost of solid waste.
The outhouses that I used on the Chilkoot Trail in the Yukon were compostable toilets. I guess they work OK as they are not as nasty as most outhouses that I've experienced.In more than one park in the Canadian north that I've visited, where the environment is very delicate and there are a lot of visitors, bodily waste is deposited in large above ground outhouses, and flown out periodically by helicopter. Helicopter costs being what they are, I was told by a park ranger that each visit to the outhouse is worth about $40.
I wouldn't count on that, at least not one sturdy enough to dig a hole with.Ok I'll change the "what if there is a stick nearby" to "there will almost certainly be a stick or other object near by".
Truly apologize if I seemed smug or some how hurtful to others. Please understand not my intention. Can you take a minute to understand my shock to watch men and women laughing and dropping there pants many times steps from the trail not even attempting to shield themselves from others. My apologiesWell, Penny, hopefully you will read the linked article so you know how to cope should personal disaster, in this regard, strike at any time in the future!
http://sectionhiker.com/how-to-dig-a-cathole/
Having read a number of threads about body waste in certain areas of the Camino. I wonder how many people know how to deal with the situation when "caught short".
Can I recommend a wee bit of night time reading via http://sectionhiker.com/how-to-dig-a-cathole/
Now I am a little confused about the placement of the TP at the bottom of the cathole. My normal order of things is to make my deposit, use TP for what it was meant, discard TP. That would put the TP on the top of the pile. Would the TP at the bottom imply making ones deposit next to the hole and then scraping the leavings into the cathole once done with the TP going in first? Inquiring minds would like to know.
The mechanics are simple really , instead of digging first you 'perform ' then dig . It does make sense if you have to dispose of it on a walk . Digging the hole first assumes you have a good sense of balance and decent aim , this might not always be the case . Digging afterwards lets you take more time at it [ assuming the need was urgent ] and scraping the deposits into the hole in whichever way you see fit .By the way, my question is serious. I am not being flippant here.
Now I am a little confused about the placement of the TP at the bottom of the cathole. My normal order of things is to make my deposit, use TP for what it was meant, discard TP. That would put the TP on the top of the pile. Would the TP at the bottom imply making ones deposit next to the hole and then scraping the leavings into the cathole once done with the TP going in first? Inquiring minds would like to know.
I'm glad you asked this question. I like to keep things in order too. As you say .... inquiring minds.By the way, my question is serious. I am not being flippant here.
There we are. Brilliantly explained. Thank you.The mechanics are simple really , instead of digging first you 'perform ' then dig . It does make sense if you have to dispose of it on a walk . Digging the hole first assumes you have a good sense of balance and decent aim , this might not always be the case . Digging afterwards lets you take more time at it [ assuming the need was urgent ] and scraping the deposits into the hole in whichever way you see fit .
I took along twelve cotton hankies to use for nose blowing. I handed all 11 out along the way. Just wash it out with the rest of your laundry everydayI write with some authority on the subject as: (1) I have had to "answer the call" over my four Camino's; and (2) I just finished my fourth full day cleaning up the Camino across Palencia.
The single most / WORST trash issue is used toilet tissue and clean-up "wipes" both the "brown" variety and simply yellow... it is incredible, the sheer volume we found each day.
Evidently, whether just blowing one's nose, or going "full-squat," people think nothing of just using and tossing their toilet paper or tissues...anywhere and everywhere.
As a general rule, if you pack it in, like toilet tissue, PACK IT OUT. Obtain and save a few plastic bags, like the those from a farmacia. They take nil space and weigh nothing.
Human feces decompose on the surface in a month or two, unless deep frozen. However the paper tissue lasts for a couple of years. I KNOW, because I have been picking it up for four days.
Let me make this clear... THE CAMINO DE SANTIAGO IS NOT AND WILL NEVER BE YOUR PERSONAL OUT-HOUSE AND LANDFILL...
Please act responsibly....THINK!
See the separate.thread on "Ditch Pigs, They're Back!"
I hope this helps. The "shouting" was occasioned by my passion for the Camino and my just finished stint as a "Ditch Pig." If you were here you would understand and agree...totally!
it's good stuff, ain't it....This whole thread is giving me stomach cramps! I'm alternating between laughing and shaking my head.
First, we have those that NEVER have an unregulated physical need; those who are so in control of their bodily functions that they can't IMAGINE someone suddenly needing to drop a deuce without a road map.
Next, we have those who have apparently taken huge advantage of the best that rough hiking has to offer--and who understand that expended T. T. (see Mark Lee's reference above) is necessary in some environments.
The reasonable cat-hole diggers seem to have hit the "three bears" measure for me. Justtttttt right. Remember this!
If you must leave a special rock
along the sacred Way
Tis time to dig, and off the trail
to keep the stench at bay.
Honestly, we probably don't need to work toward consensus on this sticky wicket, as it were. I admire those of you with such great control over your bodies, and also those of you who aren't tempted by the smell of Mark Lee's venison sizzling in the pan, but I think it's time for another cup of coffee!
much gratitude....@t2andreo and I cleaned up between Carrion de los Condes und Villacazar de Sirga - 'only 6km' - that was all what we did today, here is how Don Limpio, the Ditch Pig Trash Cart looked as we finished:
The article linked states that it would be preferable to bag your TP and carry it out, along with wet wipe s and other hygiene material. Only bury TP if necessary or if you cannot bring yourself to bag it.
A trowel allows the poop scooping to be easier than a stick would but yes scrape it into the hole then cover.
Trowels (lightweight) are available for the purpose on the WWW very cheaply. They are also not huge. I use an aluminium triangular tent peg because they are so light, strong and have other uses.
The Ditch pigs deserve an enormous amount of thanks for the donation of their work. Do you have a way of making donations towards equipment/ lodgings etc. Preferably PayPal. If so please can you open a thread giving details.
No one is arguing about whether people should properly take care of their bodily wastes on the camino, and not leave messes such as you encountered!...but
Prevention is the best medicine.
I can't believe this is something I have to argue.
I don't think that. Really! I believe we would have walked and talked happily together. In fact any of us here on this thread!I'm not as narrow minded as you seem to think.