- Time of past OR future Camino
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In some places it is bog standard practise.
Now we know where it is......
Yikes!Bhutan---two boards over a pit--you put a foot on each and squat. Fall off and you fall in. This in a country where you are required to spend $250 a day.
Bhutan---two boards over a pit--you put a foot on each and squat. Fall off and you fall in. This in a country where you are required to spend $250 a day.
View attachment 17833
I see he has one of those new "CrapPacks".
This is pretty common in Mexico as well, especially in public places. When I worked there I was told 1) It's easier to clean 2) It keeps people from lingering to long in the bathroom, especially bathrooms where you pay a peso or two to go, that helps them up their daily revenue
OMG I would have rather walked back without the light!One of my projects in West Africa was to train folks how to build VIP latrines. VIP does not mean it was for " very important people" it stands for the ventilation system. Anyway we were trying to replace the reliance on the standard roadside squat and the slightly more improved two boards over a stream public facilities. Sub-Saharan African can not understand why anyone would close themselves up in a stinky, hot little shed to do what is nature's business. My favorite story was about an associate who went to the loo late at night with her headlamp, it fell off and she had to lower herself down, gymnast style on parallel bars, into the pit and retreive her light with her feet. Yuck, but even yuckier when you consider these pits are usually full of pythons who feast on the rats that live down there .
well not having a seat is just as bad as you leaving it up....we gotta do both jobs sitting...you at least get to stand for one of them...lolIt stops women getting angry at us guys for leaving the seat up...
Well I hope if low tide it was still going out or I would definitely not be swimming at that beach...ickI once spent two weeks at a remote island village in Western Samoa. The people there had trained themselves to do their business on the beach at low tide. I never actually saw anyone doing this -- they were quite discreet. When the Peace Corps was there in the late 60s, they couldn't handle that so they built a long pier out into the waves with an outhouse at the very end. Villagers referred to it as the "fale la Peace Corps" (fale=house). After the PC left, they torn down the outhouse, seeing it as rather superfluous...and hot.
I know, huh? But I can tell you that this was the practice in this village for a very, very long time and the population there was stable, i.e., their resources never exceeded their need, including waste management. They had plenty of fresh water and did not suffer any ill effects from defecating in the sea and then eating fish and seafood caught just yards offshore. It must have been a perfect ecosystem. We could have learned a lot from those people.Well I hope if low tide it was still going out or I would definitely not be swimming at that beach...ick
well not having a seat is just as bad as you leaving it up....we gotta do both jobs sitting...you at least get to stand for one of them...lol
My list of not going there this year now includes Sub Saharan Africa. Poopies and Pythons and Rats...Oh My!One of my projects in West Africa was to train folks how to build VIP latrines. VIP does not mean it was for " very important people" it stands for the ventilation system. Anyway we were trying to replace the reliance on the standard roadside squat and the slightly more improved two boards over a stream public facilities. Sub-Saharan African can not understand why anyone would close themselves up in a stinky, hot little shed to do what is nature's business. My favorite story was about an associate who went to the loo late at night with her headlamp, it fell off and she had to lower herself down, gymnast style on parallel bars, into the pit and retreive her light with her feet. Yuck, but even yuckier when you consider these pits are usually full of pythons who feast on the rats that live down there .
My goodness! Couldn't they have placed the last one kitty-corner? How's a person to angle himself over that one !?Three very different toilet 'seats' from our latest Camino. One 'aseos' with no liftable seat, one toilet in a hotel bathroom that could also give you a wash and dry (we daren't try all of those buttons!) but also functioned 'normally' and one 'servicios' that lacked any seat at all.
No, Coleen, the giggles - hysterics rather - come AFTER you make a mess, because you realize you hadn't practised enough. Then you end up doing laundry in the middle of the day.........I ordered one of those little Women's Pee thingys that is a bright purple rubber funnel shaped thingy .......But there is NOTHING in the instructions that says what to do IF, during the training process of using this bright purple thingy, I get a mad case of the giggles and start shaking and laughing and trying not to make a mess.
Ok. Ok. I'll admit it. I ordered one of those little Women's Pee thingys that is a bright purple rubber funnel shaped thingy that guarantees I can pee standing up and not have to hurt my already bad knees. Guaranteed! But there is NOTHING in the instructions that says what to do IF, during the training process of using this bright purple thingy, I get a mad case of the giggles and start shaking and laughing and trying not to make a mess.
And NO, it did NOT come in a "plain brown wrapper" as advertised, so my neighbors think I am some kind of old perverted woman. I take umbrage at the old part of that.
Tia Valeria,Three very different toilet 'seats' from our latest Camino. One 'aseos' with no liftable seat, one toilet in a hotel bathroom that could also give you a wash and dry (we daren't try all of those buttons!) but also functioned 'normally' and one 'servicios' that lacked any seat at all.
NoTia Valeria,
I hope you are not collecting photos for a camino book titled- The Potties along the Pilgrimage.
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