While this sounds rather innocent on the surface, a home can go downhill real quick if there isn’t running water.
How do you get rid of human waste? How do you bathe yourself? How do you clean your dishes? How do you clean up around the home? How do you clean your clothing, or your bedding?
That ‘international rules’ or whatever was a warning flag on the other end though.
Sounds like there might be some wing-nuts on both ends of this.
We’ll probably hear more later on.
“How do you get rid of human waste? How do you bathe yourself? How do you clean your dishes? How do you clean up around the home? How do you clean your clothing, or your bedding?”
Easy, could lock my door now and do all of those things without power, without running water except I would still have running water, just not out of their water pipe.
How do you get rid of human waste? How do you bathe yourself?
How do you clean your dishes? How do you clean up around the home? How do you clean your clothing, or your bedding?
They showed her house on the news. It was spotless clean. She has a flush toilet. She collects rainwater and stores it in barrels and treats it. Many people do this up here in Alaska, not by choice, but because there is no other way in some areas. All she is doing is collecting what nature gives her and bypassing the middlemen. The environmental movement should applaud her, as she is living with a very small footprint.