[pct-l] TP decomposition - 3 P's
Will Hiltz
will.hiltz at gmail.com
Fri Jan 29 13:54:03 CST 2010
Feel free to continue to use whatever disposal method you like. You haven't
really told us why making your slurry is any more desirable than packing
out-- you are focused on reasons that its "just as good" as packing out,
which is not the same as it being beneficial. So we're back to, at bottom,
finding it icky as the justification for leaving your TP in the woods.
My data and statistics are this-- the idea behind LNT is to leave as little
trace as you can. Surely introducing something into the woods that wasn't
there before (even in slurry form) is less desirable than leaving nothing at
all?
Your credentials are undoubtedly in order, but as I said above, a lot of
these "methods" we see on the list are more about people trying to feel
justified in claiming their method (burying deep enough, burning, slurry,
tons of rocks on top, a stick stuck in the hole, etc., etc., etc., etc) is
just as acceptable as packing out.
Easy
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 11:26 AM, Ron Moak <ronmoak at sixmoondesigns.com>wrote:
> >> Ah, yet another justification for avoiding something which you seem to
> acknowledge is the right thing to do but you find unpleasant. ]
>
>
>
> No matter how much you mix up your patented poo slurry with extremely
> responsible toilet paper, it is definitely not the most environmentally
> friendly or LNT way to dispose of your TP. Not leaving it there in the first
> place would be... or is that just oversimplifying things? <<
>
>
>
> Easy,
>
>
>
> I don’t acknowledge or deny that packing out your TP is the right thing to
> do. It is an acceptable option if you choose to avail yourself to that
> method. I am simply saying that it’s not the only viable method to achieve a
> desired result (the unsightly presence of TP).
>
>
>
> As to whether the 3 P’s is or isn’t the most environmentally friendly
> option, you’ve failed to make any case. You’re simply stating a belief that
> the 3 P’s is environmentally unsound with no data or reasoning to
> substantiate your case. Saying I believe, is neither evidence nor a reasoned
> argument. To say leaving TP behind is environmentally harmful, you’d have to
> first establish that TP is harmful. Unsightly, agreed. Harmful, not likely.
>
>
>
> With respect to my background and reasoning process. It’s derived from a
> Degree in Forest Management combined with working three years in a major
> sewage treatment plant. This provides a pretty good basis for understanding
> the forest ecology, forest by products (TP) and waste management.
>
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------
>
> Fallingwater
>
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