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My son and I came up over a rise and found a guy about 1000y from his campsite leaning his back on a barbed wire fence. We quickly turned away to give him a little privacy. Later in the day we crossed through that area and my son took a snapshot of their "shitter" for comparison back at camp. We all agreed we preferred our approach. .One if my pet peeves in the woods of Western Colorado is hunting groups that use a toilet seat and leave it there after there departure along with their unburied or partially buried piles of crap and tp. Take it with you or bury it deeply.
Bet you're one of those neat desk sickos....; )We got a little canvas wall outhouse from Davis Tent when we got our canvas wall tent and built a scrap 2x4 frame to mount a toilet seat over a home depot bucket - and then use the plastic bags they sell for portapotty use. It is one of the nicest hunting luxuries there is on a cold morning.
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My man!...I'll see...and raise
Good to see. I never trust a man with an empty desk . . .My man!...I'll see...and raise
would work better if they would have come up with an internet version of "smell-o-vision"
So you don't want to be the last guy to leave camp?We have a big black Rubbermaid garbage can on the side of the outhouse with a heavy duty garbage bag liner. The little bucket bags are good for a number of uses - especially as we make the guys pee outside - and then they seal up and go into the garbage can. Whoever has room in the back of an open pickup bed at the end of the trip gets the task of taking out and disposing of it.
one suggestion, I noted the screw heads attaching the seat, we used to have a setup like that (unfortunately with 4 screw heads) and the first guy out in the am on a minus 5 degree day got nice little frosty dimples on his ass, we subsequently glued the seat to the frame. Otherwise OUTSTANDING!Disclaimer. This is for a camp that has been used for many years. Not a backcountry camp but not the easiest place to find. The Toilet is not in a close easily found area close to camp (120yrds from camp).
We came up with a method that keeps our camp from having any permanent structures, thus being easy to find. As mentioned earlier, a 3+ ft. hole that gets used year after year. RV toilet paper and RV toilet chemicals can make this setup last for years. Our current hole is on it's 4th year and going strong (6 grown men in camp yearly).
1)Get the hole dug. off-season scouting or camping trip.
2)Build a box "TOP" with a lid on it. the lid will get a roofing treatment (tar paper/shingles)
3)jig saw the toilet hole in the top (platform "underneath the lid").
4)build (4) removable 2x4 legs (bolt and nut attachment).
5)Will need a length of contractors tarp or similar to enclose the box once the legs are attached (don't forget a staple gun for camp)
6)Your favorite toilet seat and two wood screws to secure it.
7)shower building/toilet building optional
When the legs are removed from the platform it becomes the cover for the hole and is undetectable to others unless stumbled upon by accident thus does not get used at anytime by others during the off season (can't be used without the legs unless it's a squat and purge). Off season use as most of you know can fill a pit toilet up quickly, specially in a popular recreation area.
Post season fill the hole with several bottles of RV Chem, poor 10, 20, 30 or whatever water you have left over, pull the contractors plastic and pitch, pull the toilet seat (keep or pitch. toilet seats are cheap), pull the 4 legs and hardware for storage, close the top lid and it's ready for the following season. No need to haul chairs or buckets and the like every year (just the legs, toilet seat and a length of contractor tarp).
Typically when we come up and coyote hunt during spring we will bring 20 gal. of water and RV toilet chem and repeat the post season routine.
This is a very clean way of doing a pit toilet that leaves no trace when the hole is rendered not useful anymore. Cover/fill with dirt after years of use, transport the platform out of the area for recycle and build another. Nature takes care of the rest.
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