treemansbuds
Well-Known Member
Here's a good story....
I worked at the waste water facility in Yosemite national park. We would run the waste water through the processing plant separating the "sludge" from the water. The sludge would cook down/ break down, then after going through the plant, we would add a chemical to it and pump it into these 30' x 60' drying beds to dry out in the sun. After it would dry out, we scooped it up with a loader, and used it for landscaping fill. Looked just like regular dirt.
After we landscaped the place, we put in ornamental plants to make the place look good. After adding water for a few days to the ornamental plants, we noticed new plants coming up from the compost. Upon further inspection they were tomato plants. Yes, volunteer tomato plants. We called them "ass-hole tomatoes"...lol. The tomato seeds went through the human body, then the processing plant, cooked down, chemicals added to it, processed again only to survive and become a plant.
We had huge, beautiful tomato plants everywhere. Only a few employees would take the tomatoes home and eat them.
So in my experience, human compost will work just fine!
Good luck...
TMB-
I worked at the waste water facility in Yosemite national park. We would run the waste water through the processing plant separating the "sludge" from the water. The sludge would cook down/ break down, then after going through the plant, we would add a chemical to it and pump it into these 30' x 60' drying beds to dry out in the sun. After it would dry out, we scooped it up with a loader, and used it for landscaping fill. Looked just like regular dirt.
After we landscaped the place, we put in ornamental plants to make the place look good. After adding water for a few days to the ornamental plants, we noticed new plants coming up from the compost. Upon further inspection they were tomato plants. Yes, volunteer tomato plants. We called them "ass-hole tomatoes"...lol. The tomato seeds went through the human body, then the processing plant, cooked down, chemicals added to it, processed again only to survive and become a plant.
We had huge, beautiful tomato plants everywhere. Only a few employees would take the tomatoes home and eat them.
So in my experience, human compost will work just fine!
Good luck...
TMB-