How We Recycle ALL Our House Wastewater Into The Garden

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  • Опубликовано: 22 сен 2022
  • In this video, I show you how we recycle all the wastewater from our home into the garden, including toilet water. Also, we chat with a waste disposal guy about the worst things he has found whilst cleaning out a septic tank.
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    #septic #watering #gardening
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Комментарии • 497

  • @asdisskagen6487
    @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +94

    Mark, thank you for this. As someone who grew up with septic systems in the US it was very interesting to see how Australians do it. We actually just used a sump pump with a moveable hose to water things like fruit and nut trees, but we did it more to drain the tank and provide added nutrients to the trees than for the actual water itself since we live in an area of plentiful rain. You would think in this day and age of "sustainability, renewability, reusability" that waste management systems would have been improved due to technology, but sadly that is not the case. The best "sustainable" residential waste management system I've seen is where the black (poop/pee) waste was separated from gray (laundry/showers, etc) waste. The gray waste water could be applied directly to any vegetation while the black waste was hot composted to destroy dangerous microbes, rendering it also safe for use in the garden. That's the system we plan on installing in a few years.

    • @samurphy
      @samurphy Год назад +9

      We have what, I think, is a pretty standard septic system on my property. We have a large holding tank, and a leach field. The holding tank acts as the biological digester, and the excess nutrient rich water from that flows into the leach field which is a series of perforated pipes several feet below the soil, and it percolates into the ground, watering and replenishing what would have just been the front lawn, but in my case is my veg garden. Black and grey water flow into this, so we do try to keep on top of using things like biodegradable soaps instead of harsh detergents and bleach, which can also disrupt the microbes in the digester.

    • @FiveGunsWest
      @FiveGunsWest Год назад +2

      Grey water use on your garden or yard is illegal in California!

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +1

      @@FiveGunsWest Of course it is, because everything is illegal in California.

    • @hollysharvest
      @hollysharvest Год назад +1

      @@FiveGunsWest Not anymore!

    • @turtleman190
      @turtleman190 Год назад

      @@samurphy that's definitely one of the most common set-ups in Australia although i believe its now illegal to install them atleast in nsw

  • @vansgardens2304
    @vansgardens2304 Год назад +106

    Here in the states we call them outhouses. I’m dedicating the rest of my life to changing the name to Thunderboxes.

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +5

      😂😂😂😂

    • @Frombie_01
      @Frombie_01 Год назад +7

      In Australia, their polite name is also "outhouse", but usually go by "thunderbox" or "the long drop".

    • @wildlifegardenssydney7492
      @wildlifegardenssydney7492 Год назад +3

      Outside dunny, is what I grew up calling it. At the highest part of the backyard, fertility workload done by gravity.

    • @Frombie_01
      @Frombie_01 Год назад +1

      @@wildlifegardenssydney7492 I had forgotten all about the "dunny" to be honest. I'm trying to think back now as to who used that expression. I think mainly amongst the kids. My grandmother called it the "W.C." (water closet), but that was indoors.

    • @Ligma_butt
      @Ligma_butt Год назад

      Ah, gotta love Aussie culture!

  • @pimpozza
    @pimpozza Год назад +138

    No matter what the weather, Mark always brings a ray of sunshine with his vids.. I'm ready to get into it! 🌞🤗

    • @pimpozza
      @pimpozza Год назад +8

      Fascinating vid. Brilliant work! Mucky but marvellous 😀👍

    • @thomasmccardle725
      @thomasmccardle725 Год назад +7

      I think the weather where Mark lives is always like paradise on earth but I agree Mark brings a ray of sunshine to my heart but I think it comes from his heart ❤

    • @pimpozza
      @pimpozza Год назад +6

      @@thomasmccardle725 We enjoy a humid subtropical climate in Italy too, Thomas.. but after a crazy dry summer, the rain came flooding down this week in my region!! 40cm/16" in just *two hours..* 🙈

    • @Campfire_Bandit
      @Campfire_Bandit Год назад +1

      +

    • @thomasmccardle725
      @thomasmccardle725 Год назад +2

      @@pimpozza I hope things are better now 🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏

  • @lucanambrose7682
    @lucanambrose7682 Год назад +52

    Your the most inspiring gardening youtuber. I've started my own self sufficiency project because of you!
    Love from south Africa

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +4

      Thank you Lucan, and all the best with your self-sufficient journey! Cheers :)

  • @18Bees
    @18Bees Год назад +6

    Good morning friend. You had me at “waste sucker guy” 😂🤣

  • @CynthiaHollenberger
    @CynthiaHollenberger Год назад +16

    There are a few communities in the western United States that process waste water and send it back to properties in purple pipes. This water is cleaned to one step below drinkable and is used for outside water needs (gardens, car wash, etc.) To conserve water, residents cannot use the drinkable water for those outdoor needs.

    • @williamburke5560
      @williamburke5560 Год назад +3

      Yup its called reclaimed water.. i am a pipe foreman and have worked on a few..the water looks clear but still has a unique smell

  • @mannbat
    @mannbat Год назад +12

    Here in Sydney there's a wastewater recycling facility (in Rouse Hill) which processes tens of millions of litres daily. It's then supplied back to households via a secondary water supply main (purple coloured) for use in gardens, toilets, etc. The water is priced cheaper than the regular drinking supply and also isn't subject to water restrictions during times of drought.
    Obviously retrofitting something of this scale in established areas would be very expensive, but it's a really great solution that should be employed in every new development area!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад

      That's great Peter! I didn't know that... If I lived in that area, I'd definitely use that system for watering the garden. Cheers :)

  • @ciaragarrity6425
    @ciaragarrity6425 Год назад +26

    Its like a miniature waste water treatment plant, this amazes me. You are very resourceful not only with compost and food scraps but grey water too!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +4

      Thank you Ciara! Well, I'd love to take the credit, but the truth is someone much smarter and more resourceful than me made this excellent system so I could use it. All the best :)

    • @ciaragarrity6425
      @ciaragarrity6425 Год назад +1

      @@Selfsufficientme I appreciate your gardening videos, you inspired me to study native plants and I started growing beans and all kinds of trees. I am actually saving many different endangered species.
      On that note, never knew about the PawPaw tree before one of your vids, and its actually native to the Eastern United States, where I live. It is very rare.
      So I thank you so much, and it is nice that you read my comment.

    • @matta6298
      @matta6298 Год назад

      @@ciaragarrity6425 I live in new jersey and found it interesting too that he was growing them. Rarely see people talk about them

  • @Offred
    @Offred Год назад +58

    Exceptional. I’m manually using grey water in my garden when I can, but our place is not set up well for an easy retrofit, so we just do what we can for now. Your system is so clever.

    • @taylormallory8705
      @taylormallory8705 Год назад +3

      Look into composting toilets!! You only need to swap out a toilet for a bucket system. After a year of composting, it's safe to use in the garden

    • @Offred
      @Offred Год назад

      @@taylormallory8705 Yeah, believe me, if I lived alone I would already be doing it…my hubby and kids will take some convincing…

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +5

      Hats off to you for manually recycling the water from your home! All the best :)

    • @karlhungus545
      @karlhungus545 Год назад +3

      @@Offred Ha, here it's my wife that needs the convincing. She likes to pretend she is a 'country' girl, yet needs all of life's conveniences to be happy (i.e. a dishwasher).

  • @angerainbow9200
    @angerainbow9200 Год назад +10

    Excellent video Mark. Recycling water should be mainstream.

  • @maralfniqle5092
    @maralfniqle5092 Год назад +1

    And that right there is the golden ingredient for Mark's lush garden!

  • @arronjohnston742
    @arronjohnston742 Год назад +5

    talking shit Mark 🤣🤣🤣 .......... great video bud, even if it does stink 🤣

  • @carolleimbach6407
    @carolleimbach6407 Год назад +5

    I work at a wastewater treatment facility. You have one in your back yard. Very cool.👍

  • @LexBlazer
    @LexBlazer Год назад +1

    lol I'm really enjoying the new tougher antigovernmental vibe of your videos the past little while. My wife who watches your channel a lot (she handles the non-Cannabis gardening) & I were laughing about it.

  • @MatthewHarrold
    @MatthewHarrold Год назад +6

    We've got plans for a greywater system using the kitchen, laundry, and roof run-off. I'm in a capital city and can't avoid the horrid "Taswater" bill every 3 months, and usage is bugger-all of the cost, but ... environmental and karma reasons seem worth it. Also ... we only need to water in summer because Hobart is Hobart. $0.02

  • @user-wt2yv3nj7m
    @user-wt2yv3nj7m Год назад +2

    One of my favorite RUclipsrs! Lol and I love the dad jokes 😂😂😂

  • @snowstrobe
    @snowstrobe Год назад +14

    I live in the UK atm, but grew up in QLD. At first we had the outback dunny (which terrified me to use at night as a kid) then later we got a septic system like this in. The issue of waste being dumped in the sea is a bit topical here at the moment, and I was trying to explain to my partner what this was, but in truth wasn't really sure how it worked. So thanks for this, now I can show him how it works.

  • @janewhite2331
    @janewhite2331 10 месяцев назад

    I lived for 20 years with a septic tanks and it was recommended and very frequently practised that small dead animals should be dropped down there in order to ensure lots of bacteria. My septic tanks got roadkill, and as I lived on a shooting estate, it was pretty much pheasants with the old rabbit from the woods. Nothing ever showed up when the tank were drained and they worked very well. In fact, one chap who came to drain the tank was very complimentary and said it was the best he’d ever seen. I was just so proud😂

  • @lararabb8888
    @lararabb8888 Год назад +8

    Our kitchen sink ran out to a pear tree. It was always healthy & loaded with fruit in season. One year I lived with my mom in law and her grey water ran out into a bed of elephant ear plants. They were huge that year.

  • @pollenhead
    @pollenhead Год назад +1

    Came home from work one afternoon and found Roto Rooter parked in my spot and the toilet in the front yard. My youngest had flushed all our toothbrushes. He was a cute kid, I'm gonna miss him.

  • @dsymonkey
    @dsymonkey Год назад +5

    I pray I find a man like you that knows all this stuff... cuz when shit hits the fan I don't want to be stuck with a software engineer or desk jockey that can't fix a toilet let alone grow his own food.... God bless you!!!

    • @samurphy
      @samurphy Год назад

      As a desk jockey software engineer who also does most of what Mark does, I'll tell you this.. learn to do it yourself so you don't have to insult the 'manliness' of potential mates.

    • @dsymonkey
      @dsymonkey Год назад

      @@samurphy so then whats the point of even having men around if us women just "do it ourselves" and a person that gets insulted that easily over his "manliness" is not a man, but a boy.

  • @beatieswanepoel3004
    @beatieswanepoel3004 Год назад +5

    Hi Mark, good morning from South Africa. I am a bit disappointed about my house - all the drain pipes are underground and I cannot utilize that water. But I do have buckets in bathroom and kitchen to collect water from shower and sink. All that is a big help for my small scale container garden. Thanks for all the good gardening tips.🌹🐝🇿🇦

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад

      Hi Beatie! It takes extra effort to manually collect water from showers etc, but every drop of reused water is a saving for you, and I personally give it a big thumbs up! All the best :)

    • @bendonaldson9026
      @bendonaldson9026 Год назад

      Hello Beatie

  • @donnagarcia4541
    @donnagarcia4541 Год назад +5

    Hello from northern New Mexico 👋
    Love everything you post! ❤️

  • @Scottsideways
    @Scottsideways Год назад +30

    I absolutely love your videos. I’ve learned so much from you, I had a large house in the country and a huge garden and I learned to grow my own fruits and veggies from you, I had many summers of great harvests and I thank you for all your help.
    Unfortunately I had to move, and now reside downtown in a condo. I’d love a video on what I can grow on my balcony!

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +3

      Hey Scott! There are lots you can do and grow on your balcony. Check out this older video I made on balcony growing: ruclips.net/video/RUpR6nGLFmw/видео.html it has a lot of points and tips on growing in small spaces. Also, even since then, the "small spaces growing industry" has really accelerated with a ton of new products, such as towers and wall gardens, coming onto the market. Cheers :)

  • @donnamullins2089
    @donnamullins2089 Год назад +1

    In the states we call this type Aerobic septic system. The waste water is treated with a small amount of chlorine. Water is sprayed over a leach field at the back of the property. You must have 1 acre of land in Texas to install one. (or in our area) As needed the holding tank is flushed and drained. Annual inspection.

  • @katiebrooker1437
    @katiebrooker1437 Год назад +9

    I've always lived on septic and each system is slightly different. I like learning about how they differ and how ppl approach it's maintenance

  • @ryanduckering
    @ryanduckering Год назад +1

    These are the best types of systems.
    In my off grid setup I have to be very conscious of power usage, so have aerators/ pumps operating to oxygenate the system and move the water around doesn’t really work for me.
    I am doing a similar setup with a septic tank and two reed beds all arranged as a gravity feed system. Eventually I hope to have a small garden of fruit trees/blueberries downhill which are fed by gray water from the reed beds.
    I’ve seen some folks with reed bed systems to effective that the water that comes out is clear and odourless (not that you’d drink it).
    Good stuff.

  • @tomdalton4016
    @tomdalton4016 Год назад +3

    Mark listening to you always calms me ! In this case it sent my worries Down the drain

  • @sandralawson5598
    @sandralawson5598 Год назад

    When I first came across your page several years ago. I got excited because I found a gardner who wanted to be self sufficient. Thank you for all the post that I have seen thus far. Keep sharing. Stay healthy you and your family and my Father God the Creator of all be with you all.

  • @ItsBrendo
    @ItsBrendo Год назад +6

    I was not expecting to hear of them finding a dog and bones in septic tanks when you asked for the worst stuff they've found!
    Really interesting video though. It didn't occur to me that you'd be getting all this extra watering done automatically for free, by using what would ordinarily be wasted by most houses. That's such a great system.

  • @jenberryman3925
    @jenberryman3925 Год назад +2

    Hey Mark we have bought land in Roma Queensland and just started getting our vegie garden and fruit trees going all been watered with grey water . We love it 😉😎

  • @markmoroney105
    @markmoroney105 Год назад +1

    G'day Mark,
    Our house love your channel here in Tocumwal NSW. We love your informative videos and the way you are sharing your knowledge. Just to brighten your day our 4 year old daughter calls your channel the 'Let's Get Into It Show' we have to start and finish the day with a big thumbs up.

  • @justapersonwhoexists7802
    @justapersonwhoexists7802 Год назад +1

    Thank you Self Sufficient Me for helping the planet so much, I currently can't do much but i try to help as much as possible. You are a true inspiration for me to help the environment!

  • @ginac9008
    @ginac9008 Год назад +5

    I remember going to my grandparents farm as a child, there was no septic it was the thunder box like you showed in the video. Well if there were not frogs, red back spiders and the occasional snake around as it was out the back a decent way from the house. I must say it was not my most favourite place to visit then, it got a little better when the septic went in at least you could have a normal flushing toilet. I was ever so glad to go back to home which was in town and normality. The smell of those old thunder boxes still to this day many years later I still remember.

    • @terriwilliams8306
      @terriwilliams8306 Год назад +3

      We call those Out Houses in the US. My great grandmother had one and I didn't like to visit because of that.

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +4

      Surprisingly, technology has come a long way and the newer "composting toilets" are nearly odor free 😂

    • @terriwilliams8306
      @terriwilliams8306 Год назад +2

      @@asdisskagen6487 yeah a lot of Van's, RV's and tiny homes have them now.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +2

      My Grandfather got bitten on the privates by a redback spider sitting on a thunderbox at Lightening Ridge Opal fields (they used to have a claim there and a small hut). He reckons it was the most painful thing ever to happen to him, and he was in WW2! When I was a boy visiting my Grandparents at their claim site over the school holidays, I remember meticulously checking the thunderbox for any nasties before doing my business! Cheers :)

  • @jucjuc314
    @jucjuc314 Год назад

    The guys at the end are absolutely hilarious with their stories and the way they talk! 🤣 Thank you for sharing that, we just couldn't stop laughing.

  • @kele1264
    @kele1264 Год назад +2

    Great video! Very enlightening! Unfortunately, I live in a suburban neighborhood with city water and sewer (USA - New Jersey). We're not permitted to have wells installed, nor are we permitted to divert our gray water to for use on our property. My very first house was in a rural area with private septic. It was an awful system. Yours seem much more intelligently designed. Even if it had been a good system, I doubt I'd have been permitted to use waste water that way, because it's illegal to have effluent above ground. All I can do is watch your videos and envy your awesome property and how you make yourself self sufficient. Thank you!

  • @wendyh3891
    @wendyh3891 Год назад

    I’m happy to say that I have something similar here in my new home in Port Elizabeth, South Africa! All my grey water except toilet goes into a tank & there’s a submersible pump that takes the water from the washing machine, dishwasher, showers & basins straight to my garden beds. I’m an indigenous gardener so only my fruit trees benefit, but aloes do need some to! Thank you for this interesting video. Have a good week

  • @TheJohn8765
    @TheJohn8765 Год назад +4

    Very good vid, mate. It's a bit crazy we don't already do this. Water recycling is pretty easy even for small non urban properties. We also have a few new condo buildings near me that recycle all the non toilet water for landscaping and toilet flushes through the building. You wouldn't know it at all. It's a win win after you install the initial system.

  • @kylejones371
    @kylejones371 Год назад +1

    We're working on a veg garden. my plan is to divert the AC condensation into tanks to use for watering during the hottest months.

  • @ramyaiyengar1161
    @ramyaiyengar1161 Год назад

    The stories the sucker men had were so funny. I rewatched the candy wrapper one three times.
    We have a suburban house in India, we don't have a septic tank... but we had a garden with a guava tree right in the front by the kitchen. And what my mother did, and taught us to do as well, that any water that came from washing veggies, or kitchen spills, or anything that comes from washing food off of dirty dishes before putting them in for wash, or things like that, all that water goes into a little bucket and directly out to the tree. Also in that little patch of garden was our kitchen compost pit. Food waste, vegetable peels, everything went in there.
    That tree never got watered apart from those two times a day when the dishes were washed/food was prepared. That garden patch, we've never fertilized. And that tree yeilds the sweetest, best-tasting guava every few months by the kilo.

  • @cee2615
    @cee2615 Год назад +2

    Thank you so much for this tutorial. So timely. I have just made the big tree change buying a property in country NSW, after always living in the city … and was horrified to learn we have a septic system - something you don’t think about living in the suburbs! As a “welcome” present, the previous owners didn’t look after the septic system so it needed an immediate pump out and an upgrade. UGH! I love your channel and will definitely be a constant viewer and fan. Hopefully the fruit trees (to be planted) will love the refreshed septic system and produce lots of fruit. More of your videos to watch on how-to 😊

  • @MDeLorien
    @MDeLorien Год назад +3

    I don't have a garden, but your channel is one of my favorits. Always so interesting.
    Greetings from Portugal

  • @mikef6948
    @mikef6948 Год назад +6

    That's a terrific set up you have there Mark !! I'm definitely going to look into how I can reuse my waste water. Loved listening to those two septic truck lads too. That was funny as .... lol 👍😂

  • @mousiebrown1747
    @mousiebrown1747 Год назад +3

    Wow! The outflow from my septic tank is a pre-existing natural fertilizer source! I didn’t think of that before….. now I need to always be careful about my detergent use…..and, as you say, use it on selected edibles ( like fruits & berries, but not root or leaf crops ). Plus, it is usual to add poop-eating bacteria to the system monthly.

    • @royjohnson465
      @royjohnson465 Год назад

      Yes be careful about your detergent use as you explained because hair shampoo, hand soap, dish washer soap, toxic laundry detergent like Tide, poisonous floor cleaner like Pine Sol, CLR (Calcium Lime Rust remover) for shower & toilet stains, paint remover varsol, etc. all can go into a Septic Tank then he wants to use this to water fruit trees because the roots will filter out the nasty bits before it goes into the edible fruit.!! No thank you, I will "NOT" use a Septic Tank to water anything edible that I plan to eat.!!!

  • @bonnieblue1792
    @bonnieblue1792 Год назад

    Very interesting and informative. Also, my new favorite phrase ever- “poop sucking truck”. LOL you gave me my laugh for the day. 😁

  • @trockodile
    @trockodile Год назад

    The truck with the suction hose was known as 'The poo elephant' or 'Noo Noo the sh*t hoover' (after the vacuum cleaner on the Teletubbies) by British squaddies when on Ops. Our sceptic tank is a lot more basic where we live now, simply leeching out water underground away from the house. The run off grows great trees a 5 minute walk downhill from the house. No moving parts, just get 'Noo Noo' round every 12 to 18 months, job done! 👍

  • @arnoldmmbb
    @arnoldmmbb Год назад +5

    You are a great guy mate, love your videos!!

  • @another8125
    @another8125 Год назад +2

    Also depends what sort of shampoo, washing liquid, soaps y'all use too.

  • @girthquake1413
    @girthquake1413 Год назад +1

    America's Wastewater treatment is pretty advanced; not sure how you aussies do it, but depending on region of the US we flow it along with rainwater where similar areation occurs, though obviously massive in scale. The microbes in fact generate so much heat and are so active, treatment plants in some cities actually use heat pumps to move it to warm interior spaces during winter.

  • @ChimpityChoo
    @ChimpityChoo Год назад +2

    Fascinating and insightful. Thanks for this.

  • @garulusglandarius6126
    @garulusglandarius6126 Год назад +5

    Never seen this type of waste system before, love it. Great to see you back Mark, feels like ages. Another as always excellent video 👍🇬🇧🇦🇺

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +1

      Thank you! Yeah, I haven't been uploading as much as I would like to over the past 6 months due to several disruptions here beyond my control. I hope that by the end of this year, I'll be back to weekly uploads and at least monthly live streaming. Cheers :)

  • @kerryharvey6365
    @kerryharvey6365 Год назад +14

    This is so great. I just bought a house with septic and traditional drainfield. I'm going to see if I can convert the drainfield to something similar to what you're doing. Wonderful! Thanks Mark, outstanding content as always. 😊👍

    • @asdisskagen6487
      @asdisskagen6487 Год назад +4

      If you have easy access to the lid of the septic, you can use a sump pump with a flexible hose to water non-food vegetation. If you are in the US, your septic unfortunately combines all black/gray waste, rendering all of it black waste and so it cannot be used on food plants, but you can still use it for ornamentals and lawns.

    • @kerryharvey6365
      @kerryharvey6365 Год назад

      @@asdisskagen6487 Thanks for that info. I am in the US. The septic is in the front yard and I planned to use it for ornamentals anyway, so that would definitely still work. Going to send this to my septic guy and see what we can figure out.

    • @kaybell1501
      @kaybell1501 Год назад

      Just be aware of the cleaning products you put into your septic tank bleach and disinfectant kill bacteria and can upset the system.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +1

      Good on you Kerry! All the best with finding a solution to converting your septic system. Cheers :)

    • @bendonaldson9026
      @bendonaldson9026 Год назад

      Hello Kerry

  • @jamesperry1944
    @jamesperry1944 Год назад

    From hence forth, the toilet shall now be known only as the thunderbox.
    Thanks for that. Love your videos over here in Texas!

  • @tommythompson7941
    @tommythompson7941 Год назад +16

    This was clearly not a 'waste' of time 😆Cheers mate!

  • @benschram
    @benschram Год назад

    using an organic floor cleaner detergent I mop the floors. All the budgie poo makes the water super rich and I wait for the water to cool down and water my fruit trees and grass as shown here. The flower beds love it especially.

  • @HakkaDakka
    @HakkaDakka Год назад +2

    Hi Mark, I live in Finland and I have a system just like this. It's factory made and takes up around 6 square meters, self contained with plastic tanks and enclosed pumps. I like that you brought this up, we should live sustainable and care of our surroundings!

    • @christianmonk5320
      @christianmonk5320 Год назад

      Hi, do you know the name of the company by any chance?

    • @HakkaDakka
      @HakkaDakka Год назад +1

      @@christianmonk5320 Avalon Nordic

  • @synchrogrl18
    @synchrogrl18 Год назад +1

    This is great Mark. Water is a precious resource and I'm grateful to those that do their best to conserve and reuse it.

  • @FaizCaliph
    @FaizCaliph Год назад

    And then there is this other guy on RUclips that does septic tank work and he has never dropped his phone! I can't believe it honestly

  • @manuelfondacaro9338
    @manuelfondacaro9338 Год назад +1

    It's always a delight watching your videos, a lot of ideas for my long term ongoing household project have been taken from your channel. Wastewater has not been a subject I've considered yet, we'll see... Keep up the great content, it's really useful for a city dude recently moved to a farm household. Cheers!

  • @Yestradamus-
    @Yestradamus- Год назад

    Water Resources Management. Excellent.

  • @ruthshaw1037
    @ruthshaw1037 Год назад

    Awesome vlog mark. Thanks mate

  • @CormacHolland
    @CormacHolland Год назад +3

    Love your videos mark, been watching for years.

  • @jiggli-Jane
    @jiggli-Jane Год назад +2

    YaaaaaY, you're back! 🥳 Great to see you 🤗

  • @FruitTree
    @FruitTree Год назад +13

    Amazing job Mark. I'm totally looking up to you as a model for clean living.im even doing the youtube thing for many of the same reasons.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +1

      Thanks Brian! I can see you have a lot "growing on" there on your channel mate - great stuff! All the best :)

  • @macw2234
    @macw2234 Год назад

    Humorous and very informative. Best to you mate

  • @ImRandomDude
    @ImRandomDude Год назад +1

    Thunder box :D
    First time hearing it and made my day better

  • @effieinglish
    @effieinglish Год назад

    LOL. A topic near and dear to my heart, but I just sat down with dinner and to watch a couple videos. I'll come back to this one later. 😉

  • @jamesj590
    @jamesj590 Год назад +4

    I'm currently struggling with a failing old septic system and the biggest challenge with employing a system like this where I live is the stringent regulations. It's driving me mad, the current system is so terrible with effluent surfacing in the yard yet even replacing it with a functioning version of the same seems to be against the law now. Oh, and the costs are eye-watering.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +5

      The government ruins everything these days. Until we get a real cleansing out to rid the spunging bureaucracies, we'll continue to suffer incompetence and stupid decisions/laws that make no sense.

    • @jamesj590
      @jamesj590 Год назад +2

      @@Selfsufficientme you're spot on there. Seems entirely appropriate to be talking about sewerage and politicians in the same sentence...need to flush them all.

  • @eddiewilson8119
    @eddiewilson8119 Год назад +2

    Thank you for sharing this information!

  • @slomo1716
    @slomo1716 Год назад

    Great informative video - THANKS MARK!!!

  • @juliewilliamsnewzealand818
    @juliewilliamsnewzealand818 Год назад +2

    I love your thinking on ways to redirect wastewater in general. Our fruit trees are watered/fed by our septic system too. And VERY informative lol :) xxx

  • @cloverhighfive
    @cloverhighfive Год назад +5

    (sits with a nice meal) Yay, ok, time for Mark and his backyard! (starts the video) oops
    Eh, wasn't that bad. hahaha

  • @robinhaupt9119
    @robinhaupt9119 Год назад +1

    Good information, thank you Mark.

  • @katmandudawn8417
    @katmandudawn8417 Год назад

    In the US the pumper companies are called septic companies.
    James Butler has some great videos on running septic company and being a small business owner.
    I saw one who’s motto was “ you make it, we take it”. 😂

  • @sura2047
    @sura2047 Год назад +1

    Wow you have a completely different (more complex) septic set up than us. Our grey water is separate to the septic, it just runs into a pit, then through a connected agi pipe underground in the back yard. The septic tank has its own same system. No ventilation motors! No chlorine tables.. just into a concrete pit the effluent run off unground via the agi pipe. Ours doesn’t get checked every few months, instead once every 3 years it gets suctioned. I agree, they’re so much more environmentally friendly than treated sewage!
    Thank you for sharing such an interesting video, that was great!

  • @danielhaxton2884
    @danielhaxton2884 Год назад +1

    Nice video, anyone thought about the home biogas systems? Burnable methane and fertiliser all in one waste system

  • @HGCUPCAKES
    @HGCUPCAKES Год назад

    I’m a sandgroper and the guy in the Maroon shirt is foul blown QLD Ocker 🤣 through and through! 🤣🤣

  • @IceVoVo123
    @IceVoVo123 Год назад

    Ha - I really look forward to watching your vid's during my lunch break, but I've had to put this one on hold until I finished eating!! Keep doing what you do!! :)

  • @RoyHolder
    @RoyHolder Год назад +1

    Thanks Mark, been missing your videos. 👍

  • @rassanzedkyakre
    @rassanzedkyakre Год назад

    Just love your channel thank you for all this info

  • @GoAgainstTheOdds
    @GoAgainstTheOdds Год назад

    Haha loved this video, great info and conversations! I'll have to save it for when I have a bit more land, thanks!!

  • @denisebarker9288
    @denisebarker9288 Год назад +2

    I am thinking about reusable rain water in my area and will check to see if I can use something like you have. Thanks for the update.

  • @emilyr1702
    @emilyr1702 Год назад

    Thank you, love your videos. Wish I lived somewhere like your property ☺️

  • @k.p.1139
    @k.p.1139 Год назад

    Hey Mark! I was wondering about you. Good to see you back!

  • @carladelagnomes
    @carladelagnomes Год назад

    That was fun! (and informative!)

  • @AminEL7
    @AminEL7 Год назад

    Another great video, sound idea for cities and councils to implement. For a conscious planet !

  • @AnarchAnjel
    @AnarchAnjel Год назад

    Most definitely this should be put in use, I have a septic system and I wish I had the ability to do this.

  • @backyardfarmingsupply
    @backyardfarmingsupply Год назад

    Wow that's an amazing garden!!

  • @racheldecourcy1253
    @racheldecourcy1253 Год назад

    Love your channel!

  • @dvmusicvideochannel
    @dvmusicvideochannel Год назад

    Excellent video on how to recycle wastewater for irrigation 😎😎👍👍

  • @TheIrishAmish
    @TheIrishAmish Год назад +4

    I’m very surprised you’re not seeing a problem spraying freshly chlorinated water. If the chlorinated water was given time in open air for chlorine dissipation it would be much better for what it’s being applied to.

    • @Selfsufficientme
      @Selfsufficientme  Год назад +3

      Not only that but the trees and grass where this water is applied become greener and healthier than if watered with normal water. So I guess the amount of chlorination mustn't be enough to hurt the plants. I suppose they thought of that when they made the system... It wouldn't be a good sales pitch otherwise if it killed your garden lol... All the best :)

  • @jrhalabamacustoms5673
    @jrhalabamacustoms5673 Год назад

    Very interesting content as always.

  • @SegalsCareer
    @SegalsCareer Год назад

    this was a fun video ^_^
    I remember as a kid our mobile home (it was old before we even got to it) would back up and clog with the gray-water from the laundry and sink. So my grandfather dug up a trench and a big basin at the far end of the property where it could drain. And those cotton wood trees and orange trees thrived! Never wanted for anything and held their leaves most of winter every year

  • @bc-guy852
    @bc-guy852 Год назад

    Incredible. Glad we got such a comprehensive education and we didn't have to "Get Into It!"
    G'Day from BC Canada, eh?

  • @snewsan6645
    @snewsan6645 Год назад

    I did, I really enjoyed watching. 👍🏻

  • @natashabush7427
    @natashabush7427 Год назад

    We love our septic system. Just purchased more hoses, made them longer & they (2)can reach anywhere on the acre. I don't have to hand or hose water anything now, not the veg though. Roses do well with that water. $250 a year for ours to be serviced here in Lockyer Valley. Had to buy a new aerated the other day 9 years old, that stung!

  • @lararabb8888
    @lararabb8888 Год назад +3

    My sister had something similar. If they ran too much water through the system the sprinklers would pop up in the back yard.

  • @hentester
    @hentester Год назад +3

    Hey Mark! Good system! That would be absolute useful for the world, but if you watering the garden the chlorinated water is not the best, because chlorine is a very good disinfectant, but in the soil there are not just bad guys, so it kills the good bacteria and fungi too. The chlorine has to be neutralized with humic acid, which you can easily extract from a good compost, then you add it to the chlorinated water until it's light brown, so in the end it's more nutrition and not too much and the workers in the soil didn't got killed. Wish you many good crops!

  • @hazeorner8537
    @hazeorner8537 Год назад +1

    Hi Mark thanks for the videos! Have you ever thought of using the sludge to make humanure compost? Might be an interesting project to add to the ever-growing list

  • @mwmentor
    @mwmentor Год назад +1

    Cheers Mark - thanks for sharing your experiences with a septic tank - personally I have no problem with them at all. I would probably go a step further an reuse some of the for flushing loos. I find it staggering that in a world where water is becoming a scarcity, that cities in particular continue to promote the use of potable water for toilets... it is absolutely shocking!! And probably related to them making money from both ends of the system - delivery and removal (as in sewerage) I would love to put in a proper water recycling solution where I live, and may be sometime when I get to own my own property I will get that opportunity!! Be well and I love your videos - you know that!! Thanks Mate!! 👍🙂