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  • This is a giant pile of crap made of animal poo and all of our organic waste.

  • And were going to use it to heat this hot tub.

  • And I'm building a toilet that will use the sun to compost our waste.

  • - Hu-manure, baby. - Hu-manure?

  • Oh, my God, it's hot! Ahh!

  • My God, y'all are gonna have to turn the cameras off while we have a romance!

  • Both: This is "Shut It Off Asap."

  • All of this garbage right here is from the entire production over the last week,

  • which is actually not that much, because we've been trying

  • really hard to have an eco-friendly production.

  • But this episode, we are shutting off our waste

  • which means we don't know where this is going to go.

  • But it also means we don't know what we're going to be doing with the waste from our bodies.

  • Bye, my porcelain favorite structure.

  • It's one of those things that you don't often think about,

  • your waste in both ways just kind of gets taken from you and dealt with,

  • but this week, we're going to be dealing with it.

  • And this is honestly so smelly. That's rich.

  • So we're going to shut this and figure out a plan.

  • Us humans create a lot of poop.

  • 290 billion kilograms of feces every year.

  • So I'm going to figure out how we're going to be harnessing that stuff to create fertilizer.

  • - Okay. - So we're going to be building a solar composting toilet

  • that is going to create humanure essentially,

  • that we're going to be using to create a fertilizer

  • - to grow trees on the farm. - Whoa. Good luck with that.

  • I have decided to try and deal with our organic waste.

  • My hope is to make a compost, which doesn't sound that exciting,

  • but my idea is to use the heat that comes from compost

  • and use it to heat a hot tub,

  • so that after all of this we can relax in a nice bath.

  • And that is what I'm going to do.

  • We have picked the hottest day to be building this toilet,

  • this solar toilet that the farm is going to be using after this.

  • This is our gift to them-- the place where you take a dump.

  • So the sun, is actually going to be baking the pee and the poo.

  • This little bit coming out of the back is going to be where

  • the pee and the poo actually is, and it's made with plastic

  • that's going to act like a greenhouse to heat it up.

  • Then we're going to have solar-powered fans

  • that's going to be taking out the moisture and the heat.

  • - Will it smell? - It's not supposed to, in theory.

  • - Okay. Good luck. - But we shall see.

  • I don't want the solar toilet to be too far from our cabin,

  • but since this is my first time building one,

  • I also don't want it to be too close to the cabin,

  • and have the smell coming right back into the bunky.

  • How gorgeous!

  • I'm here with Dave, who works on the farm,

  • and he's going to be helping me

  • do our composting mission to heat our hot tub.

  • And just how do you create heat with compost?

  • We'll come back to that in a bit.

  • Because, Dave, you know a lot about composting, don't you?

  • I've build a few piles, and I love compost.

  • Have you ever built one that heated a hot tub?

  • A manure-heated hot tub?

  • Um, I'm very curious to see the outcome.

  • - I have never built one to heat a hot tub, no. - Okay.

  • So we've already pre-built this.

  • Why are we using these on the bottom?

  • The composting process is an aerobic process,

  • so having the oxygen in there, super important.

  • - That's for the bacteria, right? - For the bacteria.

  • Because if it goes anaerobic, you will know pretty much right away,

  • because it's not going to smell very good.

  • In an anaerobic environment,

  • bacteria produce oxygen-free sulfur, nitrogen,

  • and carbon byproducts like hydrogen sulfide and ammonia,

  • which stink and are toxic,

  • and methane, a horrible greenhouse gas.

  • But with oxygen around, we get nicer things like sulfates,

  • nitrates, carbon dioxide,

  • which is still a greenhouse gas,

  • but not nearly as bad, and water.

  • I think the first thing we're going to have to do

  • before we build the pile is put these T-posts in.

  • - Okay. - And we're going to use those to support the pile.

  • Okay. Okay.

  • Do I need my hands here or--

  • You don't need your hands there now.

  • It's going to be pretty loud.

  • - Okay. - All right?

  • - ( ringing ) - Ooh!

  • And I think that should be far enough down.

  • Yeah? Okay.

  • That looks pretty good. Can you see the bubble?

  • - Yeah. Yeah, it's not bad. - It's not bad.

  • So we've got the frame of our crapper up.

  • We have to make sure it's straight.

  • That's why there's three straight men with me right now.

  • - Straight. - And now we can put on the roof.

  • The flush toilet was invented in 1596.

  • Up until that point, things we would look at as toilets

  • varied from chamber pots to just holes in the ground.

  • Domestic wastewater used for irrigation

  • has been used since 3200 to 1100 BC.

  • The city of Lothal around 2350 BC in Gujarat, India

  • had houses with their own private toilet

  • connected to a covered brick and mortar sewer network

  • that emptied either into the surrounding water bodies or into cesspits,

  • which were regularly emptied and cleaned.

  • The 11th century castle building room had chamber pots,

  • but also toilets that were for the first time

  • actually integrated into the architecture.

  • The toilet is almost finished, but still not ready for use,

  • so for now when nature calls,

  • we just got to figure it out amongst the trees.

  • And it's just a pee-pee!

  • They're going to use my nitrogen.

  • They're going to grow deliciously tall from this.

  • You might have judged me, but there's sugars, nitrogen,

  • lots of things in there to feed the microbes.

  • I just helped thine Earth, okay?

  • I borrowed this trough from the farm.

  • We're going to fill it with water,

  • and our goal is to get that water

  • to 104 degrees Fahrenheit, or around 40 degrees Celsius,

  • because that's the perfect temperature for a hot tub.

  • Our most important ingredient perhaps is our big pile of poo.

  • And this is going to basically be

  • a source of heat and food for our bacteria,

  • that are going to break it down.

  • Just like humans with food or even cars with gas,

  • the bacteria combine their fuel with oxygen

  • in an exothermic reaction, meaning it releases energy.

  • We're also going to throw in some of our organic waste

  • that the crew and Greg and I have been making during this show,

  • and anything ultimately that has lots of carbon and nitrogen

  • to feed those bacteria so they make as much heat as possible.

  • So this solar toilet, there was nothing there,

  • and now there's a structure. It's kind of beautiful.

  • All the real science and what actually has to happen

  • with our feces and our urine comes next.

  • So I'm just enjoying the pristine smell of plywood.

  • So I'm here with Antonio, who taught me about solar toilets, because I used yours.

  • - Yup. - It was my first experience.

  • We don't need to go into any more details than that.

  • I need your help. You are the solar toilet king in my opinion.

  • Um, I've never been called that before.

  • I don't think a lot of people even know that about me, so...

  • So we are actually going to be using our humanure

  • to plant trees on this farm.

  • So why is our waste, which to me feels so disgusting, like, good for trees?

  • So, in nature, there's no such thing as waste.

  • Everything is a closed cycle, so humanure is really good

  • because if you eat good food, then it's loaded with really good nutrients.

  • Yeah, there's lots of phosphorus nitrogen, potassium,

  • all the things that these like, chemical companies are selling us fertilizer.

  • - So we're essentially going to harvest that. - Exactly.

  • We humans need phosphorous, too.

  • It accounts for 1% of our body mass.

  • It forms a scaffolding of our DNA.

  • It's in our cell membranes.

  • It's a key element in our tooth and bone minerals.

  • But most of the phosphorus that we eat actually passes through us untouched.

  • Depending on diet, about 2/3 of our phosphorus winds up in our urine,

  • and the rest in in our feces.

  • The phosphorus available from our urine is approximately

  • 1.68 million metric tons per year--

  • 22% of the total global phosphorus demand.

  • Mining phosphate to make phosphorus fertilizer is energy intensive

  • and it can be toxic to local environments.

  • Experts also estimate that the peak supply of phosphorus will be reached by 2033.

  • Composting toilets are a way to recoup phosphorus,

  • save the environment, and reduce the cost of food.

  • Antonio: So what I always do is I start with a layer of woodchips,

  • - so that there's already something there. - Yeah, yeah.

  • Oh, look, I can just hear the turd hitting the plastic.

  • That's not right. That's not right.

  • Well, it also helps with emptying it out easy.

  • - It's cleaner. It's like-- - These are things you need to think about.

  • And then after you have that, every time you go to the bathroom,

  • all you got to do is cover it up with the woodchips,

  • so you don't see anything. So all you see is woodchips.

  • So the sun comes in. Heats up everything,

  • especially if you paint it black, and the bin's black.

  • So it gets really hot, and because it's airtight, that moisture goes in the air,

  • and basically we're going to vent that out.

  • - With the solar-powered fans. - Yeah, the solar-powered fan.

  • The humanure becomes safer as you remove that moisture, and it doesn't smell.

  • I need to move it over there. I need to conceptualize this with you.

  • So I'm going to pretend this is full of crap

  • because one day I'm going to be wheeling it out, right?

  • Wheeling out the crap!

  • Now that the foundation and structure are in place for our hot tub build,

  • we need to add a coiled copper tube to the mix.

  • Copper is an excellent heat conductor,

  • and a coiled pipe maximizes the surface area of the metal,

  • in contact with the hot compost

  • and the water flowing through it on its way to the tub.

  • I guess it's just a matter of putting our compost on top of this now?

  • - We'll put our ingredients to make our compost on top. - Okay. Right, I see.

  • - So this is not compost yet. - No.

  • - It's compost once it's all broken down by our microbes? - That's right. Yeah.

  • Our layers of compost ingredients consist of manure,

  • rotting vegetables, and straw.

  • Around 17% of all food gets wasted every year,

  • and only a tiny bit of it gets composted.

  • Instead, most end up in landfills

  • where it produces huge amounts of methane gas,

  • trapping heat in our atmosphere 28-36 times more effectively than CO2.

  • And because these landfills lack oxygen,

  • the waste cannot be properly broken down by microbes,

  • ultimately creating acid litchi, or toxic liquids,

  • which can seep into the surrounding area

  • and contaminate water if not properly managed.

  • But our compost pile will minimize these negative effects.

  • We'll be layering our brown materials like wood and straw

  • that have high levels of carbon between our green materials,

  • like organic waste and manure that are rich in nitrogen,

  • to give our microbes the best environment to thrive in.

  • Generally, what you'll see is the temperature will spike in those first few days.

  • The earthworms and other larger insects will vacate the pile.

  • - Oh, because it's too hot. Oh, my God. - Because it gets way too hot.

  • And that's when there's so much bacteria in there,

  • so many little tiny metabolisms,

  • -that's what's creating that really high temperature.

  • - Okay. - Once the microbes get to work,

  • they'll use this nitrogen and carbon for their own benefit,

  • and in the process release heat,

  • which we will capture in our coil at the center of the pile.

  • But we want to keep an eye on this temperature.

  • If it goes too far above 65 degrees Celsius,

  • we risk killing the beneficial microbes,

  • at which point, we'll need to mix or turn the pile.

  • This will cool it down and introduce more oxygen again,

  • which helps avoid methane production.

  • Those high temperatures also kill off any pathogens,

  • making the compost safe to use even in home gardens.

  • So if we build this pile all the way to the top,

  • you could probably come back in about a week

  • - and it would be about half the size. - Are you serious?

  • - Just because it's breaking it all down. - Okay.

  • At the end of the decomposition process, the microbes ultimately create compost.

  • which improves soil structure, pH, and nutrient content,

  • and is prized by gardeners and farmers for growing crops and keeping soil healthy.

  • - All right, more poo? - Yeah, let's go a little bit more poo.

  • It's messy. It's stinky, but I am having fun.

  • I'm learning a lot,

  • and just hoping I don't have to get too much into the poop,

  • but ultimately, we need it.

  • We need it to make our compost.

  • This is when the gloves come in handy.

  • Greg: This is where the magic happens.

  • Now we're creating a greenhouse effect.

  • So we want to put this clear plastic on in the sides.

  • - Both: On the top. - 'Kay.

  • The fans, we're going to put something coming out of the side here

  • to help the flow of air go up to the roof.

  • It's got to be high enough so that you don't smell anything.

  • - True. True. - Antonio's great.

  • He's so knowledgeable, he's so confident,

  • and a great asset for us to understand how simple this solar toilet is

  • as a way to deal with our human waste.

  • Turning it into humanure is so practical, it's fascinating,

  • and he's just allowing me to be confident in what we're doing,

  • because sometimes I'm like, this is too good to be true.

  • This whole design relies on the sun for the fan,

  • so what happens when it rains or it's at night? You don't poo?

  • Because you add all those woodchips, it sucks up moisture, and then when the sun is out,

  • it's so good at extracting moisture that you get rid of it.

  • - So at night or when it rains, it's fine. - Oh.

  • The compost pile is taking shape

  • and we are getting closer to relaxing in our hot tub.

  • - It's getting bigger. - I'm really happy with the layers that we're doing.

  • - I think this is going to work really well. - Okay.

  • From the outside in, it definitely looks disgusting,

  • but composting is something that we should do.

  • I'm wondering what you think the sort of main advantage of composting is.

  • We take a lot from the soil here

  • and send a lot of it off-farm to people's kitchen.

  • - Right. Yeah. - So what we dig from the soil,

  • we need to put at least an equivalent amount back in.

  • That makes sense, because just the act of growing stuff is using those nutrients.

  • You're left with, like, a deficit.

  • And once we're finished adding our layers,

  • the pile will be big enough to turn

  • while avoiding damage to the copper coil

  • at the center of the compost.

  • While I am exhausted and I am sweating,

  • the whole process is really rewarding thus far,

  • and that's making me really excited.

  • Hopefully we have a hot tub.

  • So this is the farm's new solar toilet!

  • It's so good. Amazing. I'm so glad we have this.

  • It's a stunning crapper.

  • - Can we use it? - We can use it. It is ready to go.

  • Both: Ooh!

  • - Is there a creature in here? - So this is the sawdust.

  • - It feels like I'm at a bulk store. - Yeah.

  • Get my saw sawdust, put it in my bag.

  • So if you must know what happens, you do your business.

  • I like to be sitting down so it could be either for me.

  • Then you're done. You grab the sawdust.

  • - You put it on top like so. - Ooh.

  • That's really going to help to decrease

  • the amount of moisture and decrease the smell.

  • Know what I want to do? I will never be able to this again.

  • I want to look in here.

  • - Oh, my God. - It's never been used.

  • - Oh, my God. - Ooh! Hello!

  • It's cool in here. Well, that was fun.

  • Wait, I want to know what all that does.

  • Yeah. Okay, let's go around to the back.

  • - It's like a little greenhouse! - It literally is a greenhouse.

  • And then this solar-powered fan which is in here

  • is going to be getting all the smell and all the moisture out of this system.

  • So it's actually going to be dry and not even that smelly

  • when you pull it out every 2 to 3 weeks.

  • And we got a little door.

  • And then this you take to a part of the farm where you'll be composting it.

  • It'll take over a year before you can use it on trees and shrubs.

  • Human waste needs to compost for at least one year

  • before we can be confident the process has killed off the pathogens.

  • Even then, it is considered to be unsafe for growing vegetables,

  • because although it's rich in healthy nutrients,

  • it also contains viruses, bacteria, and other pathogens.

  • However, it's perfectly safe for trees and shrubs.

  • - But you can use it! Nitrogen. - That's so cool.

  • - Potassium. Phosphate. It's all in there! - It's very cool.

  • I just can't wait though till I'm pulling it out and being like, "Oh."

  • - "Do you want to do this job?" - Yeah.

  • We can finally go to the washroom more comfortably,

  • because we've been running out into the woods, which is horrifying.

  • I went to number two last night at 2:30 AM

  • and it was a very scary experience for me.

  • Would've loved if this was done.

  • Should you give it a little christening? Do a test?

  • I've been holding it in all day to go first!

  • - Oh, my gosh. - See you later folks!

  • Going to go bake a loaf.

  • Oh, God. I don't know him.

  • After a few days of waiting, we are finally ready to enjoy our hot tub.

  • - First of all, can you not feel heat radiating? - Oh, my God! It's hot!

  • The thermometer in there is reading 150 degrees Fahrenheit,

  • or around 65 degrees Celsius, which is the internal

  • temperature of our poop and our organic waste pile.

  • - So we know the system is working. - This is so weird.

  • Our goal was to get around 103, 104 Fahrenheit,

  • - which is around 40 degrees Celsius. - Oh, wow.

  • We haven't been able to look since we insulated it,

  • - but I'm ready to open it and see. - Yeah!

  • - See where we're at. Okay, will you help me? - Yeah.

  • - My gosh. Mitch! - Okay. Ooh.

  • Let's see. Ooh! It's warm.

  • So, it's 40.7 right now.

  • That is higher than we actually were anticipating.

  • Oh, my-- no! I don't even want to get in that.

  • - That's hot garbage water. - I have one more surprise for you,

  • to make it a little romantic.

  • While everyone watches as I blush?

  • - Some bath bomb flowers. - Oh, my God.

  • 'Kay, these are gorgeous, I will say.

  • And I know you love whales.

  • This is so much more beautiful than me just making a toilet.

  • Y'all are going to have to turn the cameras off while we have a romance!

  • ( smooth jazz playing )

  • - Both: Ohh! - Greg: My God!

  • It's an outdoor bath. I'm obsessed.

  • Okay, I'm going to put my toe in.

  • - Aah! - Ooh.

  • My God, Mitch. It's honestly too hot for me.

  • - No, it's not. - This is from hot garbage?

  • - It's literally from microbes... - This is insane.

  • - Oh, my gosh, Mitch. - ...heating the water.

  • - This is so cool. - Isn't it crazy?

  • I cannot believe this is coming from

  • the decomposition of, like, our food.

  • And can you believe that that pile of poo doesn't stink right behind us?

  • - I know. - Amazing.

  • - I love these flowers, too. - Me, too.

  • Now this is off-grid living.

  • Oh, this is so nice.

  • This whole experience with waste was, you know, a little smelly at times,

  • a little gross, but I think a lot of it is context.

  • You realize, is it really waste if it's used in another way?

  • So what's fascinating for me is that this toilet, it doesn't use any water,

  • and when it comes to our human waste,

  • we've evolved to be disgusted by it to stay safe.

  • So I understand why we're all scared of it.

  • But when there's so much potential

  • for it to be a fertilizer for plants and shrubs...

  • Obviously the hot tub is not the most practical version,

  • but it was really fun way to show a principle of untapped resources,

  • so people can be taking their garbage and composting it.

  • or maybe communities can take their garbage and compost it.

  • And the end result is this nutrient-rich beautiful compost

  • that can be used to re-introduce nutrients back into our environment.

  • It's really cool.

  • At the end of the day, we need to stop wasting waste.

  • Not only minimize our waste, but actually use the stuff we are creating.

  • - Let's get wasted. - Honest to God.

  • This episode did make me realize that waste is beautiful.

  • It's not really waste unless it's in the wrong place.

  • That is such a good line, Mitchell Moffit.

  • I think it's a great way to end.

  • To be so relaxed at the end of something...

  • - Like, the whole series. - ...that was so stressful.

  • In a hot tub, spa vibes with a pile of poo.

  • While people film us, which is so absurd.

  • - Very relaxing. - Continually absurd.

  • No, but it has been such a nice experience.

  • I don't want to get out. It's going to be the hardest part, because it's so warm.

  • It's going to be cold when we get out. I could stay in here all night.

  • - Well, let's just stay in. - I can't believe this build.

  • - Mitch: Mm-hmm. - You guys can all go.

  • ( Mitch laughs )

This is a giant pile of crap made of animal poo and all of our organic waste.

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