Re. the "clean waste portable toilet". "...the sealed bags can be legally disposed of in any onshore trash receptacle." Could make some interesting dumpster diving. "Bucket and chuck it" is what most lobstermen and women do here in Maine. Those with open transoms often just squat off the stern for number two. It is a matter of continuing humor for the stern man or captain to swing the boat around to expose the other to pleasure boaters sailing by. It helps feed the lobsters, too. (Nasty, bottom feeding oversized cockroaches of the sea. I say this because I'm allergic to them.) But most waters do not allow bucket and chuck it. We have a friend who lived in post WWII Germany. They were in an old farmhouse in the country due to their home bombed out in the city. They used a bucket, and then sprinkled peat moss over their waste. He swears there was no odor at all. Of course, dumping this in the countryside would be easy...not so in the "onshore trash receptacle". But, one might use peat moss instead of the kitty litter stuff. --Burt On Mon, Jul 2, 2018 at 3:38 PM, msminchome--- via montgomery_boats < montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> wrote:
Go on Amazon and check out clean waste portable toilet. Packs up small and the Wag bags are nicer to deal with than the liquid chemicals used in traditional portable toilets. No mess and no stink. I face mine forward for use, but sit facing aft. It is more stable this way. I also buy the wag bag military version in 50 count packages which gets the cost down to about $2. I prefer this in a secluded anchorage to a public restroom at the city dock or park. Cleaner, smells better and it offers a great view. The sealed bags can be legally disposed of in any onshore trash receptical.
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On Monday, July 2, 2018 doug <montgomery_boats@mailman.xmission.com> wrote: Hey, what do you use for a porta potty in your M-15. The space for one is so so small that I cannot find a single porta potty that would fit in that 12” wide space.