#75775 - 10/30/06 04:05 AM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Geezer
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
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If you weren't allow to dump it on the ground, were you told what you could do with it? Were you near a water source? What did they have as toilet facilities, a hole-in-the-ground privy, or a contained unit? If it was a privy, I would have considered dumping it there. Why draw a line between gray water and black water if you're letting black water enter the ecosystem? <img src="/images/graemlins/crazy.gif" alt="" />
The only thing that comes to mind is to take an empty 5-gallon jug or bucket with a tight-fitting lid (and one of those bucket openers), and dump it all in there, and empty it at an RV dump site (or take it home).
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#75776 - 10/30/06 04:06 AM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
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If you are cooking over a fire, you can cheat.
While the item is still dirty, drop in a bit of wood ash and enough clean water to make a paste, scrubbing with a bit of paper towl or rag. The lye in the ash will mix with any fat in there to form soap. Scrape slurry out, rinse with fresh water.
Otherwise, while things are still freshly dirty, wipe out with paper towel or TP, and as little clean water is possible. Pour it into a seperate container. That goes into the latrine. If it has a chance to dry, or worse, burn on, a bit of green scrubby works wonders so long as you aren't packing anything teflon (which should never need it in the first place).
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
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#75777 - 10/30/06 02:37 PM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Enthusiast
Registered: 02/08/02
Posts: 312
Loc: FL
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Don't know how applicable it is to survival or long-term camping, but when backpacking I often limit my cooking to boiling water and adding it to various dried foods.
If you pack the food in a ziplock bag, add the water to the bag, then eat from the bag, you can avoid dishwasing all together.
Bear
_________________________
No fire, no steel.
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#75778 - 10/30/06 03:44 PM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Old Hand
Registered: 09/12/05
Posts: 817
Loc: MA
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Cowboys never "washed" their cooking gear, instead they cleaned them by rubbing everything down with sand.
_________________________
It's not that life is so short, it's that you're dead for so long.
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#75779 - 10/30/06 03:46 PM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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I have been camping all of my life (and that is a lot of years, and a lot of camping trips), and I have never seen a campground that would not allow dumping dish water. Many campgrounds even have a grey water dumping site in each campsite, or at least centrally located. Have to give this some thought, but right off the top of my head, the privy, or your five gal can thing are all that come to mind...
_________________________
OBG
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#75781 - 10/30/06 04:06 PM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Geezer
Registered: 09/30/01
Posts: 5695
Loc: Former AFB in CA, recouping fr...
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Could be. If any nearby bears were hard up enough to want to dig into waste water for little bitty chunks of scrambled egg, I would be worrying about my main food supply too. Even in Yoseite and Sequoia Natioal Parks, where the bears are notorious for food scrounging, they don't prohibit grey water dumping (at least not as of my last visit, which admittedly has been a couple of years)...
_________________________
OBG
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#75782 - 10/30/06 05:53 PM
Re: Washing dishes in the woods?
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Geezer
Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
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Most of the food remnants can be wiped out of the container with a paper towel, which is then burned.
From what I understand, the 'washing dishes with sand' is just an old tale. It's not going to take the grease off, and guess what rancid grease is going to cause? Yep. Cowboys were hard workers, and they couldn't take time off every twenty minutes for a bout of diarrhea.
Sue
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