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Boondocking Tips: Off-Grid Camping, RV Travel & Van Life
Greywater and Sewage Near Lakes: Eco-Safe Practices and Laws
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Greywater & Sewage Management for Lakeside Boondocking
Lakeside boondockers must manage greywater (dish, shower, sink water) and blackwater (toilet waste) carefully to protect water quality and comply with laws. This guide compares toilet systems (composting, cassette, RV black tanks with/without urine diversion) and shows how they affect water use and waste volume. It then reviews legal requirements – such as minimum setback distances from lakes, soil absorption rules, and when to pack out or evaporate greywater – and offers low-impact dishwashing tips. We’ll debunk “biodegradable” soap myths and end with a checklist and decision map for wet and dry conditions.
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Gray water and sewage management for lakeside boondocking. Lakeside boondockers must manage gray water, dish, shower, sink water, and black water, toilet waste, carefully to protect water quality and comply with laws. This guy compares toilet systems, composting, cassette, RV black tanks with or without urine diversion, and shows how they affect water use and waste volume. It then reviews legal requirements such as minimum setback distances from lakes, soil absorption rules, and when to pack out or evaporate gray water, and offers low-impact dishwashing tips. We'll debunk biodegradable soap myths and end with a checklist and decision map for wet and dry conditions. Toilet systems, composting, cassette, and black tanks. Composting dry toilets. Modern composting or dry toilets, often waterless and odor-vented, use no flush water and separate solids and liquids. Because they require no water per flush, they generate essentially no black water or gray water from toilet use. Well-known examples, e.g., Nature's Head, Separate, collect urine in a small container, and hold solids in a composting chamber. This means minimal wastewater volume, plus high comfort and less frequent dumping. Users only empty dry waste bucket periodically. In practice, composting units dramatically cut overall waste. Only occasional hand wipe rinse water or cleaning solution, if needed, enters the graywater stream. Urine-diverting composting toilets further reduce liquid. By channeling urine to its own container, they eliminate the need to flush with water altogether. Note, urine is more than 90% water, so this cuts most liquid waste. The urine can be disposed on soil well away from water or diluted and dispersed on ground, if allowed. Portable cassette toilets. These small self-contained toilets, also called chemical toilets, have a toilet bowl and a removable holding tank. They use some flush liquid, often pumped in and may mix it with solid waste. They yield moderate gray black water volumes. For a typical cassette unit, one flush might use around 0.5 to 2 gallons of water chemical solution. The waste is stored in the cassette tank until you empty it at a dump station or toilet. Tassette toilets are more water efficient than full-size RV tanks, but still produce wastes that must be disposed properly. Urine-diverting portable models exist. By separating urine into a smaller chamber, these can reduce flush frequency and volume, easing disposal. RV blackwater tanks. Traditional RV toilets use onboard holding tanks that collect all toilet contents plus the flesh water. They produce the largest volume of sewage among these options. Each flush can use one to three gallons or more of fresh water, quickly filling the tank. This typically means frequent trips to dump stations. Blackwater tanks also carry sinks and shower drains, grey water in many RVs, doubling the waste stream. In cold weather, blackwater tanks must be winterized or emptied to avoid freezing. Some RVers use urine-diverting retrofit inserts or dual flush valves to cut waste. By diverting or reducing the liquid portion of waste, they shrink the tank volume and water use. In general, less water per flush, as in composting or diverting systems, means less greywater produced. Legal framework. Greywater and sewage disposal regulations vary by jurisdiction, but a few key rules apply in most U.S. public lands. Federal land rules. National Park Service NPS regulations strictly forbid dumping any waste or draining refuse, including greywater, except at approved facilities. NPS areas effectively require pack-out or use of facilities for both blackwater and greywater. The U.S. Forest Service likewise prohibits placing pollutants near water or leaving waste in unsanitary conditions. Forest Service rules explicitly ban placing any substance near a stream or lake that may pollute it. The Bureau of Land Management, BLM, is the notable exception. BLM allows dumping washwater, gray water, on undeveloped lands as long as it's not in developed campsites. Washwater is generally defined as water used for washing or cleaning. Wastewater from sinks, showers, etc., is technically allowed on BLM public lands if dispersed responsibly. Laws on sewage, regardless of location, discharging untreated sewage, human waste, into lakes or streams is illegal under Federal Clean Water Act provisions. For example, U.S. boating laws prohibit dumping any untreated sewage within three miles offshore, including lakes, rivers, or reservoirs. Many states extend this. For instance, California forbids dumping any human waste into lakes or in harbors. Practically, this means black water must be sealed until flushed at a proper dump station. It also underscores why gray water should stay out of water. Setback distances. Both federal advice and many state local codes require keeping gray water and waste disposal well away from water bodies. The safe separation usually ranges from 50 to 100 feet up to 200 feet, 60 meters from shorelines. Leave no trace, LNT principles, explicitly instruct campers to carry dish and body washwater at least 200 feet from streams, lakes, or campsites. A Canadian backcountry guide similarly advises scattering greywater in a broad arc 60 plus meters from water sources. Some states codify distances, e.g., Colorado campground regulations require any pit toilet latrine be at least 50 feet from lakes or streams. The goal is to ensure soil has room to filter and decompose contaminants before they reach water. In practice, whenever possible, one should be well beyond the ridgeline or 100 to 200 foot buffer from any water body before dumping gray water on the ground. Soil absorption. Disposal methods depend on soil type. Sandy or gravelly soils with good drainage can absorb graywater and allow microbes to break down contaminants. Saturated, clay, or frozen soils cannot absorb water, so dumping over land will cause runoff or pooling. If the ground won't soak it up, do not dump. In such cases, high water table, recent heavy rain, rocky ground or snow, the best solutions are to pack out graywater or use an evaporation method. The famous Burning Man Festival, with very strict leave-no-trace rules, actually requires participants to pack out any graywater they create. For lake camping, this means if your site is swampy or the ground is brittle rock, you should collect wastewater in containers and empty it at a drain field or toilet later. Some seasoned campers also carry collapsible tanks or dry bed composters to hold greywater in uncertain conditions. One historic option has been to scatter greywater in a small hole to evaporate, the sump method, but modern ethics favor the scatter method on soil instead of a concentrated pit. Pack out versus disposal. If local regulations or site conditions forbid on-site disposal, pack it out. Grey water can be carried out in empty jugs or buckets. As Burning Man Advice notes, you can accumulate washwater and remove it from the site. Household style soaps should never go into containers you'll reuse for drinking water. In wilderness areas, packing out sewage, solid waste, is increasingly required. Similarly, any heavy grease or soapy water may be better carried out or evaporated, e.g., by scattering on gravel or a large tarp in sun. In all cases, never dump gray water directly on a lakeshore or into a sinkhole. Low impact dishwashing and soap use. Minimizing the impact of washwater is crucial. Follow the classic scrape, strain, scatter, or evaporate. Routine. Scrape. Remove all food scraps from dishes into the trash. This prevents attracting wildlife and concentrates nutrients in a handleable form. Strain. Pour washwater through a fine mesher cloth to catch remaining solids. Dispose of these solids in your garbage, never in nature. A bandana or strainer works. Many backcountry guides underline that food particles attract wildlife. Wash minimal soap. Use up to three pots method. One, wash. Two, rinse. Boiling water if possible. Three, sanitize. Use hot water and scrubbing to remove grease first. Biological organisms often recommend not using soap at all unless needed. In fact, boiling water and scrubbing often cleans dishes well. If you must use soap for heavy grease, use only a tiny amount of biodegradable soap with a bowl and never spill any directly into nature. Wash water can be chlorinated, as in solar still bags, if needed for odor control on a packout camp. Guidelines note that dirty dishwater contains food smells, so burying it helps activity over broad scattering. Bars of castile or other biodegradable soaps still contain surfactants and nutrients, so the best practice is to minimize their use. Scatter evaporate. After washing, take the strained gray water at least 200 feet, approximately 60 meters from the lake/slash stream. Scatter it widely in a thin layer over a vegetated or downwind absorbent spot. Swing the dishwater container in a broad arc so it soaks in over a wide area. Do not dump all your water in one spot. A puddle of sudsy water kills grass and fisheries, creates odors, and fails to soak in. If you're in extremely arid or impermeable ground, you may need to help it evaporate. Spread it on rocks or gravel in sun. In a sheltered place to avoid runoff, or dig a shallow pit to trap water and allow sun evaporation. In winter or freezing conditions, gray water will freeze quickly. Still, scatter it away from ice so the spring thaw doesn't wash contaminants into the lake. Importantly, washwater should never be emptied into latrines or toilets. Toilets and vaults are for human waste only. Pouring dishwater or shampoo into a toilet can overload systems and increase odor. Instead, keep such greywater out of sanitation facilities. Biodegradable soap, myth versus reality. The term biodegradable on soap labels is often misunderstood. Biodegradable simply means that given time, microbes can break the product down. It does not mean instantly harmless. In outdoor conditions, cold water, low bacteria, even green soap can take weeks to decompose and its byproducts may be problematic. Many soaps contain nutrients like phosphorus or nitrogen that are precisely what aquatic ecosystems usually need to limit. For example, in New Hampshire, most soaps with phosphorus have been banned because the phosphorus causes algal blooms and oxygen depletion in lakes. In practice, biodegradable soaps still harm aquatic life. As Leave No Trace warns, any soap and water can increase nitrogen and actually cause significant harm to aquatic inhabitants. Soaps often don't fully decompose before being washed into a lake. The LNT Skinny on Soap states getting any soap in a water source is not acceptable. The soap can cause all sorts of issues from increased nitrogen to significant harm to aquatic life. So avoid washing in the lake stream, even with biodegradable soap. Always wash well away from water and scatter the wastewater on land, as above. Remember, dilution is not a safe solution. Dirty water should be treated as a pollutant, unless you can broadcast it harmlessly on land far from water. When in doubt, use the minimum amount of soap, or none, and follow the scatter guidelines. Compliance checklist and disposal decision guide. On-site checklist, know the rules, identify who manages the land. If it's BLM public land or designated backcountry where rules are lax, you may be allowed to scatter graywater, still following buffers. If it's Forest Service or Park Service territory, assume dumping graywater is forbidden. You'll need to pack it out or predispose in approved facilities. When in doubt, contact the land manager or check posted rules. Buffers. Always dispose of graywater at least 200 feet, approximately 60 meters from any lake, stream, wetland, or campsite. Mark this distance before creating wastewater. Soil check. Ensure the ground is dry and absorbent. If the soil is saturated, frozen, or clay, do not dump. Instead, plan to carry out or evaporate. Solid waste. Pack out all garbage and food scraps. Even biodegradable items should be buried only in a calf hole. Do not mix them with graywater. Never dump food scraps or fat outdoors. These attract animals and do not decompose quickly. Wastewater treatment. If you must use soap, choose a EPA-approved percent waterproof container to hold graywater until disposal or treat with chlorine before scattering, especially in high-use camps, to kill bacteria, odors. Emergency plan. If heavy rain or flooding occurs, gray water that you scattered may run off. In advance, be prepared to bale water into absorbent ground or carry it out in a secure jerry can. Disposal decision guide. Normal ground, absorbent dry conditions. Strain and scatter graywater on soil 200 feet from water. Bury minimal human waste in cath holes at least 200 feet from water. Use portable toilet or pit, depending on amenities. High water table, saturated soil, no dumping on or near soil. Either pack out graywater in containers, portable tanks, jugs, or use evaporation. Pour washed water onto vegetation or rock where sunlight and air can evaporate it safely, well away from water. Alternatively, wait for drier conditions or improve drainage, e.g., dig a deeper pit well off camp, so waste can percolate safely. Reminder: some areas may require all waste packed out. Follow local regulations exactly. Winter snow. Greywater will freeze near the surface. Choose a spot away from ice. You may need to save it in jugs, prevent freezing by adding a bit of bleach salt water, or let it freeze on rocks for later pickup. Pack out any sanitized greywater solids. Using a toilet in sensitive zones. If you use a toilet, vault, or bucket, empty it only at designated dump stations. If required, pack out all solid waste in sealable bags, e.g. hiker's wag bag, and bury or transfer at a latrine facility. Never throw toilet waste into lake or leave on surface. Post activity. Before leaving, inspect your site. Cover any waste holes and disperse any remaining graywater residue. Ensure you leave no visual or odor trace. By following the scrape strain scatter method and planning for extreme conditions, campers can meet legal and ethical obligations. A quick compliance checklist. Did I bring all appropriate containers? Strainer, soap in hand, basin, jug? Do I know if this is BLM, washwater okay, versus forest NPS land, no dumping? Have I marked 200 feet from water as my washing zone? Dash, am I prepared to pack out waste if rain, snow, rocky soil prevents safe disposal? Have I completely buried or removed any waste? By combining the right toilet system, e.g., a waterless or urine-diverting toilet with these low-impact practices and legal precautions, lakeside campers can boondock safely and compliantly without harming water resources. All links to sources are available in the text version of this article. You can find the full article at boondocking.tipslash blog. Thanks for listening. 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