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It never ceases to amaze me...



 
 
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  #51  
Old January 31st 08, 01:52 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc, uk.tech.digital-tv
WW
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Posts: 2
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

On 31 Jan, 12:40, (Sam Nelson) wrote:
In article ,
*Kay Robinson writes:

On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:


--- bobbit


Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


It's certainly true that, with the introduction of the `water closet' our
Victorian ancestors were initially reluctant to allow them into their homes
for fear of `bad air'. *Those outside toilets were a deliberate choice.
--
SAm.


I wish my hotel room had an outside bog, this mornings delivery of
curried chickpeas from the previous night definately left some 'bad
air'. It was like a fall of old shoes from the loft.
  #52  
Old January 31st 08, 02:17 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
michael adams
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Posts: 48
Default It never ceases to amaze me...


"Kay Robinson" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:

--- bobbit

Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


What you're talking about is public sanitation where the stuff is carried
away in closed pipes rather than open drains and not pumped back into rivers.

Which only really became an issue when people started living in targe towns.
There are loads of fatal diseases caused by contact with raw sewage and
effluent, dysentry being one of the better known.


michael adams

....





According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(

Kay

(\__/)
(='.'=) This is Bunny. Copy and paste Bunny into your
(")_(") signature to help him gain world domination.



  #53  
Old January 31st 08, 02:49 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
Marky P
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Posts: 1,479
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 12:35:28 -0000, "Bill Wright"
wrote:


"Kay Robinson" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:

--- bobbit

Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


Yes, it's contrary to common sense to have the ****ter in the house. One
worrying thing about motorhomes is the fact that the toilet is often very
close to the kitchen.

Bill

When I'm on holiday with my brother in his caravan, he won't let
anyone **** in the toilet, you have to go to a toilet block. Omly
peeing aloud in the chemical toilet.

Marky P.

  #54  
Old January 31st 08, 02:54 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc, uk.tech.digital-tv
Dr Hfuhruhurr
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Posts: 334
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

On 31 Jan, 13:49, Marky P wrote:
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 12:35:28 -0000, "Bill Wright"



wrote:

"Kay Robinson" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:


--- bobbit


Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


Yes, it's contrary to common sense to have the ****ter in the house. One
worrying thing about motorhomes is the fact that the toilet is often very
close to the kitchen.


Bill


When I'm on holiday with my brother in his caravan, he won't let
anyone **** in the toilet, you have to go to a toilet block. Omly
peeing aloud in the chemical toilet.


And it can be quite loud in those tin things......

Doc

  #55  
Old January 31st 08, 06:02 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
Chas Gill
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 235
Default It never ceases to amaze me...


"Marky P" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 12:35:28 -0000, "Bill Wright"
wrote:


"Kay Robinson" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:

--- bobbit

Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...

According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


Yes, it's contrary to common sense to have the ****ter in the house. One
worrying thing about motorhomes is the fact that the toilet is often very
close to the kitchen.

Bill

When I'm on holiday with my brother in his caravan, he won't let
anyone **** in the toilet, you have to go to a toilet block. Omly
peeing aloud in the chemical toilet.

Marky P.


When I had a caravan and me kids were little I had a similar rule. Try
enforcing that with three girls (two not-quite-teenage daughters and the
wife) when it's ****in' with rain outside. If I recall correctly there was
also the "once I sit down I can't stop myself" excuse................ love
'em.

Chas


  #56  
Old January 31st 08, 06:35 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
Andy Wade
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Posts: 445
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

Marky P wrote:

Omly peeing aloud in the chemical toilet.


But I thought the p was silent ...

--
Andy
  #57  
Old January 31st 08, 06:59 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
Max Demian
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,457
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

"Sam Nelson" wrote in message
...
In article ,
Kay Robinson writes:
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:


Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


It's certainly true that, with the introduction of the `water closet' our
Victorian ancestors were initially reluctant to allow them into their
homes
for fear of `bad air'. Those outside toilets were a deliberate choice.


My grandparents has a house built just before the first war in which the
lavatory was a kind of lean-to built onto the side of the house, with a door
to the garden and another to the bathroom in the house, so they clearly
weren't quite sure that an inside lavatory was a good idea.

--
Max Demian


  #58  
Old January 31st 08, 08:17 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
Roderick Stewart
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,271
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

In article , Sam Nelson wrote:
According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


It's certainly true that, with the introduction of the `water closet' our
Victorian ancestors were initially reluctant to allow them into their homes
for fear of `bad air'. *Those outside toilets were a deliberate choice.


They probably didn't have automatic extractor fans with timers in those days.
I think there's a rule that hotel en-suite bogs have to have them, but you
rarely see them in homes even today.

Rod.

  #59  
Old January 31st 08, 08:55 PM posted to uk.media.tv.misc,uk.tech.digital-tv
michael adams
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 48
Default It never ceases to amaze me...


"Sam Nelson" wrote in message ...
In article ,
Kay Robinson writes:
On Thu, 31 Jan 2008 10:55:54 +0000, Adrian C
sharpened a new quill and scratched:

--- bobbit

Sanitation is the most important development for mankind that has
enabled its survial, so I'm told by some hollywood film I forget...


According to a documentary I watched some months ago it's entirely the
opposite. Tests done showed that any sanitation unit installed within
a home caused contamination throughout the home whereas those (very
few these days) homes with only outside loos had virtually none. It
was fascinating and also rather disturbing :-(


It's certainly true that, with the introduction of the `water closet' our
Victorian ancestors were initially reluctant to allow them into their homes
for fear of `bad air'. Those outside toilets were a deliberate choice.
--
SAm.



"Bad air" wasn't simply a euphemism for the smell. The Victorians, including
Francis Chadwicke actually believed that infection was carried by the air.
It was the stink from the Thames that persuaded Parliament to invest
millions in Bazalgettes sewage scheme. Only afterwards was it discovered
that infection was carried via contaminated water and effluent which the
sewerage schemes and treatment plants were ideally suited to combat.


michael adams

....





  #60  
Old January 31st 08, 11:55 PM posted to uk.tech.digital-tv
Johnny B Good
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Posts: 568
Default It never ceases to amaze me...

The message
from Andy Wade contains these words:

Marky P wrote:


Omly peeing aloud in the chemical toilet.


But I thought the p was silent ...


Only if your name is Rick. :-)

--
Regards, John.

Please remove the "ohggcyht" before replying.
The address has been munged to reject Spam-bots.

 




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