Hello
And the detergent is not antibacterial?
Septic tanks are going to disappear. In any case in the Paris region. Now it's all in the sewer. And in addition rainwater and wastewater must be separated, up to the sewers. For the moment there are no separate sewers for rainwater / wastewater, but it will come.
So I think it is better to throw an organic product rather than a chemical product in the sewer.
Nuts: natural and biodegradable laundry
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Completely, not only "down to the sewers"PITMIX wrote:[...] And in addition rainwater and wastewater must be separated, up to the sewers.
What do you mean exactly ?PITMIX wrote:For the moment there are no separate sewers for rainwater / wastewater, but it will come. [...]
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"I am a big brute, but I rarely mistaken ..."
Christophe wrote:I would tend to say that given the quantities and especially the biodegradable aspect of saponin the problem does not even arise (in comparison with chemical detergents ...) ...
What do you think ?
Considering where we are going, the problem is likely to no longer arise the day that the wash nuts will be prohibited, because not approved ... (see post on nettle liquid ...)
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Woodcutter wrote: What do you mean exactly ?
I mean that the City Council obliges people to suppress their septic tanks and to separate rainwater and wastewater, before reselling their houses.
Through the city network it is not separated and everything goes in the same tube.
These are the words of the people who were forced to remove their septic tanks.
I assume that when all the dwellings have a double network the Town Hall will have the sewers redone.
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Woodcutter wrote:The "chemical detergents" as you say, perhaps have no effect on the bacterial flora of a pit, it simply will not be degraded (or in much longer) and will overload the receiving environment with nutrients.
Well, an undegraded detergent is always an active detergent, right? So a priori anti bacterial, right?
Woodcutter wrote:Moreover, is it really saponin which is referred to by the terms "antibacterial" and "harmful to aquatic flora"?
Well since there is no other substance in nuts I think so but the quantity and concentration must be much higher than what is rejected by some nuts ...
Woodcutter wrote:I always wonder why we call it flora? The force of habit no doubt ...
No doubt because we do not consider a bacterium as an "animal" ... but in absolute terms you are right ...
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Are you talking about a particular case that you know about?PITMIX wrote:[...] Through the city network it is not separated and everything goes in the same tube. [...]Woodcutter wrote: What do you mean exactly ?
Because it is absolutely not representative of reality.
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Why?Christophe wrote:[...] Ben a not degraded detergent is a detergent tjrs active not? So a priori anti bacterial, right?
The first power of a detergent is to be surfactant it seems to me?
When I was in college, some of my evolution teachers considered that there are 5 "kingdoms" on Earth ...Christophe wrote:[...] Without doubt because one does not consider by a bacterium as an "animal" ... but in the absolute you are right ...
(from memory: animal, plant, bacteria, fungi and viruses ..)
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"I am a big brute, but I rarely mistaken ..."
PITMIX wrote:So I live in an imaginary city.
After the "Truman show", exclusively on Econologie, the "Pitmix show"
Say, Pitmix, have you ever tried to get out of your house? What if you lived in a large studio ????
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