dcopas78
Well-known member
I know a lot of the members here are on private sewer or septic systems, but for those on a public sewer systems, please consider what you are sending down the drain before you send it. I've saw a lot of environmentally conscious people not realize the treatment plant won't remove everything. Oh, and anything labeled as "flushable" usually isn't. Those wipes cause more maintenance issues in sewer systems than I care to explain.


This detergent was dumped about 4 miles from the plant, and was about 5 gallons of industrial strength detergent. It came in on about a 2 million per day flow. It went through the plant like crap through a goose and into our receiving waters which are an exceptional warm water habitat. Luckily, we had heavy rains throughout the day and it flushed from the stream quickly. It was also rather harmless and didn't contain any toxics or drop down O2 levels in the water. At one time the foam level was about 3 feet thick on the receiving waters.



This detergent was dumped about 4 miles from the plant, and was about 5 gallons of industrial strength detergent. It came in on about a 2 million per day flow. It went through the plant like crap through a goose and into our receiving waters which are an exceptional warm water habitat. Luckily, we had heavy rains throughout the day and it flushed from the stream quickly. It was also rather harmless and didn't contain any toxics or drop down O2 levels in the water. At one time the foam level was about 3 feet thick on the receiving waters.