ntenny
Subscriber
I have what may be an odd problem: a septic tank. They don't like significant loads of chemicals or heavy metals; not only will whatever goes in the septic tank eventually leach into the yard (causing triffids to grow or whatever), but enough of a load can actually kill the biological cycle in the septic tank itself, which would be a Bad Thing.
So I'm pretty conservative about what photo chemicals go down the drain. For developing film, and even for developing prints, this isn't a big deal---I just dump into the bottles that the DIH2O came in, and make a run to the hazmat disposal every so often when the darkroom starts to get crowded with full bottles in strange colours.
But I can't wash prints that way, can I?---way too much water. On the other hand, late in the process, it seems like the amounts of chemicals coming out must be quite small, and maybe they're OK for the septic system after some initial period.
Does anyone know what I can do without drowning myself in bottled runoff water or poisoning either my yard or the septic tank?
Thanks
-NT
So I'm pretty conservative about what photo chemicals go down the drain. For developing film, and even for developing prints, this isn't a big deal---I just dump into the bottles that the DIH2O came in, and make a run to the hazmat disposal every so often when the darkroom starts to get crowded with full bottles in strange colours.
But I can't wash prints that way, can I?---way too much water. On the other hand, late in the process, it seems like the amounts of chemicals coming out must be quite small, and maybe they're OK for the septic system after some initial period.
Does anyone know what I can do without drowning myself in bottled runoff water or poisoning either my yard or the septic tank?
Thanks
-NT