Sgt. Mom

Sgt. Mom
Location
San Antonio, Texas,
Birthday
February 21
Bio
Retired military, novelist and mother, sucker for animals and homebody

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SEPTEMBER 23, 2009 9:11AM

Myths, Rites and Legends: Unspeakable Latrines

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It is a truism that travel broadens the mind, and brings the adventurous traveler in contact with many, many things— some of them elevated and educational and some of them mundane - and one of the mundane adventures is the exposure to the many, many different ways that human waste can be disposed of, ranging from the elaborate to the unspeakable.

The United States being, as Europeans are so tiresomely fond of reminding us, a relatively new country, our indoor plumbing arrangements are fairly recent and relatively standardized; rare (at least on the West Coast, and outside the historical districts) it is to encounter the old-fashioned toilet with the water tank up near the ceiling and a chain-pull hanging down, which releases the water, sending it thundering down the pipe to flush the bowl in one mighty, gravity-fed blast. But this was quite the usual sort I encountered in Europe- amusing, noisy, but fairly familiar and most usually clean.

Such is not always the case, as travelers find to their dismay- and even military standards of maintenance and cleanliness are not quite up to the challenge of keeping plumbing in a temporary building gone twenty-years over the originally expected lifetime up to par. This is, of course, a roundabout way of leading into my highly personal account of the Top Three Most Disgusting Public Lavatories I have ever encountered. No doubt, others have encountered worse, and are welcome to comment with the gruesome particulars.

The Third Most Disgusting was a little shed, an outhouse at the edge of a field, beside the road between Towada City and Lake Towada. There was actually nothing inside the shed save a hole in the floor of it and a fetid stench rising from the hole and the unspeakable pit underneath, a stench of such solidity in the heat of summer that you could practically see it, like the little ripples in the air over a cartoon skunk. And that was it— no paper of any sort, no water, just the little shed beside the road. It was the only thing resembling a public lavatory for miles - unless of course, you counted the benjo ditches, but not many Americans had the insouciance to use the ditches, not in broad daylight and in the open, anyway.

I regret to say that the Second Most Disgusting was actually the latrine at EBS-Zaragoza, a little cubicle at the end of a thirty-year old Quonset hut that housed the radio and engineering sections, which cubicle actually boasted a small window. The window saved it by a short head (no pun intended) from being a contender for First, in that it fresh air could be induced to enter, and dilute the potent reek emanating from the urinal. No matter how the cleaning lady scoured it, and no matter how many gallons of bleach and other cleansing agents we poured down it, on hot summer days the odor of crusted urine imbedded in thirty-year old plumbing beat them back and emerged triumphant, wafting down the corridor as far as the passage to the automation room. I hung a neatly lettered sign on the door to the latrine during one particularly hot summer; Warning: You are Now Entering The Bog of Incredible Stench, and everyone laughed their ass off, except for MSgt. Ken, the Station manager, who made me take it down.

The Most Disgusting Public Latrine in the west of the world actually was also in Spain; a service station restroom on the outskirts of San Roque, close by Gibraltar. I had to stop and fill the VEV’s gas tank, and both Blondie (then about 11 years old) and I badly needed to use the facilities. It was immediately apparent, from the moment that I opened the door at the back of the service station building, that the staff of the service station did not include any of the female persuasion. Not only was the toilet and sink caked with a unique assortment of filth, but a cardboard carton which performed as a waste basket - since a lot of facilities in Europe are incapable of digesting toilet paper it was full to overflowing with what in the good old US of A is normally flushed down the toilet - was covered with a moving carpet of enormous insects. Some kind of mutant daddy-long-legs was moving and seething, all over the carton of waste, the floor, the filthy sink and the walls. It looked for all the world like that scene in the first Indiana Jones movie with the cave full of tarantulas. My daughter took one horrified look at it, and said,
“Mom, I don’t have to go that bad!”
Unfortunately, I did. The bushes out at the back of the service station were thin and insubstantial, and I practically levitated a good ten inches over the disgusting seat. I have mercifully blocked out the name of the gas company - otherwise I would have advised nuking it from orbit, as the only way to make sure of it being cleansed from this earth.

Blondie has since made a practice of checking out the women’s restroom of any restaurant before she consumes anything from their menu, on the theory that if they can’t keep the can clean, the Deity knoweth what standards prevail in the kitchen. Words to live by, people, words to live by.

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military, memoir, travel

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Good words to live by.
Fascinating topic, Sgt. Mom. Growing up as I did in the remote Intermountain West, we had no public toilets, no rest areas when driving along the highways, where one could go an hour or two without hitting any sign of civilization. Up through my high school years a pit stop meant pulling over to the side of the road, men on one side of the vehicle, women on the other, bring your own TP, thank you very much, and hope no one had a camera. Squatting in the sagebrush was all we knew. Even on bus trips in high school this was commonly practiced. The advent of the rest area was quite the thing.

That aside, the single worst "rest area" I have ever encountered in North America, bar none, was driving across the prairies of Highway 1 in Canada, heading westward, somewhere in Saskatchewan. The memory of that stop is seared permanently in my brain.
My all time worst was in a park in Vladimir, Russia, closely followed by a toilet at passport control on the border between Tanzania and Kenya, in the middle of nowhere, on the highway between Nairobi and Mt. Kilimajaro.

Suffice it to say, in both of those places, aroma was the least of the problems.
I can't top any of those, but I will offer my most entertaining public toilet. It was in Northern Italy (the "advanced" part of that elongated nation-state). In the middle of the floor was a hole, with two feet painted on either side of the hole. The feet, of course, told you where to stand (or squat). Once you completed your business, you pulled the metal chain dangling from a tank attached to the ceiling. Once you pulled the chain, you had to quickly jump out of the way as the water rushed down from the open pipe attached to the tank above your head. After the initial shock, it was really quite fun!
In my recent travels to Turkey, Sicily, etc., I encountered nice toilets...even the squat ones in Turkey were nice compared to the old hole-in-the-floor-foot-rests kind of old Europe.

BUT...some years ago I was in India for a couple of weeks, a complex, variegated, mysterious place - which applies to the toilet facilities too. Occasionally I was at a loss as to what to do...
Some of the worst toilets I have encountered have been public ones right here in the US of A: Gas stations, fast food restaurants, libraries, campgrounds, transportation hubs, sad to say.

Most improved: Grand Central Station.
sorry, can't make the rating toggle work...
Oh - and there was one in Scotland that...
My personal worst head:

1991. Okinawa - Camp Kinser H+S barracks.

Old-style cinder-block barracks built way back in the 60s. Barracks rooms were air-conditioned. The passageways and the heads were not. Come A/C season water condensed and sheeted down the cinder-block walls. Within weeks the walls were covered with algae. Which could be beaten back with regular cleaning but would be back within hours.

It was like showering in a smelly terrarium.

Worst bathroom ever:
Airbase, Dhaka, Bangladesh.

The Bengalis were nice enough to billet us in their nicest barracks. Which included a separate six-stall building, thoughtfully raised a few feet above ground level. These looked pretty decent by the light of the day with flush-type squat toilets, electric lights and so on.

But at night every single bug, creepy-crawly, flying horror and slithering thing was attracted to the only light for miles around - the one lighting up the head. Within seconds the helpless squatee was surrounded by a cloud of too-many-legged yuck.

I do not think that 'screens' were on the spec-sheet for that building.
The most consistently disgusting public toilets I've used are the ones in the women's bathrooms in the Liberal Arts Building at the University of New Orleans. They weren't the worst by a long stretch (that honor belongs to an outhouse at a north Georgia rest stop that had a sign warning patrons to "beware of poisonous snakes"), but as I took classes and worked in that building for almost four years, they win.

There were six or eight stalls in the women's rooms. The first four or six stalls contained floor-mounted urinals. The first time I went into the bathroom there, I went back out again to check the sign on the door as I thought I was in the men's room. Nope--this was the women's bathroom. The urinal was shaped like a key--a bowl with a slanted rim and a long, thin, flat-bottomed sticky-out part. Anyway, there was no good way to sit on it to do your business, so the last two stalls saw the brunt of action and were therefore always filthy, out of paper, and getting clogged up. Then, during the 10-minute break in classes, some people who didn't have the time to wait for the real toilets would be forced to use the urinals, which quickly got peed on and clogged up with toilet paper, shit, and tampons, none of which their pipes could handle. Oh, and the flush mechanism never really washed out the long, thin part of the "key.:

I asked a female professor about the toilet situation and her response was that UNO used to be a WWII-era Navy base and that the Liberal Arts building dated back to that time. Since there were very few women stationed there, nearly all the bathrooms were originally men's rooms. When the Navy base became UNO, they just put up partitions in the bathrooms and changed the signs on half the doors and didn't bother to change the plumbing. (Note: this is ENTIRELY something UNO would do.)

Then, later on, I found out that the urinals were actually Sanistand FEMALE urinals, made in the 1950s-1970s and mainly bought and installed by government bureaucracies. They fell out of fashion because they didn't save any time, space, or water, and because women HATED using them. (They were obviously designed by a man, as the only way to use them as intended and not run the risk of peeing on your clothes--by straddling--would be if you were wearing a short skirt and no underwear. Plus, they couldn't handle toilet paper.)

UNO, however, in a display of wisdom that only UNO can have, bought and installed these urinals in the late 1980s, long after the company stopped making them on the grounds that the product really sucked.
I live in terror of encountering a squat toilet, but so far it's been needless! Thanks for your entertaining run-down on nasty toilets of your experience - makes the bushes look down-right wonderful!
Wow. I think your daughter has some wisdom, there.
Yes, great words to live by, unless you already know the place and it has GREAT food, in which case you don't want to mess up that relationship....
Having worked on jobsites for many years, I can attest to the legendary filth of the "honeybucket". And when the larger crews of guys show up, the buckets can get so filthy so quickly I have actually walked blocks away and bought something in a store just to be able to savor the dirt of a "regular" public RR. The "unisex" models with both urinal and seated throne are pretty bad for those of us who sit down. That "puka" (as a HB vendor in Hawaii called it) right in your face is just icky, and, as said vendor noted to me, "the boys never hit it right."

Your buggy story takes the cake, though. Even the cheapest company I ever worked for had the buckets cleaned once a week.
My skin is still crawling.

PS- My dad used to go to Zaragoza for USAF training missions when we were stationed in Germany. I never heard about the latrines, though, thank God.
This is why I always carry a P style. I can pee standing up, no mess no fuss.
Dear old Mom taught me to squat and go - excellent for the leg muscles and very useful in Japan. Sadly, a permanent case of sciatica makes that a dicey proposition these days. Rated for being very informative.
I played pool once a week at Roger's Rec in Fayetteville, Arkansas, when I was in grad school. There was a skanky sit-down toilet, but it was like every single guy who ever used the head aimed for the floor. I will say that there was an amusing bit of graffiti that might have accounted for it--a sign over the urinal that said "Don't hit the piss biscuits."
The worst toilet I have ever been in was a part-a-potty, so I guess it doesn't really count. It was at Edwards Air Force Base on their open day a few years ago. The air temperature was 115. Need I say more?

The consistently worst toilets I encounter are at Borders book stores. I guess those tattooed pierced hipsters who work there can't lower themselves to clean the damn john now and again. The cleanest chain store toilets are at Target, where they check them two or three times an hour. There's a sign-in sheet for the cleaner to verify that, on the back of the door.

@Critical Path - "puka" is Hawaiian for hole (any hole) such as in puka shells which are those little white circles strung on necklaces worn by surfers.

@Hell's Bells - The Dutch have come up with a converse to "Don't hit the biscuits". It's a fly etched into the porcelain. Not only does it encourage guys to aim within the urinal, it's actually placed at the optimum spot to minimize splashing. http://urbanlegends.about.com/library/bl_fly_in_urinal.htm