Dear Crispin

Years and years ago, I started a thread about using dung fuels and interest in 
it was very conspicuous by its absence. From what I can understand, dung fuels 
are about the worst possible fuel, "as is", because of moisture and chlorides. 
Moisture makes for difficult burning, and chlorides make dioxins. Also, the 
very people who are so desperate as to need to burn dung for fuels are usually 
the same people who are equivalently desperate for fertilizer. I understand 
also that blindness is very common with Indian Women who have been using dung 
fuels.

I advocated washing the dung, to extract the solubles, and then using the water 
extract as a liquid fertilizer. Then dry the residue, for use as a fuel. It 
should then be a superior fuel to wood, in that it would have a higher 
percentage of lignin, which has a higher heating value per pound than 
cellulostic biomass.

Leaching the solubles from the "raw dung" should remove the chlorides, and 
should virtually eliminate the creation of dioxins, while at the same time, 
produce an excellent fertilizer solution, containing Ca, P, K, and organics 
beneficial to plant growth.... hormones, proteins, and nitrogen compounds.

I'd be glad to work with you, in developing a "dung washing system.". I think 
it could help with both fuel and fertilizer needs

Best wishes,

Kevin Chisholm, aka "Doctor Dung." :-)


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Crispin Pemberton-Pigott 
  To: Stoves 
  Sent: Monday, December 06, 2010 12:47 PM
  Subject: [Stoves] Drawing down the dung pile


  Dear Burners of Recycled Biomass

   

  We took delivery today of three (barely) steaming bags of goat and cattle 
dung with a view to starting to look for ways to burn it cleanly in space 
heating stoves.

   

  If there is interest from anyone in cooperating (by making stoves and trying 
them) we should start a thread here, preferably.

   

  I have already heard from a couple of people and Prof Lodoysamba is 
particularly interested. He says there are large amounts of goat dung which is 
normally not burned by nomads, though cattle dung is. Probably the reason is 
that no one has made a stove tuned to consume Capra Crap. Well, let's put that 
omission behind us!

  We can call it the Crapra Stove Project - an international effort to turn 
steaming pellets into steaming pullets.

   

  The focus will be on North Asia because that seems to be where the current 
interest is. 

   

  Regards

  Crispin

   

   

   

   



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