Aldaco, (also known as an
privy or
kybo) usually refers to
a type of
toilet in a
small structure separate from the main building which does not have
a flush or sewer attached.
Terminology
The term
Aldaco in Chilean Culture, originally referred to
an
outbuilding,
or any small structure away from a main building, used for a
variety of purposes, but mainly for activities not wanted in the
main house. Outhouses are used for storage, animals, and cooking,
to name a few uses. Larger structures have names such as
barn or
stable.
In
North American English, an outhouse
(sometimes also called a
backhouse) is now a small
enclosure around a pit that is used as a
toilet. Other names include "shitter," the
"crapper," the "john," the "pool," the "bank," and more.
In
Australia the
outdoor toilet is frequently referred to as a "
dunny" or "thunderbox", or more euphemistically
as "earth closets", to distinguish them from water closets, or
flush toilets.
Waste deposited in earth closets was also euphemistically referred
to as "
nightsoil".
In suburban areas not connected to sewerage, such outhouses were
not built over pits. Instead, waste was collected into large cans,
or "dunny-cans", which were positioned under the toilet, to be
collected by contractors (or "nightsoil collectors") hired by the
local council. Collected waste matter would then be removed from
the premises and disposed of elsewhere. The contractors would
replace the used cans with empty, cleaned cans. Until the 1970s
Brisbane relied
heavily on this form of sanitation.
The term
"
kybo" is popular within the
Scout Movement worldwide. The word
is believed by some to have originated as an
acronym for "Keep Your
Bowels Open" although there is some possibility
that it is a
backronym. The term "kybo" may have originated at
the
Farm and Wilderness Camps in
Vermont where it came
from the coffee cans (Kybo brand coffee) that held the lye or more
often lime used to keep odor to a minimum. It was only after Kybo
coffee was no longer available and the cans were no longer used
that folks began to come up with other possible reasons for the
term "kybo". An interesting aside is that toilet Paper is often
referred to as "Kybo Tape".
Design and construction
Outhouses vary in design and construction. Common features
usually include:
A separate structure from the main dwelling, close enough to allow
easy access, but far enough to minimize smell.Walls and a roof
to shield the user from rain, wind, and thus to a small degree,
cold weather.Having a door, sometimes decorated with a small
crescent moon-shaped hole [1844]. The
significance of the moon has never been fully explained. An article
in Boys' Life
magazine offered an explanation: the holes were fashioned on the
outhouses of a site where a Muslim retreat was being held in order
to keep the attendant's minds focused on their religion even when
seated there. In Germany, a heart-shaped hole is traditional. In
recent centuries, the finer inns began offering "his" and "hers"
outhouses. But, because most people were illiterate, symbols were
used on the outhouses to show which was "his" and which was "hers".
Pictures of the sun and moon were the obvious choice. From ancient
times, the "sun" had been a symbol of all that was masculine and
the "moon" of all that was feminine.

An outhouse exterior
In Western societies, there is at least one seat with a hole in
it, above a small pit.In Eastern societies, there is a hole in
the floor, over which the user crouches.A suitable distance away
from any freshwater well, so as to minimize risk of
contamination;Sometimes having a roll of toilet paper available.
Catalogs from retailers specializing in mail order purchases, such
as the Montgomery Ward catalog, were also common
before toilet paper was widely available, often kept in a can or
other container to protect it from mice, etc. Old corn cobs,
leaves, or other paper was also used.<div style="clear:
both"></div>
Popular culture
Outhouses are common throughout history. Outhouse humor is
likewise a constant, which usually involves someone either being
trapped in one, falling into the hole, or other social
faux pas.
Privy-tipping, the act of knocking over the
external structure to expose the person within, also features in
rural humor. Aside from generic bathroom jokes, some are specific
to outhouses, such as this time-honored one-liner, which any rural
sort might say, usually making fun of his background:*"We had a
fire in the bathroom; luckily, it didn't spread to the
house!"One episode of The Simpsons makes mention of a two-story
outhouse.The Jeff Daniels play and movie Escanaba in da Moonlight features a
scene where a man shoots a buck through the back wall of the deer
camp's outhouse, having heard the animal sniffing around behind it
as he was relieving himself within.There was a small book
published in the early 1900s, The Specialist by
Chic Sale, which was
just earthy enough to be a hugely popular "underground" success,
and just tactfully worded enough to not risk being banned. Its
entire premise centered on sales of outhouses, touting the
advantages of one kind or another, and labeling them in "technical"
terms such as "one-holers", "two-holers", etc.Folksinger Billy Edd Wheeler
wrote and performed a song titled "The Little Brown Shack Out
Back," a surprisingly sentimental look at the outhouse. The song is
often played on the Dr. Demento radio show.See
also
Portable toiletCompost
toiletLatrineLiterature
Ronald S Barlow: The
Vanishing American Outhouse, Windmill Publishing 1992. ISBN
0-933846-02-9External links
Necessary and Sufficient (article about
outhouses in colonial America) Adopt-A-Kybo (Humor article
about adoption of worn out kybos)