In the context in which it matters, if I was setting up a remote shower, do not. If no one pisses or shids into the shower, then the water can be recycled and multiple people can shower with a fairly small amount of water. If pissing and shidding happens, it's black water and I'm not confident in my ability to remove the nasty bacteria before the next wash.
At home with modern suburban water supply and sewage, whatever. I don't care.
In the context in which it matters, if I was setting up a remote shower, do not. If no one pisses or shids into the shower, then the water can be recycled and multiple people can shower with a fairly small amount of water. If pissing and shidding happens, it's black water and I'm not confident in my ability to remove the nasty bacteria before the next wash.
At home with modern suburban water supply and sewage, whatever. I don't care.
That’s a good point, keeping the grey water grey does ease the cleaning process.
I assume most people are in an urban or suburban context, but I recently did a thing planning for some showers in a remote area.
(I don't. idk, I'm a prude or something)