05/18/2026
๐ซ T๐ก๐ ๐๐ฅ๐ญ๐ข๐ฆ๐๐ญ๐ ๐๐๐ฉ๐ญ๐ข๐ ๐๐จ-๐
๐ฅ๐ฒ ๐๐จ๐ง๐: What NOT to Flush (Ever)
Own a septic tank? Then your toilets aren't trash cans.
When you flush the wrong things down the line, you arenโt just making them disappearโyouโre inviting a slow-moving disaster into your yard, your pipes, and your wallet. Unlike a city sewer line, a septic system relies on a delicate balance of biology and engineering. When that balance breaks, the consequences are messy, stressful, and entirely preventable.
Before you press down that handle, make sure none of these Top Septic Offenders are going down with the water:
1. The "Flushable" Wipes Lie
The Golden Rule: Just because it can clear the bowl does not mean it dissolves.
"Flushable" wipes are public enemy number one for septic tanks. They do not break down like standard toilet paper. Instead, they float, catch on pipe joints, and bind together to create massive, solid blockages that can completely back up your system.
2. Feminine Hygiene Products
Tampons and pads are literally designed to absorb liquid and expand. Sending them into a septic tank is a recipe for an immediate, high-stress plumbing emergency. They don't decompose, and they will quickly clog your inlet pipes or crowd your tank.
3. Fats, Oils, and Grease (FOG)
Cooking grease might be liquid when itโs hot, but as soon as it hits your pipes and cool tank water, it solidifies into a rock-hard layer. This smothers the natural bacteria your tank needs to break down waste and creates a "scum layer" that can ruin your drainfield.
4. Household Chemicals & Cleaners
Your septic tank is a living ecosystem powered by good bacteria that digest waste. Dumping harsh chemicals down the drainโlike bleach, drain cleaners, oil-based paints, or chemical pesticidesโacts like a bomb to that ecosystem. Kill the bacteria, and your tank stops functioning.
5. "Everyday" Trash
If it isn't human waste or standard toilet paper, it doesn't belong in the bowl. Keep an eye out for these sneaky offenders:
Paper towels and tissues (built to stay strong when wet)
Dental floss (turns into a literal net that catches other solids)
Cigarette butts and plastic wrappers
Cat litter (even the "flushable" kind)
๐ก The Takeaway
An ounce of prevention is worth thousands of dollars in avoidable repairs. Protect your investment, protect your property, and keep your system running smoothly by keeping a trash can next to the toilet for everything else.
Notice pooling water, slow drains, or unusual odors? Don't wait for a total system failure. Contact the team at Herring Septic Service today to schedule your next inspection or pump-out!
Call today ๐ฒ(229) 356-1786