A couple of years ago we updated our master bathroom which, among other things, included replacing the hand-painted toilet and sink. (The original owners had hand painted flowers on the cabinet doors and carried the theme onto the sink and toilet.) While I appreciated the effort and love that had gone into the painting, the overall effect just screamed “SEVENTIES!” So, we put the old sink and toilet in the basement to deal with later, as one does. By the time later actually rolled around, we had added a second toilet to the collection as we had replaced the plastic toilet in our travel trailer with a ceramic one.
The day eventually rolled around when Kenn asked The Question: “What should I do with those old toilets? Sit them out by the road?” My answer was a resounding NO! I refuse to be those people that have a toilet (or in this case, two toilets) sitting in their yard. Admittedly, at our last house, someone might have picked them up but I still wouldn’t have put toilets in the yard. Our current neighborhood is a little nicer and in all the years we’ve lived here, I haven’t seen a single free-range toilet in search of a new home. Toilets also seem to fall under the definition of “household debris” that the city won’t pick up. So, we left the toilets in the basement to ignore a while longer.
Kenn is the one who ultimately came up with the solution to our excess toilet situation: Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore. He had helped his brother find a “gently used” replacement sink for his office at a ReStore so, hey, maybe they would take our old bathroom fixtures. We loaded up the truck and drove to our local ReStore where there were a few raised eyebrows at the flowers, but they took everything. Whoo hoo! (Thank you Habitat for Humanity!)
Fast forward to this year when we are updating our guest bath. One of the first things to go was the hideous green toilet with its even more hideous wooden toilet seat.🤢 (At least the green tub/shower unit can be hidden behind the shower curtains.)

One weekend we went full Beverly Hillbillies, loaded the toilet in the bed of the truck, and headed out to run errands. The toilet accompanied us to the recycle center, Goodwill, the grocery store, and finally to the ReStore where we learned that even “gently used” has its limits. The green toilet was so bad that the good folks at the ReStore refused to take it!😂 So, we took ourselves out to a late lunch – still with a toilet in the truck bed – then went home to regroup.
My suggestion for dealing with the green monster was to take a sledge hammer to it and dump the pieces in the city trashcan for pickup. (The old “there’s more than one way to skin a cat” method.) Once again, it was Kenn to the rescue. We both have part-time jobs at a local agricultural center which happens to have a convenient dumpster. The next time I worked, I drove straight to the dumpster and called Kenn who came and helped me offload the toilet into the (also green) dumpster. Less than an hour later, the dumpster was emptied and the Great Green Toilet Saga was concluded. Sweet, sweet success!
So, tell me dear readers, how would you dispose of a toilet?
Over the years as we’ve upgraded and remodeled in this house we’ve given lots of things to Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore. It’s a great place. In our case it’s nowhere near us so like you we load up the car and haul ourselves with our stuff to it. You know you could have turned your toilet into a flower pot. People used to do that around here, but it’s kind of fallen out of favor.
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My husband actually suggested that. I shot it down, LOL.
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And your neighbors said “thank you.”
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Right? They dodged a big green bullet and don’t even know it.
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When we remodeled our bathroom, the contractor asked if he could take our old one. It was plain white, still worked, and we live in Los Angeles. It’s probably still in use somewhere.
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Supposedly there is someone in the Atlanta area who will pay good money for items like “vintage” green toilets. Sadly, if he exists, we couldn’t find him online.
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We have – fortunately – never had to dispose of an old toilet. However, should we ever face this circumstance, I will definitely keep “Habitat for Humanity” ReStore in mind. There is one pretty close to us. I am sure your newly remodeled areas look so much better!
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It does!
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You just have to smile at a good toilet story–or in this case, laugh. 😄
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I’d have put it in the front yard and turned it into a planter. And Tara would have ripped my head off approximately five minutes later.
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Kenn suggested that as well. The answer was NO.
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I guess it’s a man thing, ha!
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I thought I had my own toilet conundrum this morning when the toilet would not stop running after flushing it when I had been fin earlier. Sigh. No knight in shining armor to figure out the problem, so luckily I reached into the tank and pulled the flapper up and it was fine (for how long is anyone’s guess).
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Hopefully it won’t recur anytime soon. A constantly running toilet is so annoying.
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I’m happy it stopped running … I know nothing about plumbing and what I did was a stroke of luck. 🙂
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