I freaked out a bit before heading to India for the first time.

Squatty Potties as the primary type of bathroom while backpacking through India?! What am I going to do?

I had no idea what to prepare myself for! Like, to the point where before leaving on my nine month backpacking adventure I contemplated buying some kind of collapsible toilet seat cover thing with legs to bring place over the Indian toilets.

What I did wind up bringing with me was a pack of those tissue paper toilet bowl seat covers to place over. In retrospect…WHAT was I thinking?! Like, was I planning on gently placing them on the squatty potty rim and having a seat? It’s hilarious to me now!

 

A public restroom in Hampi, India
A public restroom in Hampi, India

 

Communal squatty potty India
Sometimes, a squatty potty in India is literally a hole in the wall … and not very private

I Can Poo and Shower at the Same Time?!

Seriously, in many of the places my wife Carrie and I stayed, the shower head (and by that I mean an open pipe pumping out freezing water) was directly over or right next to the squatty potty hole. I guess that’s what happens when you pay less than $5 for a night’s accommodations in India.

 

Shared bathroom at the Mowgli Inn in Hampi, India
120 Rupees ($2.55 at the time) a night provided this shared bathroom at the Mowgli Inn in Hampi

 

Squatty Potty located next to a shower at a hotel in Puducherry, India
One of our pricier hotel rooms, we paid 350 Rupees ($7.45 at the time) for a bed next to this mosquito-infested private bathroom

My Thoughts After a Month of Using Indian Squatty Potties

I recently stumbled upon the below never-before published text from my Travel Journal on India, written around a month after arriving.

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A pay toilet that cost 5 Rupees (10 cents at the time) to use at the Red Fort in New Delhi: a popular tourist destination
A pay toilet that cost 5 Rupees (10 cents at the time) to use at the Red Fort in New Delhi: a popular tourist destination

“As I have mentioned in previous posts, the Indian toilet is a squatty potty: essentially a hole in the ground, usually with some sort of plumbing if not a way to flush. You simply squat over it and do your business…no spending lots of quality reading time in there as is so popular back home. Toilet paper is also hard to come by and we never leave home without at least a handful in our pocket or bag.

As was the case in Central America, even though these toilets have plumbing they usually can not handle TP going down them. As such, most bathrooms have a bucket next to the hole filled with used TP. When there is no bucket you have no choice but to use a bag. This is true in public toilets and in our hotels…even the ones that actually have Western style toilets (a nice luxury).

All Indian toilets have a faucet or bucket of water on the floor next to the hole. The idea is to wet your left hand and wipe your bum, cleaning it off as you go. A direct result of this is that you don’t do much else with your left hand as it is rightfully considered unclean. If we were to offer a left hand for a handshake it’s considered an insult. However, we have yet to jump 100% into Indian culture and try it out…in case you were wondering :P”

 

A squatty potty in Bhagsu, India
A squatty potty in Bhagsu, India

 

A bathroom in a pretty decent hotel in Port Blair, one of the Andaman Islands
A bathroom in a pretty decent hotel in Port Blair, one of the Andaman Islands

 

A squatty potty in Bhagsu, India
A squatty potty in McLeod Ganj, India

What’s the strangest/scariest place you’ve ever had to go potty?