Peggy,First a shameless compliment on your book I recently purchased. I already saved the purchase price by not buying the vent filter I had in my hand last week. Also hoping your autograph will make me rich sometime in the future...I have a question on what seems to be contradicting advice I've heard on how to prevent anerobic bacteria (the bad ones) from thriving, and I hope you can straighten me out. On the one hand, I understand that a well designed passive ventilation system in a holding tank will prevent odors. By that I mean a hose of adequate diameter (say one inch)not running greater than a 45 degree incline along a distance of three feet. Two hoses would be even better.On the other hand I've heard that a mechanical pump to force air into the holding tank (at a cost of over $200) must be below the level of waste and air must flow up through the waste using a bubbler, presumably because a single column of rising air would not be adequate.If a passive system can prevent odors, why couldn't an air pump suffice even if it didn't bubble up through the waste? I now know that my current ventilation is woefully inadequate, but I'm not quite ready yet to poke some new holes in my holding tank or the hull. Has anybody ever tried sending air down the pumpout hose? I have a 13 gallon tank with a 5/8 inch vent running 14 feet up (and down and up...) to the bow and it's not getting the job done. What if I created a Y-valve setup which converted my pumpout hose to a vent when not in use? In this configuration I would run an additional vent hose from the top of the tank to a y-valve which taps into the discharge hose. This would give me an instant 1 1/2 inch vent, but the y-valve would be cumbersome to use, since access is difficult.