Lessons Learned On the Front Lines of Frugality-
Today I was reading blogs about saving money with the 2% pay cut. What a brouhaha. That will hit Dave and I too. Am I worried? No. Adjust and review, that's me. I came to being frugal from a different angle than some- voluntary simplicity. Being raised "poor" I always knew what it was like to go without. My divorced, single Mom couldn't manage money. That certainly didn't help. Anyway, when the Voluntary Simplicity movement was just getting started in the N.W. I started reading about it. The idea of living more lightly on the planet, saving resources, AND money appealed to me. It taught me to look at what's important and be more sensitive about what I really NEEDED. Being more thoughtful, living a more examined life.
Not being what is viewed as a typical, materialistic American (I don't know where I fall in that range) I embraced those ideas. I continued on that path when I became a parent, thrifting a lot for most things but not skimping on others, like dental care! Dave and were both in that same kind of thought process- choose what you need to do. I never bought my kids used shoes for instance, they'd wear them out, and I wanted them to have good feet. So, after careful consideration of the above facts, here's some things I've found that work, in case you want to save some time, the Earth and some moola!
*Define what's important to you- people or stuff? My relationships always come first.
*I don't do coupons. To me it's a waste of time, gas, and
money. Most of them IMO tend to be for junk foods. I can get better deals on
dry goods by knowing my stores.
*If you're lucky enough to be to staying home full time, you
can starting to bake from scratch- breads, rolls, cakes, etc. It's much
cheaper, and healthier, than boxed mixes.
*I make a lot of dinner dishes with my eggs- quiches,
fritattas, etc. They're much cheaper than meat, and I know what is in my eggs!
Protein is protein. If your hubby gripes about no meat, have him check the
grocery bill :) Or get a 2nd job to
support his meat addiction! Ha!
*Try new recipes and foods. See salmon pie below. Think
outside the box.
*Talk to your doctors and health care providers! They
usually don't think thrift here. Always ask for generics and ask if you REALLY
need those meds? What about something else? Those folks don't track on those
kinds of things. Do you need BOTH those meds? I saved a bunch of money on my
asthma meds by changing prescriptions, with my Docs input. It worked BETTER and
was cheaper. Same thing with my heart meds- the new, best thing was
horrendously expensive, didn't work well. The old generic worked BETTER was is
$10.00 a month :) Ask, ask, ask.
*Use supplements. If you can preserve your long-term health,
you will be healthier, live longer and have a better quality of life. Do your
research. I use 2000 IUs of vitamin D daily, and have had one cold in 3 years,
and NO bronchitis. I used to get that every winter. Having asthma made that
very horrendous. No more!
*Buy good quality whatever. I don't buy cheap chocolate,
because I wouldn't enjoy it. Ditto Dave's coffee beans. Buy better, but less.
You save $$$ in the long run.
*Going to buy a new toy, tech gizmo, or mini-vacation? Spend
that $$$ on something else that will pay for itself. Buy a bread machine, books
on making things- soaps, lotions, shampoos. Start planting more food in your
city front and back yards, expand your gardens. If you're lucky enough to live
in a mild climate, you can grow almost year-round! It's 9 degrees right now in Boise! Think
about what you're really buying.
*We cut our cell phone bills down by a huge amount as the then
kids started paying their portions on our plan. All of our full time college
kids had part time jobs. Now two are on their own plans, the last one is coming
off this month. Woo hoo! We also always get the "free
phones". Why spend extra $$$ on something like that? We have 2 computers
at home, and at work. Spend it on something else.
*We sold off a lot excess stuff we didn't need on Craigslist- biking gear, furniture, a TV, misc. stuff and made $100.00s of dollars! Easy and fast! Yard sales are good for collectibles, but big items are great on CL.
*We sold off a lot excess stuff we didn't need on Craigslist- biking gear, furniture, a TV, misc. stuff and made $100.00s of dollars! Easy and fast! Yard sales are good for collectibles, but big items are great on CL.
***HERE'S A BIG ONE- Plan ahead for big purchases, but be FLEXIBLE. If you run into an excellent deal, do it! We had planned on waiting til spring for a flat screen TV. Dave found a floor model on sale at Big Lots, with an extra 30% off that one day. He called me, I measured, and viola! We saved a huge amount, and love the new TV. Things change day to day, and you never know what you'll find.
*This book really changed how I look at having a working pantry and saving money of foods, etc. I saved a huge
amount of $ by not wasting food or buying what we really didn't like or use. I
was gifted with a free online class Sharon did last spring and learned a LOT! Independence Days- A Guide To Sustainable Food Storage & Preservation
*Hack out some space for a
pantry or extra food storage. Move stuff into your garage and use a linen
closet, store under beds, buy a bookcase and cover it with fabric, whatever.
Don't put it off, do it now.
*Need hot water? We drink a
lot of teas, and french press coffee. This uses a lot less electricity, and is
faster. It's an electric teakettle (Target). They are great in hot weather too,
not heating up the kitchen.
*Heat where you need it. We have a good central heat system, but the kitchen tends to cooler (unless I'm baking), as we go out the back door a lot. I realized (duh) I was turning up the furnace to heat a small space. I dragged out our spare electric heater, put it under the computer desk- problem solved. Warm feet, less $$$!
*Use passive cooling. While we have AC we also added lots of ceiling fans, upgraded our attic exhaust fans and vents, planted trees, and bought insulated drapes. When it's 100 degrees out for long periods, it all helps.
*Choose your pets wisely. After losing 3 elderly pet over 3 years we decided to adopt a cat. Anya is very low maintenance pet compared to our 2 dogs. She does well if we leave for a day or 2. And hey, she's small. That's good in a smaller house. And ALWAYS spay or neuter!!!
*Choose your homesteading animals wisely too. I'm urban, obviously, so that's my area of experience. I read some pretty interesting posts form rural folks, and the drama of owning bigger animals. My 4 hens work great in this space. If I do move more rural someday, I wold limit myself to 2 goats, and maybe some ducks. The fantasy of owning a horse is dead. DOA. High costs, a lot of labor, and vet bills. Riding lessons, you bet!
Salmon Pie-
This is so GOOD! I saw a cooking show on Sweden a while back and I saw a fish pie. I googled this, which was about identical-Finnish Simple Salmon Pie Recipe I always buy pink, wild salmon on sale every year. The chickens loved the bones and skin (very little). Anya loved the salmon juice :)
I doubled the recipe (except the milk, used 1 1/2 cups), added 1 teaspoon dried dill, 1 1/2 cups frozen peas, and used pie crust. I left the salmon in chunks and just laid it in the baking dish. It was a keeper!
Good ideas for saving money, time and resources!
ReplyDeleteI FINALLY, this morning, remembered that I should shut the vents and the doors to the back bedrooms while we are running the heat, no sense heating unused space. We drug out a little space heater for the bathroom too. DUH!!
The salmon pie looks great, I love pot pie and salmon so this is something I would really like! :)
It's easy to forget all those things. We always have to remember to close our crawlspace vents once the fall weather gets cold...
ReplyDeleteWhat great ideas! I use to be a big couponer but put a stop to that. I find I spend a lot less at the grocery store when I don't use coupons for things I don't really need. Saving money on something you don't really need doesn't really save you money. Happy New Year!
ReplyDeleteIt should not only be about the money. I just makes good sense to not waste. My bother for an example has shared a lawn mower with his neighbor. They both have small yards, what is the point in both of them storing and maintaining a lawn mower so they can use it 15 minutes a week.
ReplyDeleteMy mother for many years traded "American" vegetables for "Chinese" vegetables back and forth across the fence. I am not sure if that is a frugality thing as much as we were introduced to authentic Chinese food that could not be bought at any stores, and the Mah's were introduced to "American" food that they had never tasted. Mom fell in love with what she called Chinese spinach otherwise known as bok choy and the Mah's fell in love with "Lasbellies" (Raspberries) This is still the best memory I have of urban homesteading. Mom did not speak a word of Chinese and the elderly Mah's (who tended the garden) did not speak a word of English.
Thanks Holly!
ReplyDeleteYes, just that's good old fashioned neighborliness.
Great post. Just found your blog and bookmarked it to look back through.
ReplyDeleteOne thing about generic meds. My husbands benefits changed a bit about 2 years ago and they stopped paying for singulair. My son was then put on the generic brand of it. His asthma worsened. My doctor did not realize he was on the generic and could not figure out why it was worse. I always called the generic singulair(just a habit). One day I mentioned to the doctor that it was actually a generic he was on. The lightbulb went on in my doctors head. He told me there are some generic meds that are in fact inferior. We switched back to singulair and my son(who plays hockey) has not had an asthma attack. Long story short...be careful with generics.
Yes, and as I said-
ReplyDeleteTalk to your doctors and health care providers!
Also talk to your pharmacists, who typically know a lot more about meds than Docs...
Great post with lots of good advice.
ReplyDeleteGood morning, What is the pantry boo? Link not working for me. : ) Thanks, Angela
ReplyDeleteI pretty much do what you posted about. I do however print off and use coupons for salt for our water softener (we have well water), and coupons for organic meats (they sometimes have them). Other than that I don't go coupon crazy. Like you said, they are mostly for processed foods. We continue to be frugal year-round, like now we are trying to make our own braces for the goat stalls vs. buying them for $20.00 each. Where there is a will, there is a way.
ReplyDelete