apnep
Disneyworld Rocks
- Joined
- Jan 5, 2010
- Messages
- 699
Happy Birthday!! Good for you choosing where you want to go! MY family would be laughing at me but I wouldn't care I would be saving more $$$ for Disney![]()
Thanks, Disneydreamersx4!
Happy Birthday!! Good for you choosing where you want to go! MY family would be laughing at me but I wouldn't care I would be saving more $$$ for Disney![]()
Okay, some things are smart, some things are too time consuming for me, and some things are over the top, but this is just gross!![]()

"Original quote from Princess - also agree that there is a fine line between being frugal and being ridiculous.
Ripping paper out of a spiral notebook to save a measly DOLLAR crosses that line. "
Depends on how much you need or want to save that dollar. I bought at package of printer paper for $5.29 at Walgreens last week. This week they had it on sale for $1.99 a package. I returned the paper from last week, to save $3.29.
I love the Budget board, but sometimes we get a little judgemental here. I don't have any problem with saving a dollar, and I don't find it ridiculous at all.
Perhaps. I guess it depends on your viewpoint.
My Great Grandma lived her younger years in a house without indoor plumbing. When she did get indoor plumbing, she lived with a septic tank, which requires pumping when it gets full. Pumping a septic tank isn't cheap. She also had a septic tank later in life in rural southern CA.
With the serious drought in CA is the 60s and 70s, my Grandma just went with the flow (or without, you could say) and just dealt with life as it needed to be dealt with. Remember, toilets used to require a lot more water than they do nowadays. I grew up with her perspective. I can still hear her saying "Save the flush" when I was a child, and she and I would use the same flush for number 1. Everything that had to do with toilets and water was just very matter of fact. It's just the way it was. And as a child, I didn't take issue. So as an adult, I still don't.
I'm not suggesting that guests join in the fun, but when you are talking about child sized and immediate family, well, with my own perspective, it doesn't gross me out at all. I still save the flush in my family.
Grandma did many other major water conservation things. She had tubs that she would use for washing dishes. One was filled with soapy water. One was filled with rinse water. The final rinse would occur in the sink after all the dishes were there. They would get "sanitized" with the boiling water from the tea kettle poured all over them.
I remember that I could have a bath with a few inches depth amount of water in it. She would use that bath water after me. She washed her hair in the sink. And she would set her own hair in rolls for her "perm." She had typical shorter gray hair. And she didn't need to wash it everyday. There was a cup at the tub for me to use to rinse my hair in the tub.
Forget compost. My grandma would just bury fruit peelings and other similar things all over her garden. She'd just dig a hole and put the stuff in it. And she ate a lot from her garden. Her neighborhood would swap food. She had a necterine tree. Someone else had peaches, plums. She grew tomatoes, someone else grew zuchinni. And so on and so forth. She also had a pecan tree but I never visited during the right season to get any.
I can remember that there was a friend of hers that we would meet at a mall about 40 minutes away. Only once in a while. We ate a Luby's (a very special treat) and would window shop. I can remember her fingering all the clothes on the manikins and saying, "You could just whip this up in no time." She sewed most of her own clothing.
You never knew if there was butter or cool whip in that tub because she saved them all to use for leftovers or other things (i.e. buttons). It was like playing memory to look through the fridge.
She was born in 1914. Was a child of the depression. Grew up in rural Oklahoma. Married and moved to Southern California, in the more desert like areas in San Bernadino county. She had 3 children. She worked when it was necessary for money. Otherwise, she was a housewife. She lived to be 93 years old. She died in her own bed. Went to sleep and never woke up again. She was frugal. I'm not advocating it as a way of life. But considering how much I visited her every summer growing up, I am not so far removed from it.
Modern conveniences are very nice, but it's always good to remember the alternative. There are shades of "gross" between an outhouse and a toilet that flushes into a sewer system that some find more or less tolerable. I shared the truth of my own history with a PP because there is no "shame" in these things in my eyes. Could be gross, I admit. It just all depends on your perspective.
Perhaps. I guess it depends on your viewpoint.
My Great Grandma lived her younger years in a house without indoor plumbing. When she did get indoor plumbing, she lived with a septic tank, which requires pumping when it gets full. Pumping a septic tank isn't cheap. She also had a septic tank later in life in rural southern CA.
With the serious drought in CA is the 60s and 70s, my Grandma just went with the flow (or without, you could say) and just dealt with life as it needed to be dealt with. Remember, toilets used to require a lot more water than they do nowadays. I grew up with her perspective. I can still hear her saying "Save the flush" when I was a child, and she and I would use the same flush for number 1. Everything that had to do with toilets and water was just very matter of fact. It's just the way it was. And as a child, I didn't take issue. So as an adult, I still don't.
I'm not suggesting that guests join in the fun, but when you are talking about child sized and immediate family, well, with my own perspective, it doesn't gross me out at all. I still save the flush in my family.
Grandma did many other major water conservation things. She had tubs that she would use for washing dishes. One was filled with soapy water. One was filled with rinse water. The final rinse would occur in the sink after all the dishes were there. They would get "sanitized" with the boiling water from the tea kettle poured all over them.
I remember that I could have a bath with a few inches depth amount of water in it. She would use that bath water after me. She washed her hair in the sink. And she would set her own hair in rolls for her "perm." She had typical shorter gray hair. And she didn't need to wash it everyday. There was a cup at the tub for me to use to rinse my hair in the tub.
Forget compost. My grandma would just bury fruit peelings and other similar things all over her garden. She'd just dig a hole and put the stuff in it. And she ate a lot from her garden. Her neighborhood would swap food. She had a necterine tree. Someone else had peaches, plums. She grew tomatoes, someone else grew zuchinni. And so on and so forth. She also had a pecan tree but I never visited during the right season to get any.
I can remember that there was a friend of hers that we would meet at a mall about 40 minutes away. Only once in a while. We ate a Luby's (a very special treat) and would window shop. I can remember her fingering all the clothes on the manikins and saying, "You could just whip this up in no time." She sewed most of her own clothing.
You never knew if there was butter or cool whip in that tub because she saved them all to use for leftovers or other things (i.e. buttons). It was like playing memory to look through the fridge.
She was born in 1914. Was a child of the depression. Grew up in rural Oklahoma. Married and moved to Southern California, in the more desert like areas in San Bernadino county. She had 3 children. She worked when it was necessary for money. Otherwise, she was a housewife. She lived to be 93 years old. She died in her own bed. Went to sleep and never woke up again. She was frugal. I'm not advocating it as a way of life. But considering how much I visited her every summer growing up, I am not so far removed from it.
Modern conveniences are very nice, but it's always good to remember the alternative. There are shades of "gross" between an outhouse and a toilet that flushes into a sewer system that some find more or less tolerable. I shared the truth of my own history with a PP because there is no "shame" in these things in my eyes. Could be gross, I admit. It just all depends on your perspective.
The difference is if I have an outhouse human waste is not sitting inside my house. I'm sorry, but it grosses me out when people don't flush. If it works for you, great. I couldn't do it.

If it's yellow, let it mellow.
If it's brown, flush it down.
![]()
Sorry but yellow and mellow turn yellow and nasty smelling. Urine smells to high heaven, and that is one thing that I refuse to do. IT SMELLS. I know, I have kids that forget to flush and then I go in and lift the lid, and I want to trow up.
Just want to offer a caution on this one. Plastic water bottles are intended for one time use. The plastic used is an inexpensive grade that begins to degrade quickly. The reason bottled water has an expiration date is because the water inside will get contaminated by the degrading plastic. If you reuse water bottles, then you are likely drinking water that is being contaminated by the plastic bottle. Especially if the plastic EVER gets heated by either cleaning or sitting out in the sun, being in a hot car, etc.
I checked into this. It is an urban legend.
The toxicological properties of PET and any compounds that might migrate under test conditions have also been well studied. The results of these tests demonstrate that PET is safe for its intended uses. (For details, see The Safety of Polyethylene Terephthalate.)