goofytinkerbell
Tinkerbell
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2009
- Messages
- 560
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I hear ya, and I'm so sorry you're having a tough time. We've been there on and off through the years. I agree that most advice is too typical and not particularly helpful for people who have long given up most standard items of comfort or convenience. We generally live by the motto, "Use it up, wear it out, make do, or do without!"I'm in the debt dumpers thread, which is great motivation to get my finances in order, However, I simply don't make enough money. I'm trying to work out a lot of things, but in the meantime I still have to pay the bills.
I've started looking at ways to save some cash, and I've been through all the typical lists: look for better deals on insurance and the like, don't eat out, don't get takeout coffee, switch to store brand things, and so on. But I'm looking for different ideas. I was researching, and apparently I'm using WAY too much laundry soap (I guess 1-2TBSP is plenty??). What else does everyone have for unusual tips like that?
99% of all my groceries come from Aldi and Walmart;
Focus on flowering perennials in the garden, less annuals. I have 1 pot near my front door and 1 pot near my garage that I put a couple annuals in every year and that's it. I don't add annuals to the main gardens.
Buy gently used items for growing kids,
Try to run AC less in the summer. I work from home and don't mind it warmer in the house during the day.
Don't buy bulk or shop sales. I know this is against most people's advice, and there are obviously exceptions to this, but food waste is often the bigger drain on the wallet than food prices. If someone is prone to stock up on food or buy something on sale that ends up getting thrown out, then shop minimally and intentionally, a little bit at a time, even if it is full price.
Utilize dollar stores, dollar sections of stores, or clearance racks in food stores. Dollar stores have saved us in the past, and is still a good "shopping reset" when food cost burnout is high. I like knowing I can walk in with $5 and leave with about 5 items, which helps me not overspend and not overbuy. Plus, sometimes even getting things like condiments or kitchen tools for $1 is worth it.
Around here we generally don't get a choice on the frequency of pick up. Generally trash is weekly and recycling is mostly weekly but can be bi-weekly depending on the city or the trash company. Majority of the places and companies I've used have had weekly recycling but some have started venturing into bi-weekly recycling.if you have garbage service do you realy need it weekly? it's a savings of over 50% where we live to go to bi-weekly pickup (and we found that much space was being eaten up by grass clippings and cardboard both of which there are free disposal sites for near us).
Around here we generally don't get a choice on the frequency of pick up. Generally trash is weekly and recycling is mostly weekly but can be bi-weekly depending on the city or the trash company. Majority of the places and companies I've used have had weekly recycling but some have started venturing into bi-weekly recycling.
Grass clippings aren't something that is put in the trash here or at least that's never been what anyone I've ever known to do. You put it in a paper bag (leaf bag) or a specific type of plastic bag meant for leaves and or grass clippings. It's yard waste. In my particular city you can pay for a specific bin for yard waste (which includes small limbs and leaves) if that works better for someone than the bags. Cardboard is recycling (unless it falls under the kind that is not accepted). Recycling is required by the county to be provided to citizens at no additional cost for 14 years now. Def. if you're not recycling you are using up a lot of space in your trash. Glass is something that they don't take in recycling (though you can pay for a service to come and collect it) but we store it up and then take it to special dumpsters around the metro that then recycle the glass.
In my city they do trash through themselves for the vast majority of the city service area. They don't contract it out like other cities do though around here where they partner with a service provider, it's city workers doing it. We get a bill from the city for trash/recycling/yard waste, water, sewer and storm drain. The trash is weekly, the recycling is bi-weekly and consistently we rank highest in the county for the most trash diverted from the landfill (meaning recycling is utilized high here).
Some things we do is purchase bread then freeze it
Here's it's just second nature. The other side of the state line in my metro the largest city in the metro is just now getting recycling and it's so strange how that is because we've had it for like IDK 20years if not more?? First it was the very small bin then it got bigger. We get like a 95 gallon size no cost. Some trash services have special rules about "overage" for trash itself and whatnot but our particular city does not.that they do not offer recycling bins or alteranative yard waste disposal (other than dropping it off at their distant site).
City has everything to do with it here but it doesn't just mean if the city does it themselves. They can and have been frequently revoking contracts and ability to have trash services with companies that are bad, inept, too many customer complaints, etc. Most of the cities don't do their own services or contract it out but some do including my city. They run three trucks one for trash one for recycling one for yard waste.city has nothing to do with garbage services here (even if we lived in city limits).
That's not a common thing here. I mean we have a Wonder Bread factory but it's not a huge savings. Honestly we just get Great Value multi-grain bread when we can, it's our primary purchase but sometimes it hasn't been stocked so we get a different bread. But it all seems to freeze well. We put it in the fridge to thaw and it stays there as we use it.we do as well and we also get tremendous savings by going to the outlet store the local big provider operates. the identical products (from the same bake run) are sold at as much as 50% less. combo that with their punch card and after you amass $100 in purchases you get 10 items free (big fans of seattle sourdough in our house).
Wow, my daughter who is vegetarian and has been complaining how much more expensive her food has gotten since the pandemic. 16 ounces of Tofu at Walmart is $2,13, double what is was a couple of years ago. Beyond hamburger patties are $7.98 a pound, beef hamburger patties are $3.48 a pound.An unintended cost saver for us was going vegetarian a few years ago. Everyone we know constantly complains about the rising costs of groceries, but despite seeing that many items are now double what they cost a few years ago we have had no increase in our average grocery spending. I don't set a budget (we buy whatever we want), but I do track our spending to the penny each month and we are still spending the same on groceries that we were 10 years ago because we have replaced some things with less expensive alternatives. Ex. Tofu is around $1.50 and freezes well. We buy beans in bulk for around $1/lb (which equals about 3lb when cooked)
We’ve been vegetarian for years. While prices for vegetarian products have definitely increased (along with everything else) it still costs way less than a traditional meat eating diet. I still buy meat for my son that lives at home. Those prices have skyrocketed.Wow, my daughter who is vegetarian and has been complaining how much more expensive her food has gotten since the pandemic. 16 ounces of Tofu at Walmart is $2,13, double what is was a couple of years ago. Beyond hamburger patties are $7.98 a pound, beef hamburger patties are $3.48 a pound.
She is considering going back to school in Germany and spent two weeks there in March and was amazed how much larger the selection of vegetarian products are there, and how much cheaper.
i remember going to the wonder outlets! here we have the franz bakery and outlets. their outlet prices are great. i am amazed at how the quality of great value and the other baked goods in walmart have become. there are several bread items we buy exclusivly there b/c the quality is great and the prices can't be beat (just tried their asiago cheese bagels this past week-great!).Here's it's just second nature. The other side of the state line in my metro the largest city in the metro is just now getting recycling and it's so strange how that is because we've had it for like IDK 20years if not more?? First it was the very small bin then it got bigger. We get like a 95 gallon size no cost. Some trash services have special rules about "overage" for trash itself and whatnot but our particular city does not.
City has everything to do with it here but it doesn't just mean if the city does it themselves. They can and have been frequently revoking contracts and ability to have trash services with companies that are bad, inept, too many customer complaints, etc. Most of the cities don't do their own services or contract it out but some do including my city. They run three trucks one for trash one for recycling one for yard waste.
That's not a common thing here. I mean we have a Wonder Bread factory but it's not a huge savings. Honestly we just get Great Value multi-grain bread when we can, it's our primary purchase but sometimes it hasn't been stocked so we get a different bread. But it all seems to freeze well. We put it in the fridge to thaw and it stays there as we use it.
do you have any ABC stores near you? they do occasional case sales on vegetarain items that can be quite a savings.We’ve been vegetarian for years. While prices for vegetarian products have definitely increased (along with everything else) it still costs way less than a traditional meat eating diet. I still buy meat for my son that lives at home. Those prices have skyrocketed.
We also rarely by the Beyond/ Impossible and stick more to whole foods / tofu/ legumes etc which helps.
My daughter gave up meat 17 years ago, so almost half her life.We’ve been vegetarian for years. While prices for vegetarian products have definitely increased (along with everything else) it still costs way less than a traditional meat eating diet. I still buy meat for my son that lives at home. Those prices have skyrocketed.
We also rarely by the Beyond/ Impossible and stick more to whole foods / tofu/ legumes etc which helps.
3. This might be TMI, but if you're a young female, a menstrual cup is a small investment that will pay you back huge over the years.
Definitely! I have been recommending menstrual cups for 20 years. No waste, no remembering to restock, amazingly convenient for travel. I don't know why more people don't use them.For anyone also looking through this thread for ideas, I can confirm both the dryer balls and the menstrual cup work brilliantly! I know menstrual cups aren't for everyone, but I couldn't go back to regular products. Not only am I saving a fortune, but they're so much better to actually use (for me, anyway).
To clarify, I didn't say that vegetarian food has remained the same price since the pandemic. The prices of everything have definitely increased. However, our total grocery spending has remained the same ($600/mo) because we stopped buying meat and have replaced that portion of our diet with other protein sources that are cheaper. Ex. Even if 1lb of tofu increased in price to $2.13 at Walmart, that's still cheaper than 1lb of sausage. So, swapping out the sausage in a meal with tofu would save money.Wow, my daughter who is vegetarian and has been complaining how much more expensive her food has gotten since the pandemic. 16 ounces of Tofu at Walmart is $2,13, double what is was a couple of years ago. Beyond hamburger patties are $7.98 a pound, beef hamburger patties are $3.48 a pound.