Frugal Coupon Mom et al: Anyone else feel like this isn't really shopping?

I have a question - are any of you FT employees out of the home? I work about 50 hours a week and am a FT mom so I'm having difficulty getting the time to do these deals. If you are, can you tell me how you still have time to do them? I do CVS and any groceries I can (and Kmart when they double and target sporadically) but had to give up Rite Aid, don't do walgreen bc it's too far away and I haven't made it to CVS in the past couple of weeks b/c I just run out of time. any suggestions/advice would be appreciate.

I'm not a mom, but I'm out of the house 11-12 hours a day. Pretty much all I do is go home, make dinner, and go to sleep.

But, I am required to take a 1 hour lunch break everyday (which I'm on right now!) and I check out the ads online (or bring them with), clip my coupons, make my grocery list, etc.

Fortunately, I can walk to several CVSs and Walgreens from my job during lunch, and if I walk quickly, even a Dominick's and Jewel (grocery stores). On my way home, I'll pop into the Whole Foods, Trader Joe's, etc. if needed.

Rarely do I make it to the store on the weekends - there's just too much going on.

For me, if I tack on another 15 minutes on the way home it's much more managable - having to schlep out once I've gotten home or on the weekends isn't very realistic.

I also make sure I have all my lists, coupons, and store cards (like for CVS) with me at all times - you never know when you might get a spare minute to shop.
 
I work from home and I'm in a graduate program, plus I have three kids and a dh. I find my couponing/planning/HotCouponWorld time at nights and on Sunday afternoons. I don't watch tv so there's a whole bunch of free time right there LOL
 
I have a question - are any of you FT employees out of the home? I work about 50 hours a week and am a FT mom so I'm having difficulty getting the time to do these deals. If you are, can you tell me how you still have time to do them? I do CVS and any groceries I can (and Kmart when they double and target sporadically) but had to give up Rite Aid, don't do walgreen bc it's too far away and I haven't made it to CVS in the past couple of weeks b/c I just run out of time. any suggestions/advice would be appreciate.

I work full time, and am a mom, and I coupon.

I clip on weekends, in the evening, while I watch tv, ect. I sometimes convince the kids to help me clip. It does take me about 30-60 minutes of prep time a week.

I get my list together, and shop every Sunday. My 9 year old LOVES couponing. He can spot a blinkie faster than the blink of an eye. :) He can hardly stand the excitement, waiting for the cashier to state what we saved that week. He also gets the benefit of picking out flavors of things I have coupons for.

I end up saving 50-60% a week on groceries, with the coupons. I am slowly creating a stockpile, while still doing my nightly menu planning. I am weening myself away from planning a menu, as my stockpile rises.
 
Could some of you Coupon Queens post a bit about how long it takes you to check out at the cash register? I saw where Frugal Coupon Mom talked about it taking her a short time to shop but much longer in line, and she can't go except on Sunday (when the crowds are unavoidable).

How long does it take, understanding that it's never perfect; some things always kick out and they have to search the tape to find where you bought XYZ product, look up the face value of a product, etc.

Are you getting a lot of "harumphs" and sighs of exasperation behind you? I hate peer pressure!!! :flower3:
 

Could some of you Coupon Queens post a bit about how long it takes you to check out at the cash register? I saw where Frugal Coupon Mom talked about it taking her a short time to shop but much longer in line, and she can't go except on Sunday (when the crowds are unavoidable).

How long does it take, understanding that it's never perfect; some things always kick out and they have to search the tape to find where you bought XYZ product, look up the face value of a product, etc.

Are you getting a lot of "harumphs" and sighs of exasperation behind you? I hate peer pressure!!! :flower3:
Walmart is dreadful about coupon usage. Even though they have the lowest prices around, I tend to avoid them because it always takes forever(20+ minutes) to check out. And I usually end up arguing with cashiers, front end supervisors and csr's. Thus, a lot of unhappy customers behind me.

Very, very rarely will I have a problem at a grocery store. And it takes about 1 minute for them to scan my coupons, which can be a significant pile(avg about 30 coupons per transaction). Usually any problems I encounter with coupons at a grocery store stem from cashier inexperience. For example, yesterday I was purchasing 10 like items and I had a coupon for each item. So 10 coupons. The cashier wanted to ask a csr to make sure there were no limits on the number of coupons allowed. There weren't. It probably added an extra 3 minutes onto my checkout.

Oh, and if I have a coupon for a free product, I always write the purchase price on the coupon. The cashiers always seem to appreciate this. And I try to put the free w/ coupon items on the belt last. That way the cashier just has to look at the last couple items on the receipt to find the price.
 
I work FT, my kids are grown up (21 and 25) and shop in 'Mom's Stockpile' when they come home! lol They never pay for HBA items, detergent, etc.

Sunday morning is *my* time. I enjoy my coffee, read the paper, and then attack the coupons sections and ads. I talk with my buddies on AFC, specifically in my local store forums and then do a look over of the CVS and Walgreens forums to see if it is worth stopping on my way home from work as they are quite out of my way. If they are, I go...if not, oh well! I plan for bigger events like the KMart double events that have been running where they will double Qs up to and including $2. Thats huge! My last trip there, my bill was over $120 and my actual out of pocket was $16. Some of it was food items, some things for my dog, storage containers, HBA, etc. I can splurge on produce and meat items more freely if that part of my budget is very low so it makes sense for me to do this.

When a great coupon comes out that I know I would use over and over, I will order some and get extras of an item.

As far as checkout time, it depends on the cashier but most of the locals know each other so there is no questioning. You hand them the coupons, they scan them and they go through if you are using the coupon properly. If not, you dig through the receipt with the cashier to verify the match up. No big deal......
 
Could some of you Coupon Queens post a bit about how long it takes you to check out at the cash register? I saw where Frugal Coupon Mom talked about it taking her a short time to shop but much longer in line, and she can't go except on Sunday (when the crowds are unavoidable).

How long does it take, understanding that it's never perfect; some things always kick out and they have to search the tape to find where you bought XYZ product, look up the face value of a product, etc.

Are you getting a lot of "harumphs" and sighs of exasperation behind you? I hate peer pressure!!! :flower3:

I have gotten those, but I don't care :) I just smile at them!
 
you are obviously VERY good at it and must be highly organized to make it work. How much do you think the $$ value of your efforts is per year? When you said it's a job, I bet you are saving your family an astronomical amount in all kinds of things you buy across the board.

I figured out how much I saved one year. I live alone, so I shop for only me or for BF & me. I saved about $700.

As for it being a "job"? I think most of us here work for an hourly rate or our spouses do. So every amount you save is a trade-off of having to work for that amount and fork over the cash. Like if I saved $30 in one shopping trip, and it took me an hour to shop with the coupons, then that hour was worth $30/hour!

For those that are SAHMs, it is a wonderful feeling bringing in money so to speak, in the form of products you would have bought anyway. Otherwise, your spouse would have had to make the money for it.


someone touched on it in an earlier post .. one thing I see over and over on coupon sites is stockpiling. It's hard to sit down with the weekly paper and plan meals, and then expect to save a lot using coupons. I suppose it can be done, but I've never been able to make it work. Some weeks, there will a meat sale and that's all I'll buy, planning on using things I've stockpiled in my pantry. Other weeks, I'll only get things I have coupons for an pay very little out of pocket. I look at it as more of a lifestyle. LOL.

Stockpiling is odd at first and you (and your family can think you are crazy. The first few weeks of rough because you really don't have much to choose from in your stockpile. In fact, you bought excess, which goes against common sense when you are a really limited budget.

The first week, you may stockpile 10 cans of tomatoes because you were able to get them for 10¢ a can. You still end up buying other necessities at full price because nothing was on sale.

You go home with your 10 cans, and DH asks you what's to eat? Umm...tomatoes? :eek: All you have is a big bag of canned tomatoes? (You even question your own common sense on this.) Sure you can use a can, but you feel like you wasted 90¢ of the excess of the other cans.

The next week, pasta is on sale. So you get 6 boxes. Oh, good, you can make spaghetti with the canned tomatoes. Butter & herb noodles. But, you can't have that all week either. Now your cupboard has 9 cans of tomatoes and 6 boxes of spaghetti. (You question your own sanity, and your family members are too. :eek: )

The third week, there is a great sale on chicken and ground beef. BINGO! With the canned tomatoes, you can make a great meat sauce, beef tacos, sloppy joes. With the chicken & tomatoes, you can do a catchatori, a crockpot shredded chicken & pasta, a pasta salad.

The fourth week, you get a couple more items which really start giving you choices with the previous three weeks of items. That's when your stockpile really starts cooking. (Pun intended.) :yay:


Thanks for the tutorial Imzadi! It is particularly helpful for shoppers like me whose grocery stores will not accept coupons printed on-line. The managers all claim that there were too many bogus on-line coupons being used and they stopped accepting them. Even our Target won't accept their own on-line coupons.
I know what you mean. Here in NYC, the land of cynicism, always vigilant for thieves and cons, places don't accept printed on-line coupons either. :(


I have been able to get the free items from Walgreens and such, and it is a great deal, but my complaint is the nearest Walgreens and CVS to my house is a 30 minute drive. I only go when there are several items I can benefit from, but then I need to go back to spend my register reward coupons within 2 weeks even if the trip isn't that productive.:mad:

Also none of my local grocery stores double coupons. There is one 30 minutes away, but it is such a small store they are almost always out of the sale items I want, and they only double up to 50 cents. :sad2: Those of you who live where larger coupon amounts are doubled are lucky.
Check some of the coupon trading sites in different regions. Say, on the east coast, the inserts have a lot of $1 coupons. In your area they won't double a $1 coupon. But on the west coast, the inserts are 75¢ for the same item. Your store WILL double a 75¢ to $1.50. :) If you trade enough coupons in a single trade, you may save an extra $5 or $10 than using your $1 coupons. Times that by several months, and the saving add up.

I know it's a pain for Walgreens to be 30 minutes away, but if you save $15 in that trip, again that hour was worth $15/hr at a one hour job.

And yes, some weeks, it's just not worth the trip.


In terms of the health and beauty aid items, I get everything and anything that I can get free of cheap with coupons and keep two boxes going....one is for the Rescue Mission and the other is for the Battered Women's Shelter. Anything I get that isn't for us goes in there and when the box is full, off it goes. You could do this with processed foods that you don't' want to use and take your box to the food pantry. They will love you for it.

Just some thoughts and hope it helps a bit!
clap.gif
I've also donated to Battered Women's shelters. It is a great feeling to be able to give, even at times when I myself don't have cash to spare, but can give away items.
 
I've tried these methods in the past,but honestly we now have 2 cut price groceries within 15 minutes- they don't take coupons,and they're still cheaper than scouring ads,and pulling coupons to match sales....between Aldi,Pricerite,and my 1x month run to Trader Joes for some of the health items I can't get at my 2 locals,I'm set,and it costs less b/c I get what's on my list,without 50 shelves full of 'sale' items I probably wouldn't use much anyway....
instead of 'saving' a bunch at the regular grocery,I just buy what we need and it is cheap to begin with.
But we also don't use paper towels and suchlike things anymore,the only paper product I now buy is toilet paper- changing what we use makes a big difference-
Even if we did buy poptart-like items(we don't) Aldi or Pricerite brands would still be so much cheaper.....

I hear you about Trader Joes! I love them! :cool1: I wish they had coupons for their stuff.

As for regular couponing, I've been able to get a 4 roll pack of toilet paper down to 10¢/pack and 25¢/pack with coupons with a sale.

It isn't about using a coupon for a full priced item. It's about combining a coupon for an item when it's on sale. Why wouldn't someone want to save more money off even the sale price? But if you can buy a 4 pack (not a single roll) for 10¢ without a coupon, more power to you! :thumbsup2
 
I'm not sure I can organize multiple coupon flyers per week, week after week, then coordinate them with the right stores, then shop at multiple stores per week to use those coupons, if I ever find them out of my stockpile of coupon flyers, LOL. :rotfl:
You don't have to! check out the links I suggested at MyCoupons.com, CouponWorld & some other people mentioned. There are already threads for stores in your area where OTHER people have done all the work in organizing the sales that week with the coupons that came out. Some women are really into this stuff, have the head for it and the time. They really get off on all of it, then sharing what they find. Be very grateful for them. :worship: I couldn't do this on my own without them.

All you have to do is scan the pertinent threads, choose which items you want to get, (takes maybe 5 minutes,) and pull out those coupons.

I don't even clip out coupons ahead of time and have a binder and all that. :eek: I stack my pile of inserts chronologically on top of each other week to week. That's my big organization. :laughing: When they say there's a sale for 6 pack of toilet paper for down to 50¢ with coupon and give which week's date of insert the coupon in. That's when I clip it and any other coupons for that week's sale. I restack all my inserts neatly again, ready for next week.

I know some people keep binders and coupon carriers, but frankly, if a coupon's not something I'm going use, or I don't have the coupon with me when I'm shopping, I don't need it that much. Remember, any savings is better than nothing. I don't need to go overboard. Spending hours clipping coupon is not what it's about. I'm all for saving, in as little time as possible. :thumbsup2
 
so for the people that get multiple copies, how do you do that? because buying multiple sunday papers at $2.50 a pop kind of defeats the purpose, so how do you get multiple coupons without paying for them?
There are a few places to get multiples:
Neighborhood recycling centers or the "Recycled paper bins" are usually really clean because all they have is paper in them. No sticky goop or spilled coffee, just paper.

Starbucks on Sunday mornings. Customers usually bring in their own newspapers or buy the one there, then leave them for others after they finish reading them, in the front area where the customers sit.

Starbucks routinely throws them out after a few hours of piling up. You don't have to buy any coffee. Just go in, find the basket or tables where the the newspapers have been left, quietly take the inserts & leave. They don't care if you take the papers that would go in the garbage or recycling bin anyways. Go to 2 or 3 different Starbucks on a Sunday morning, get 2 or 3 inserts at each one, and you have a stack of 6 (or more) coupon inserts. :cool1:

There are usually two different inserts in each paper: Valassis and Smart Source. Every few months, Proctor & gamble puts out an insert.

Most newsstands and stores throw out there excess Sunday papers Sunday nite or on Monday. Only the top page has to be returned to the newspaper company to get credit back. So the papers are usually bundled and tossed out. You can often ask them if they would save you the inserts, or if you can go through the bundles to carefully take out the inserts without messing up their bundles and strewing papers all around. Or stop by after they are closed, grab the inserts from the recycler.

Another way is to ask you neighbors. They may not coupon. There's no shame in it. ask them if they don't coupon, could they simply put the inserts off to the side for you, or ask if you can go through their paper recycling bin.

Lastly, if you or a friend works in a corporate office, many people bring their newspapers in to read on Monday & then toss them in the recycling bin. Just reach in and quickly grab the inserts, or ask them to save/get the inserts.

When most people ask you why you coupon, you can also state that you like to donate to battered women & homeless shelters. Couponing helps you do that. You won't be lying, because in several weeks, as you start accumulating a small stockpile, you WILL have enough to donate and make it true. Also, make it a goal. :goodvibes

If you ask people for the inserts and give them to you, it's great to reward them by giving them some stuff once in a while, that you got with coupons. Once you give them something and they understand what it's about, and they happily save you the inserts. It's paying them back for helping you and the shelters out. :thumbsup2 People like to be rewarded and they like to know they are doing a good thing, especially when it's so little as saving newspapers for someone. :angel:


I get my list together, and shop every Sunday. My 9 year old LOVES couponing. He can spot a blinkie faster than the blink of an eye. :) He can hardly stand the excitement, waiting for the cashier to state what we saved that week. He also gets the benefit of picking out flavors of things I have coupons for.
Yes, for those with kids old enough, make a game out of it. Hand them a coupon for an item that you know is in that aisle and play the matching game. They have to find the item that goes with the picture on the coupon. :yay:

Could some of you Coupon Queens post a bit about how long it takes you to check out at the cash register?
Are you getting a lot of "harumphs" and sighs of exasperation behind you? I hate peer pressure!!! :flower3:

The first few times you may feel guilty. What I've learned to do is tell people behind me that I have a bunch of coupons and hold them up so they can see the stack. If they only have one or two items, i may let them go first. If they have more, then they've been politely warned and it's then up to them to decide if they want to wait. usually coupons scan quickly. It may take about an extra 2 minutes if all goes smoothly.

Also, I try to pick my cashier well. Some look like they will complain about a sunny day. :rolleyes: Others, I really say a sincere "Hi" to, so they feel like I'm connecting to them as a human being. Many are sympathetic and want you to get the savings. :) Others, as they get to know you, are also curious to see how much you can save. :cheer2:

Walmart is dreadful about coupon usage. Even though they have the lowest prices around, I tend to avoid them because it always takes forever(20+ minutes) to check out.

Walmart is just dreadful period, with or without coupons. :p

Actually, they do have a good "trial size" aisle for shampoos, soaps, mini deodorants, toothpastes, etc. At many Walmarts, any coupons which actually state on the coupon: "Good for ANY SIZE," they will accept the coupons for the trial size item. Technically they are supposed to since it says any size, but some don't. (No problem. Just politely say you don't want the items then.) If you have 6 coupons for 50¢ off a trial size shampoo, and the end price comes out to 5¢ for each 2 oz bottle, you've only spent 30¢ for 12 oz of shampoo. :)

BTW: Soap is soap. Doesn't matter if it's liquid "shampoo." It can be put in a cheap pump bottle, diluted a little and used as liquid hand soap or even to clean the scum off the bathtub. Just because you don't use that brand on your hair doesn't mean it can't be used as soap. The ones with conditioner added are actually good for the hands. :thumbsup2

I have 3 full size bottles of assorted Garnier shampoos I got from Rite Aid's "Free After Rebate" stockpiled for hand soap. :cool1:
 
there are LOTS of things I get from couponing I dont use.. I simply put them away and save them up for a garage sale.. my BFF also does this and we have dual garage sales with all of our free and money maker items, plus ill get items if they are a few cents, I'll make it back in the sale if I dont end up using them items.
.
I get duplicate coupons from the recycling center and the recycling paper bins outside of schools. you can also subscribe to the paper here sunday only for $1 ea. I have 4 delivered.
 
Thanks everyone for the links...will have to check them out.

I have used coupons for years and used to save 10% to 15% each shopping trip. Now I'm lucky if I get 5%. So many of the coupons I used to use don't seem to exist anymore....Tropicana, Kraft, Green Giant, etc

My point, (and I do have one) is that it still helps a bit, even if you don't spend a lot of time with it.
 
Question: I had a coupon from the outside of a box of Mini Wheats a while back that was good for a FREE box of a new flavor of Mini Wheats. I was shopping at Harris Teeter and tried using it on their weekly sale price of B1G1 on Mini Wheats. I had two boxes and thought it would work out both boxes were free.

Of course, they said no. But even now I'm still wondering about that decision. Would other grocery stores have allowed that coupon use on their B1G1? There's nothing I hate more than being told (snidely) "no" when I try to use a coupon.

btw, I only got one box using my free box coupon. Why do they care if I "pay" for my B1 with a coupon (and they're getting reimbursed by Kelloggs, right?) or with cash? I'd like to know upfront for next time if I can expect to encounter this logic when I use coupons on B1G1 items.

Also, what if my coupon is a B1G1 and then the store has it's own B1G1? Do I B1G2 then?
 
Question: I had a coupon from the outside of a box of Mini Wheats a while back that was good for a FREE box of a new flavor of Mini Wheats. I was shopping at Harris Teeter and tried using it on their weekly sale price of B1G1 on Mini Wheats. I had two boxes and thought it would work out both boxes were free.

Of course, they said no. But even now I'm still wondering about that decision. Would other grocery stores have allowed that coupon use on their B1G1? There's nothing I hate more than being told (snidely) "no" when I try to use a coupon.

btw, I only got one box using my free box coupon. Why do they care if I "pay" for my B1 with a coupon (and they're getting reimbursed by Kelloggs, right?) or with cash? I'd like to know upfront for next time if I can expect to encounter this logic when I use coupons on B1G1 items.

Also, what if my coupon is a B1G1 and then the store has it's own B1G1? Do I B1G2 then?

Use of coupons with B1G1 sales varies from chain to chain and even from store to store within a chain! I suggest you ask at customer service at your store(s) before attempting to use the coupons so you know the "real deal."

For example, at Acme, I can use two $x coupons with a B1G1 sale. At Pathmark I can only use one $x ith a B1G1 sale.
 
I love to coupon - it is free money.

I have all of my inserts in a hanging file organized by insert/date. I go to couponmom.com and pull up the weekly Publix list. I check off the items that are on sale that I want to get, print out the list, and then write any additional items I need on it. I also frequent hotcouponworld.com and afullcup.com for additional coupon matchups and to find free deals.

It only takes me 20 minutes to cut out the coupons I need because she tells you what insert/date to pull it from.

Just this week I got 8 cans of Muir Glen Organic Crushed Tomatoes, 8 cans of Del Monte Diced Tomatoes, and 12 packs of Mentos gum for free. Today I am picking up 3 bottles of coffee-mate creamer for .16 a bottle. A few weeks ago, Publix paid me .11 a bag for Green Giant frozen veggies and I got 8 boxes of Mueller's pasta for less than .20 a box.

We plan our meals around what is on sale and stock up on fresh meat when it is really marked down.

I have been doing this for 2 years and until this February I worked full time out of the home. I also have a 4 year old. It is possible, if you stay organized.
 
I plan for bigger events like the KMart double events that have been running where they will double Qs up to and including $2. Thats huge! My last trip there, my bill was over $120 and my actual out of pocket was $16. Some of it was food items, some things for my dog, storage containers, HBA, etc. I can splurge on produce and meat items more freely if that part of my budget is very low so it makes sense for me to do this.
See, I think this is why I get discouraged, LOL. I planned and planned for our first Kmart double coupon event, up to $2, back in October. I was SO excited. I went in with a huge stack of coupons planning to save a huge amount of money, get free stuff, it was going to be great. :laughing:

Then I got there. The prices were SO high that even after my doubled coupons I still didn't want most of the stuff. Most things I could still get cheaper at Wal Mart with the regular face value of the coupon. Kmart's prices were just that much higher. The grocery items that would have been free or nearly free were all things they either didn't carry, not even space on the shelf for them, or things they were out of. I went on the first day but not first thing in the morning. Still, they couldn't have had much of that stuff to begin with as our local Kmart isn't ever very busy.

So my Kmart double coupon event that I spent so much time planning and coupon clipping for was a bust. All I came out with was some relatively inexpensive canned cat food and treats, which I don't normally buy but bought because they were a good deal. :rolleyes1
 
You don't have to! check out the links I suggested at MyCoupons.com, CouponWorld & some other people mentioned. There are already threads for stores in your area where OTHER people have done all the work in organizing the sales that week with the coupons that came out. Some women are really into this stuff, have the head for it and the time. They really get off on all of it, then sharing what they find. Be very grateful for them. :worship: I couldn't do this on my own without them.

All you have to do is scan the pertinent threads, choose which items you want to get, (takes maybe 5 minutes,) and pull out those coupons.
Unfortunately there was almost nothing for my local stores. We have only Giant Eagle and Shop N Save, if you're not counting WalMart. There was one post for Giant Eagle recently, and it was for mustard, LOL. Shop N Save only had a couple of recent posts and they were about not accepting internet coupons and something else like that. Nothing about what deals were available, darn it.

Maybe I need to start driving into WV to go to Kroger. They always seem to have deals.
 
See, I think this is why I get discouraged, LOL. I planned and planned for our first Kmart double coupon event, up to $2, back in October. I was SO excited. I went in with a huge stack of coupons planning to save a huge amount of money, get free stuff, it was going to be great. :laughing:

Then I got there. The prices were SO high that even after my doubled coupons I still didn't want most of the stuff. Most things I could still get cheaper at Wal Mart with the regular face value of the coupon. Kmart's prices were just that much higher. The grocery items that would have been free or nearly free were all things they either didn't carry, not even space on the shelf for them, or things they were out of. I went on the first day but not first thing in the morning. Still, they couldn't have had much of that stuff to begin with as our local Kmart isn't ever very busy.

So my Kmart double coupon event that I spent so much time planning and coupon clipping for was a bust. All I came out with was some relatively inexpensive canned cat food and treats, which I don't normally buy but bought because they were a good deal. :rolleyes1

And I can understand that frustration, believe me. But here is the thing....if you utilize HCW or AFC, regulars on the boards will help you by letting you know what items work out free with the coupons that are currently available. It's all about helping each other. Same idea with your local grocery store...... Here's a perfect example.....one of the regulars on the grocery board for my store just noticed that Sucrets are on sale this week at our store. It was literally buried in the ad so now we all know to grab them before the sale ends tomorrow. You can't do this kind of saving and shopping by yourself. You really want to find a group of fun, helpful people to work with on one of those sites. I love my buddies on the Price Chopper forum.
 
Unfortunately there was almost nothing for my local stores. We have only Giant Eagle and Shop N Save, if you're not counting WalMart. There was one post for Giant Eagle recently, and it was for mustard, LOL. Shop N Save only had a couple of recent posts and they were about not accepting internet coupons and something else like that. Nothing about what deals were available, darn it.

Maybe I need to start driving into WV to go to Kroger. They always seem to have deals.

You're getting some good advice here but I don't know if you're following all the pointers. I just looked at the afullcup.com site and there is a ton of stuff listed for Giant Eagle. Did you check there?
 












Receive up to $1,000 in Onboard Credit and a Gift Basket!
That’s right — when you book your Disney Cruise with Dreams Unlimited Travel, you’ll receive incredible shipboard credits to spend during your vacation!
CLICK HERE






DIS Facebook DIS youtube DIS Instagram DIS Pinterest DIS Tiktok DIS Twitter DIS Bluesky

Back
Top Bottom