.
We get about 30-50 Trick or Treaters every Halloween as live in a neighborhood with lots of kids under 15. The smallest of the ghouls and goblins start showing up for goodies about 5pm and we do lights out at 9pm.
Last year the first week of November I scored two bags (.50 each) of these great stickers that have been packed away to be given this Halloween.
In addition we do give away candy. This years budget was $25. A few weeks ago I found these Cars Pez dispensers for .06 each at Rexall. In other years I have overbought and we end up eating a bunch of candy that only contributes to our waistlines. This year if it runs out we will do lights out early.
So, this year keep your eyes peeled for great after Halloween sales for non edible items to give away next year. It is also a great time to pick up craft supplies for fall related items.
Update: October 31,2011 - a completely awesome fall day - warm and quite unlike our regular Halloweens of past (we normally have snow by now) so hubby insisted on making an additional run for extra candy. Any extra calories on our hips are now his fault :)
Sunday, October 30, 2011
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Another Great Shoe Find - Thrift Store Steal of a Deal
Found at Goodwill
Ralph Lauren "Megan" brand teal grey faux croc shoes - Brazilian leather
$5.99
Hubby was shocked...he is now placing orders (I informed him it does not work that way but he was unconvinced).
I am finding such great items thinking about trying out the reselling market when we move and I am not employed full-time.
For now these will grace my closet.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Time to Start Thinking About Christmas!
Art courtesy of graphicsfairy.blogspot.com
We are almost two months away from Christmas - time to start thinking about the Christmas Budget. This year Hubby and I are spending about half of what we normally do on each other and saving the rest for our move. We are planning on spending the same amount as in the past for family: two widowed mothers, four kids, and three nephews.
This year my intent is to simplify Christmas and continue year two of the "No More Christmas Crap" way of living.
Last year I realized I had far too much of everything Christmas. You may be interested in reading the original post here. That means in the next three weeks I hope to cut my Christmas crap down by half and donate the rest to Goodwill or Salvation Army (just before Christmas when they can easily sell this stuff).
The "Buy No More Christmas Crap" rules:
1. Use up what I have
2. Recycle (I went through the after-Christmas wrapper trash last year and separated re-usable bows and sparklies and have been saving bags, bows and ribbons all year that enter the house on other gifts or wrapping)
3. Get creative when I run low or run out by using alternatives we already have.
This morning I had some serious energy to purge so gathered together together some items to give away:
Christmas stocking and extra tree skirt
Box of miscellaneous items and a couple more Halloween Decorations
Bag of clothes and extra blankets
Our families love movies so I ordered eight movie passes for Cineplex Odeon using some Aeroplan points that a pair each will be added to the kids stockings. They have not arrived yet but I am confident they will be here by December.
Do you need to order some goodies for Christmas using points or freebies? Time to order now!
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Freebies and Great News Day
Freebie received this week:
Kashi sample granola bar and $2 off coupon. Last month I was able to turn a similar coupon into a free box of Kashi so am going to hang on to it for such a sale.
Great news this week: My friend who had a masectomy this spring due to breast cancer found a new lump on her collarbone. She had a bone scan and new tests and they say it is unlikely it is cancerous. In fact, previous lesions she had on her spine are gone - a product of chemotherapy - she is requesting more tests to confirm but for now some worry is gone.
In the end who gives a crap about money when life is at stake. Today I am thankful for my friends life.
Kashi sample granola bar and $2 off coupon. Last month I was able to turn a similar coupon into a free box of Kashi so am going to hang on to it for such a sale.
Great news this week: My friend who had a masectomy this spring due to breast cancer found a new lump on her collarbone. She had a bone scan and new tests and they say it is unlikely it is cancerous. In fact, previous lesions she had on her spine are gone - a product of chemotherapy - she is requesting more tests to confirm but for now some worry is gone.
In the end who gives a crap about money when life is at stake. Today I am thankful for my friends life.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Tales of a Wonderful Thrift Store Afternoon
My friend and I have a mutual love of thrifting. We met up Saturday for bargain hunting and lunch. It was a wonderful sunny fall day and we visted four different stores near where she lives (ones I normally don't go to).
My finds:
Two glass apothecary jars - that go absolutely perfect in the bathroom. Cost? $3 for both
Three Shirts:
Sweater and a tank that had never been worn and still had the $19.99 price tag on it.
Green Sweater (Reitmans) $5.99
Red Sweater(Dalia Brand) $5.99
Black tank (Northern Reflections) $3.99
My friend also had a great thrifting day: Blue navy felt coat $15.99, tablecloth that will be a gift to her sister $4.99, black leather pumps $19.99 (a bit steep but they were Guess), a brown set of pumps $4.99, handmade mittens .99. Unfortunately no pictures of her finds as did not take the camera.
In turn (as more must go out of the house as come in until we move) I gifted her three pots for her balcony. She gave me a bottle of red wine (she is unable too drink for five years as is taking medication for her post-cancer treatment that may damage her kidneys if she drinks) that she has had in her cupboard for a long time and some bacon some friends she had over recently left in her fridge as she is a vegan.
She also has agreed to take five more blue pots that we figured out she will have room for on my next visit.
Hubby sold one more item this weekend for the Vancouver Island furniture fund:
Trailer dolly $40. Total in the fund now $865.
My clothing tally for the year is now at
$152.07 for new items
$173.95 for used items
Total $325.02. I have decided to cap it at $400 for the year. It is nice to know that I can have a really nice wardrobe on very little. A lot of what I am buying now will be used for at least the next year so the first six months of no work I should be required to buy very little in clothing.
Our earliest move date would likely be March if the house sells immediately so that gives me five months to complete the downsize. It seems to be going rather well-we just have to keep the momentum going.
My finds:
Two glass apothecary jars - that go absolutely perfect in the bathroom. Cost? $3 for both
Three Shirts:
Sweater and a tank that had never been worn and still had the $19.99 price tag on it.
Green Sweater (Reitmans) $5.99
Red Sweater(Dalia Brand) $5.99
Black tank (Northern Reflections) $3.99
My friend also had a great thrifting day: Blue navy felt coat $15.99, tablecloth that will be a gift to her sister $4.99, black leather pumps $19.99 (a bit steep but they were Guess), a brown set of pumps $4.99, handmade mittens .99. Unfortunately no pictures of her finds as did not take the camera.
In turn (as more must go out of the house as come in until we move) I gifted her three pots for her balcony. She gave me a bottle of red wine (she is unable too drink for five years as is taking medication for her post-cancer treatment that may damage her kidneys if she drinks) that she has had in her cupboard for a long time and some bacon some friends she had over recently left in her fridge as she is a vegan.
She also has agreed to take five more blue pots that we figured out she will have room for on my next visit.
Hubby sold one more item this weekend for the Vancouver Island furniture fund:
Trailer dolly $40. Total in the fund now $865.
My clothing tally for the year is now at
$152.07 for new items
$173.95 for used items
Total $325.02. I have decided to cap it at $400 for the year. It is nice to know that I can have a really nice wardrobe on very little. A lot of what I am buying now will be used for at least the next year so the first six months of no work I should be required to buy very little in clothing.
Our earliest move date would likely be March if the house sells immediately so that gives me five months to complete the downsize. It seems to be going rather well-we just have to keep the momentum going.
Wednesday, October 12, 2011
Out with the Old, In With The New (Thrift Find)
There is a Goodwill Thrift Store located within 2 blocks of my workplace and I often venture there on my short 45 minute lunch break. Today I had to drop off these (placemats and tablecloths from my Thanksgiving Post)
and bought this:
Duncan Hines Dessert Book (6th Printing 1966, original printing 1955)
I collect pre 1970 cookbooks and have a very nice small collection including a late 1800s cook book valued at $200 (purchased when I worked in a used and rare bookstore), early Betty Crockers and many a leaflet from the 1950s. Purchase price? $2.49. Not a steal but a bargain to me (consider that there are no garage sales here for 8 months out of the year so am subject to thrift store prices).
I love the simplicity of the recipes:
Macaroon Pie Crust? Egg White, Sugar, light corn syrup, vanilla and coconut
Creme Brulee? light cream, egg yolks, white sugar, brown sugar. Who knew creme brulee could be so easy. I am inspired!
Most of them don't even include Duncan Hines products - and there is a large section on frosting - obviously before Duncan Hines got into the frosting game.
Another great thrifting blog you should check out is Apron Thrift Girl which I posted a previous thrift find(shoes - by Cheapchick) on her Thrift Share Monday. I found a bunch of other great thrifting blogs there - check it out.
I took along my new work friend who has a love of thrift as well and we decided a girls day of thrifting with lunch is required and have made plans for this weekend.
I know, I am not supposted to be buying crap because we are moving - but loads more is leaving the house than coming in, and a girl has to live!
and bought this:
Duncan Hines Dessert Book (6th Printing 1966, original printing 1955)
I collect pre 1970 cookbooks and have a very nice small collection including a late 1800s cook book valued at $200 (purchased when I worked in a used and rare bookstore), early Betty Crockers and many a leaflet from the 1950s. Purchase price? $2.49. Not a steal but a bargain to me (consider that there are no garage sales here for 8 months out of the year so am subject to thrift store prices).
I love the simplicity of the recipes:
Macaroon Pie Crust? Egg White, Sugar, light corn syrup, vanilla and coconut
Creme Brulee? light cream, egg yolks, white sugar, brown sugar. Who knew creme brulee could be so easy. I am inspired!
Most of them don't even include Duncan Hines products - and there is a large section on frosting - obviously before Duncan Hines got into the frosting game.
Another great thrifting blog you should check out is Apron Thrift Girl which I posted a previous thrift find(shoes - by Cheapchick) on her Thrift Share Monday. I found a bunch of other great thrifting blogs there - check it out.
I took along my new work friend who has a love of thrift as well and we decided a girls day of thrifting with lunch is required and have made plans for this weekend.
I know, I am not supposted to be buying crap because we are moving - but loads more is leaving the house than coming in, and a girl has to live!
Monday, October 10, 2011
Links Of The Day
Wild flower on Comox B.C. beach
I am having a wonderful day off today browsing the internet discovering new and wonderful bloggers.
Here are a few that you might be interested in:
Home made mod podge from Changing my Destiny
Furniture makeovers from fellow Canuck Upcycling My Life
and one of my absolute favorite finds this week a woman after my own heart,
The Queen of Fifty Cents, tales from a diehard garage saler.
I am having a wonderful day off today browsing the internet discovering new and wonderful bloggers.
Here are a few that you might be interested in:
Home made mod podge from Changing my Destiny
Furniture makeovers from fellow Canuck Upcycling My Life
and one of my absolute favorite finds this week a woman after my own heart,
The Queen of Fifty Cents, tales from a diehard garage saler.
Sunday, October 9, 2011
Happy Turkey Weekend Canada!
Three more photos from our recent trip to Vancouver Island
This weekend is Canadian Thanksgiving. We celebrate today so that the kids can celebrate with their mother tommorrow. I am taking a break as the turkey has been stuffed and is roasting and I will have to start the rest of the meal in a few minutes time. I made double the stuffing this time as all hubby could talk about yesterday was stuffing. I am sure we could do without the Turkey and he would be happy with a meal soley of stuffing and gravey, but the rest of the family might revolt. What is on the menu for five adults and two teens?
13 pound turkey
Double batch home made stuffing (bread, butter, celery, onions, poultry seasoning and some chicken broth
Garlic mashed potatoes
Gravy
Salad
Corn
Cranberry Sauce
Pumpkin Pie with Vanilla icecream
As I was getting things out this morning I had a revelation - I hate tablecloths and cloth placemats - so all have been gathered to give away on Tuesday to Goodwill. They are too labour intensive(washing/ironing) and really not required if you like the look of your table. One less thing I have to pack for our move.
No great deals this week (10lbs potatoes for $3.99 count?) but the Costco P&G sampler freebie came
Happy Thanksgiving Everyone! (and to our American friends Happy Thanksgiving Next Month!)
Tuesday, October 4, 2011
The Down-size Continues
Excellent luck selling things on Kijiji this week.
We sold:
Hand weights $100 (there is something wrong with the mechanism that holds the weights on the bell - the purchaser was aware of that and still bought them!) Originally hubby was going to throw these in with the sale of one of our other fitness items but someone made him an offer he couldn't refuse!
Treadmill $325
Total in Vancouver Island furniture replacement account: $825
I also managed to give away four full boxes (sorry no photos) of Halloween decorations to a friend at work who has a four year old son who can appreciate them as our kids have outgrown them.
If you have never tried buying or selling on Kijiji the basic ad is free. If you want your ad to be front and centre you can pay extra. We have bought and sold boats, vehicles, and furniture this way. I highly recommend it.
We sold:
Hand weights $100 (there is something wrong with the mechanism that holds the weights on the bell - the purchaser was aware of that and still bought them!) Originally hubby was going to throw these in with the sale of one of our other fitness items but someone made him an offer he couldn't refuse!
Treadmill $325
Total in Vancouver Island furniture replacement account: $825
I also managed to give away four full boxes (sorry no photos) of Halloween decorations to a friend at work who has a four year old son who can appreciate them as our kids have outgrown them.
If you have never tried buying or selling on Kijiji the basic ad is free. If you want your ad to be front and centre you can pay extra. We have bought and sold boats, vehicles, and furniture this way. I highly recommend it.
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Save Money On Groceries - Seventeen Tips
Wouldn't you rather be spending your money on things like travel, entertainment and family? Or getting out of debt or becoming mortgage free? Use these tips to save on your grocery expenses:
1. Buy in bulk but be aware sometimes bulk is not always the best deal - calculate the cost per unit. Buying six heads of lettuce does not make sense when you will end up throwing some out due to spoiling. Be aware of bulk buying stores Costco - you may end up spending far more than intended. Buying a small amount of a specific spice to try out a new recipe makes more sense than a large container that will go to waste.
2. Only buy meat on loss leaders. We eat a well balanced diet but only eat certain things when on sale. A freezer comes in handy for this purpose. Most meat can last up to six months in a freezer without any breakdown in quality. Buy in season (turkeys before Christmas and Easter go on sale every year). Buy family packs and break them into portions that will work for your family at home.
3. Only use coupons for items you would be already buying. Try to hold back on using them until the item goes on sale - then you end up with the absolute lowest price. Some areas offer doubling of coupons or stacking. In Canada a great resource for learning how to coupon is smartcanucks.ca.
4. Don't be brand loyal or if you must be brand loyal watch for sales on those brands. I will only drink Earl Grey Tea and I drink it every day. Regular black tea is cheap but does not come close. I buy huge bags of 100 at Superstore for $6.99 as this tea rarely goes on sale. I feel the quality is worth the cost therefore pay more. The same goes for Heinz Ketchup and Kraft Peanut Butter. Luckily peanut butter goes on sale quite often. For everything else we buy the brand that is cheapest with or without a coupon. Some times that means store brand.
5. Buy produce in season. In winter buy produce that is on sale due to loss leaders. When it is minus 30 degrees celcius out grocery stores often put cucumbers on sale or tomatoes to attract bargain shoppers. Buy cheaper produce in summer and freeze for winter use. Buy local - do you really need okra in Alberta? I wouldn't even know where to get it and would certainly pay a high price if I could find it. Avoid recipes with odd ingredients.
6. Eat soup for supper at least once per week. Whether store bought or home-made soup is an easy low calorie low price meal. Add buns and you have dinner - or make biscuits or cornbread. Sometimes I buy Knorr broth(with coupons), add my own pasta(whatever is in the pantry - spaghetti broken up if nothing else),veggies (whatever is in the fridge-celery, onions, broccoli, cauliflower, red or green peppers) one chickenbreast (cubed - will cook in broth) and any leftover salsa. This is one of our favorite winter meals. The salsa just gives it a little kick. If you have no salsa put a small amount of cayenne pepper for the same effect.
7. Try to eat porridge at least once a week for breakfast. Not the kind that comes in little packets - the from scratch kind. Throw in cloves, cinnamon, dried fruit (I like dried cranberries left over from another recipe or raisins) and you have a hearty, filling, healthy breakfast. Very low cost per person. If doing a bacon and egg fry-up consider only using half a package of bacon. A side benefit to this is a lower calorie meal.
8. Shop at more than one grocery store. Buy loss leaders at all of them. This way you get a varied diet. Try to stop on the way home from work so you save on gas. Make lists using the local fryers of deals at each store and only go there if nearby to pick up the loss leaders.
9. Shop less. Everytime you go to the grocery store you chance picking up non-essential items. If going to pick up one or two items don't get a cart.
10. Shop with a list. Nothing comes home unless on the list or unless a shockingly low deal that was unadvertised. Those I come across regularly, especially in the day old department of the bakery or some of the smaller grocery stores in older areas that may not see as much traffic as the new shiny stores.
11. Grow your own produce. Don't spend big bucks-try to get plants or seeds at the lowest price possible. I have gotten 20 tomatoes off of one tomato plant purchased for $3.99 in the Spring. It is now a living room plant as the first frosts have come but it is still producing. Even if you don't have a yard try container gardening on a balcony or sunny room. My tomatoes are chemical and pesicide free as well.
11. Cook from scratch. Once you set up a pantry properly with spices and baking items there are both savings to your grocery budget and you will eat healthier as know what is going into what you are eating.
12. Don't buy convenience items like pre-cut salads and pre-cooked pieces of meat unless your are using a coupon that makes it cheaper than if you bought the individual ingredients to do it yourself.
13. Shop alone and only on a full stomach. My husband is terrible to grocery shop with as he keeps throwing items in the cart without looking at the prices.
14. Buy direct from a producer where possible. Is there a local farm near you? Can you go pick apples at half the cost of the store? Is there a local meat shop where you can buy half an animal and have them cut it up and wrap it for freezer use?
15. If entertaining make dishes like casseroles or a big roast that can feed multiple mouths with several side dishes. The less meat the cheaper the whole meal will be. I can feed 7 (five adults and two teenagers) on $20 at Thanksgiving by making my own stuffing and buying grade b young turkeys.
16. Use less. Cut that fabric dryer sheet in half, use half as much shampoo, use a smaller amount of sugar called for in a recipe.
17. Waste less. Use up yesterdays leftovers in todays casseroles. If it can't be used today then freeze it for a rainy day. Browning bananas are a classic example of an item that can be frozen for use in muffins or banana bread. If going on holidays did you know you can freeze milk?
Be creative, get out your cook book and the next time the budget is getting a little tight for groceries check your own cupboards before running to the grocery store.
Saturday, October 1, 2011
September Grocery Tally and Coupons Used
Septembers Budget was $450.00 minus 46.03 over from August = $403.97
Actual: $423.09 ($19.12 over budget)
Coupons Used: $83.53 - my highest month to date (Year to date $418.12)
Octobers Grocery Budget will be based on my new Thrifty Plan
$426.57 (see more on Thrifty Plan Guidelines here) minus $19.12 overage from September = $407.45.
This month I went over budget on purpose in the last week. Why? Great sales on produce with sales ending on September 30th. I would rather go a little bit over than pay twice as much for the same item the next week - that is the major benefit of carrying the overage from one month to the next. My overspend never gets out of control.
We have been cooking from scratch this week more, on Thursday was ground Turkey (that had been sitting in the freezer for several months) chili and baking powder biscuits. It turned out really good and we have a frozen batch for some future dinner when we don't feel like cooking. My chili is always a mish-mash of whatever is in the fridge. Leftover salsa, that last bit of barbeque sauce, some pasta or rice, and always tons of chili powder.
I scored one food product for free this week at Sobeys
$1.99 minus $2 coupon (no tax on food products in Alberta)= free plus 1 cent to apply to other groceries.
I found a great deal on gum at Rexall. They must have been selling off older stock - I wonder if gum expires?
4 packages for .16 each (photo shows 3 as husband stole one before I could take a picture) plus tax .68 cents (for 80 pieces of gum)
We also listed a few items for sale on Kijiji. One sold last night:
4 year old Costco Patio set (that was starting to chip pieces off the top as I am certain these were not meant for our harsh winters)
Sold for $400 - that goes straight into the Vancouver Island Furniture Fund(for anything we sell here that we have to buy there - is much cheaper than shipping an 800 pound patio set)
Things are starting to leave the house - selling things makes me feel like we are moving in the right direction. The patio actually looks much larger now that the set is gone and will likely show better when we sell.
Here is a shot I took a few weeks ago at sunrise. Seagulls flying high in the pink puffy clouds. Cheers everyone!
Actual: $423.09 ($19.12 over budget)
Coupons Used: $83.53 - my highest month to date (Year to date $418.12)
Octobers Grocery Budget will be based on my new Thrifty Plan
$426.57 (see more on Thrifty Plan Guidelines here) minus $19.12 overage from September = $407.45.
This month I went over budget on purpose in the last week. Why? Great sales on produce with sales ending on September 30th. I would rather go a little bit over than pay twice as much for the same item the next week - that is the major benefit of carrying the overage from one month to the next. My overspend never gets out of control.
We have been cooking from scratch this week more, on Thursday was ground Turkey (that had been sitting in the freezer for several months) chili and baking powder biscuits. It turned out really good and we have a frozen batch for some future dinner when we don't feel like cooking. My chili is always a mish-mash of whatever is in the fridge. Leftover salsa, that last bit of barbeque sauce, some pasta or rice, and always tons of chili powder.
I scored one food product for free this week at Sobeys
$1.99 minus $2 coupon (no tax on food products in Alberta)= free plus 1 cent to apply to other groceries.
I found a great deal on gum at Rexall. They must have been selling off older stock - I wonder if gum expires?
4 packages for .16 each (photo shows 3 as husband stole one before I could take a picture) plus tax .68 cents (for 80 pieces of gum)
We also listed a few items for sale on Kijiji. One sold last night:
4 year old Costco Patio set (that was starting to chip pieces off the top as I am certain these were not meant for our harsh winters)
Sold for $400 - that goes straight into the Vancouver Island Furniture Fund(for anything we sell here that we have to buy there - is much cheaper than shipping an 800 pound patio set)
Things are starting to leave the house - selling things makes me feel like we are moving in the right direction. The patio actually looks much larger now that the set is gone and will likely show better when we sell.
Here is a shot I took a few weeks ago at sunrise. Seagulls flying high in the pink puffy clouds. Cheers everyone!
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