Power Play, Eating a Hole in my Pocket
The budget is a big obstacle in getting to Skokomish. We're trying to save nearly 1/3 of my income. We're not big spenders as a general rule - we rarely buy name brand anything, we don't spend a lot on entertainment, and we don't carry credit card balances so our only interest payments are the home mortgage and a student loan. Still, there doesn't seem to be much accumulating in the savings account at the end of each month.
I looked at last month's bills. There were two that immediately stood out where we could find the savings we need: electricity and food.
The power company took $400 last month. Most of that was to run the air conditioner; we've turned the temperature up 5 degrees and all the ceiling fans on high. It costs 76 cents to dry a load of clothes; the clothesline that sterilizes and bleaches our cloth diapers will see more use. My computer burns about $7 each month just sitting on all night; I've started shutting it down before bed. We already use CFLs instead of incandescent bulbs; we might burn those even less by adjusting to a 'dawn to dusk' schedule instead of a 'mid-morning to well after dark' schedule.
Food cost us about $1500 last month - $300 apiece, and that includes the baby still on just milk. About 2/3 was groceries, and the rest was eating out. For the next year, we're going to eat out only Sunday lunch and maybe dinner, and all other meals at home. We're going to keep our monthly grocery bill under $250, and we're not going to sacrifice adequate nutrition and variety while doing it. How? We're starting by eating through everything we have stockpiled in the house before we make another shopping trip.
August 25th, 2009 - 10:01
A dawn to dusk schedule will help on the farm too. As well as Vitamin D absorption during a northwest winter.
November 11th, 2009 - 19:59
Veggie patch is good, for enjoyment, flavour as well as nutrition. Much stuff bought in shops does not actually have that high nutritional value.