by Watchman » 10 Mar 2010 13:33
We began building our food supply about 13 years ago -- and with few exceptions, bought everything on sale. First we made a "provisions" list of food, medical, personal, cleaning - and every time we stocked up to strength on one of the items, we crossed it off the list. Now that our storehouse is complete, the only food expense we might have is to replace something on our inventory. I have two properties to pay taxes on, so that runs about $200 a month; auto and homeowner insurance runs about $100 a month; emergency cash about $100 a month; petty cash (my wife the banker) about $300 a month; gasoline about $35 a month; electricity (two buildings) about $75 a month; natural gas $50 a month; city services (trash, water, sewage) $65 a month; phone service (cell and land) $85 a month; tithe 10%; silver $200; and lastly, our only form of entertainment (other than me telling jokes that my wife does not find funny sometimes) our TV DVD collection. We have no cable TV. Oh, about $100 a month total for birthdays - we do not celebrate Christmas as the big boxes say we should - we don't give Chinese goods - we send something special for each of our grand-kids and their parents on their birthdays. We space our spending orgasm out over the year

rather than waste it on one frantic shot in December. We reserve December 25th for worship. There are some yearly things that we do, like $70 to the USFS for ten woodcutting permits. We (I admit it) go out for Chinese food about once a month or every other, which amounts to about $200 a year. Other than that we're in good shape. Oh, one thing I forgot - internet service about $55 a month; yearly hosting fees for three web pages that I maintain (including this one) about $300. Books, oh damn, we both read voraciously and spend about $25 a month on used books, which we turn back in for credit. No [Wash My Mouth] sodas, no pizzas (we make our own - learned this skill from five years in Italy), eat a lot of fruit, can a lot of vegetables and meat - we do eat deer and antelope that our grandson harvests and some big lake trout once in a while.
We strictly rotate food and other supplies and our motto is "save the pennies and the dollars take care of themselves".

We began building our food supply about 13 years ago -- and with few exceptions, bought everything on sale. First we made a "provisions" list of food, medical, personal, cleaning - and every time we stocked up to strength on one of the items, we crossed it off the list. Now that our storehouse is complete, the only food expense we might have is to replace something on our inventory. I have two properties to pay taxes on, so that runs about $200 a month; auto and homeowner insurance runs about $100 a month; emergency cash about $100 a month; petty cash (my wife the banker) about $300 a month; gasoline about $35 a month; electricity (two buildings) about $75 a month; natural gas $50 a month; city services (trash, water, sewage) $65 a month; phone service (cell and land) $85 a month; tithe 10%; silver $200; and lastly, our only form of entertainment (other than me telling jokes that my wife does not find funny sometimes) our TV DVD collection. We have no cable TV. Oh, about $100 a month total for birthdays - we do not celebrate Christmas as the big boxes say we should - we don't give Chinese goods - we send something special for each of our grand-kids and their parents on their birthdays. We space our spending orgasm out over the year :twisted: rather than waste it on one frantic shot in December. We reserve December 25th for worship. There are some yearly things that we do, like $70 to the USFS for ten woodcutting permits. We (I admit it) go out for Chinese food about once a month or every other, which amounts to about $200 a year. Other than that we're in good shape. Oh, one thing I forgot - internet service about $55 a month; yearly hosting fees for three web pages that I maintain (including this one) about $300. Books, oh damn, we both read voraciously and spend about $25 a month on used books, which we turn back in for credit. No [Wash My Mouth] sodas, no pizzas (we make our own - learned this skill from five years in Italy), eat a lot of fruit, can a lot of vegetables and meat - we do eat deer and antelope that our grandson harvests and some big lake trout once in a while.
We strictly rotate food and other supplies and our motto is "save the pennies and the dollars take care of themselves". :)