It ain’t always easy

The other night, as I was picking dried poop off of a baby chick’s rear end (whereupon it immediately pooped on me), my husband remarked how country living isn’t always what it seems.  We had just had several families out for the day and the kids ran around looking at all of the animals and running all over the place.  Here was some hatching eggs, there was a brooder full of adorable baby chicks.  Over here, you can pet some baby rabbits, over there, you can feed the chickens.  But, what people don’t get to see is the day to day upkeep and maintenance as well as the issues that pop up from time to time around a farm.

Those cute baby chicks have to be checked on a few times a day to check for ‘pasty butt’ ….an actual situation which requires me to wash off/pick off baby chick poo on their hind end so that they can keep on going Number 2 without getting ‘backlogged’.  I have to watch for egg picking and eating in the big chicken coop, as well as watch out for any sign of predation or disease.  We went through a six week patch of avian pox (amazingly NOT called ‘chicken pox’) with the chickens and ended up losing two of my roosters.  One of my cockatiels in my aviary got a little down and stopped eating the other day, so I had to separate her and medicate her.  My baby bunnies got diarrhea after my kids fed them a huge handful of weeds.  Once again, I became the resident ‘Poo Picker’ and had to clean bunny poo off of a couple of unwilling patients.  (they’re now used to weeds; it just takes some time) A few weeks back, we lost my oldest duck and the unsinkable Wayward Jones, presumably to a stray dog, when they both hopped over the fence.

This morning, Jason called to tell me that he had found Garfield in the road,  limp and still warm.  I had only seen him close to the road once, last year,  and after the way I went screaming and running at him like an absolute madwoman I thought that surely he’d never attempt that again.  You’d think that fences and gates would mean something , but sometimes they just don’t.  And, I am not one of those people that believe in keeping an animal indoors 100% of the time.  In fact, I think it’s just plain ridiculous.  It makes as much sense to me as people who never go outside…and frankly, that scares me.

If you have read older posts, you will remember that he is our furry alarm clock cat that always managed to beat Jason to the bathroom.  Garfield enjoyed sunning in the front garden and following us all over the place.  We’d let him out in the morning with the dogs, weather permitting, and bring him in before we left the house and at nightfall.  He was always where we were and usually either curled up at our feet or in a chair, or meowing to let us know about whatever was aggravating him at the moment.  Usually, it was because the food in his dish was more than five minutes old.  Last Friday night (more accurately, Saturday morning), at 3:30 a.m., he let out an extremely loud “MEEEEEOOOOOOOOWWWWW” which woke both me and Jason up out of a dead sleep.  We both thought we were dreaming until we realized that surely it wasn’t possible that both of us were simultaneously dreaming about a screaming cat.  I suppose that Garfield felt neglected or he felt that his food was unpalatable after sitting out since about 8 p.m. and wanted to let us know about it.

And that’s really the last story that I have to tell you about “Jason’s ‘Furson'”.

I could tell you about how, yesterday, I almost took a picture of him as he was in his typical upside-down, on-his-back position while napping on his favorite chair, his paws curled up on his chest and chin stuck up in the air.  Or how a couple of days ago, he and both of the small dogs were all three curled up in a single chair without an inch to spare.  Or how he meowed at us most every time he saw us…telling us with his funny flat face and round orange eyes how inadequate we were as cat owners.  Or how his fur looked as though it was glowing at dusk each day in an impossibly fluorescent shade of orange.  Or how, one day, as I was explaining to the kids what ‘felting’ was, I took some of his fur we had just combed out and, rubbing it together, made a weird orange felt ‘ball’ and laughed at the idea of ‘cat felt’.

But today, I am telling you how I cried when I looked in the litterbox and realized this would be the last time I’d get to scoop his poop.

I never thought I’d ever miss scooping cat poop.

I looked at the cat dish (still half-full with cat kibble…unpalatable to his standards, I am sure) and realized how I would never again hear his signature meow or see him stretch up to claw the crap out of the edge of my cabinet as he always did when I scooped out fresh food.  I’ll miss the way he always ran in front of us, somehow usually managing to cause one of us to stumble in the process, his fluffy orange striped tail flicking in cat laughter at us.  I’ll miss the hairballs drifting across my living room floor like tiny orange tumbleweeds.  I’ll even miss the early morning caterwauling.  I”ll miss poking fun at him in our best British voices.  I am positive that if he could have, he would have had a monocle and a top hat and have a British accent and speak to us with sheer disapproval at our lackluster attempts at ‘cat parenting’.

The problem with pets is that you are opening yourself up to something that, in all likelihood, you will outlive even at their full life expectancy.  What makes it worse is that it is very easy to get attached to such a creature.  Especially a charismatic cat.

Country life isn’t always sunshine and rainbows.  Sometimes, it’s just plain damn hard.

 

A-campin’ we will go…

For the past 4 or 5 years, we have wanted to go on vacation.  Specifically, go on vacation to the Crater of Diamonds State Park in Arkansas; the world’s only public diamond mine.  However, little Mrs. FrugalPants (me) just couldn’t turn loose the extra money to go.  But, five years of my family’s pleas, as well as my own longing to go on vacation, finally turned the tide.

Trying to avoid any unpleasant surprises and wanting to know more about where we actually were going, I did a couple of week’s worth of research on the park and surrounding area.  Mrs. FrugalPants was having a VERY hard time justifying staying at a hotel.  Visions of burning dollars went up in flames in my mind.  So I suggested getting a tent.  Mr. FrugalPants thought I had lost my mind.  Visions of leaky 2’x4′ pup tents from his Cub Scout days went through his mind.

“No way.”, said Mr. FP.  After pulling up several family tents on Amazon and Cabela’s, I showed him that today’s tents weren’t designed with only people under 5 feet tall in mind.  We ended up going for the Coleman Bugaboo, a five person tent with a too-cute name.  Technically, it’s a Bugaboo Two, which possibly tipped it in my favor.  (Okay, not really, but still…) I rationalized that for less than the cost of one night in a hotel, I would come out with a tent and all of the supplies.  If I hadn’t done my research, I could be telling you a camping horror story quite easily.  Here are some tips on choosing a tent if you decide to ever take the plunge.

Besides, I told myself, it sure would be nice to wake up there at the park, rather than have to drive back and forth from the hotel.

After reading through some camping stories, I decided that it would be best to set the tent up immediately when it came in and seal the seams with a liquid sealant.  I also elected myself to spend a night in the tent with the kiddos pre-trip for a trial run.  If you learn nothing else from me about camping, know this:  SLEEPING BAGS ARE NOT OPTIONAL.  This is funny now, but not funny at the time.  When we went to the sports store to get our camping gear and sleeping bags, Mr. FrugalPants said, “Nah, I don’t want one…I’ll just bring a comforter.”  So I thought, well…it would save us a bit of money, so I won’t get one either.

Night of the trial run:  I had my queensized blowup mattress.  Check. Two thick comforters. Check.  2 pairs of sleep pants and thick socks.  Check.  The temperature was supposed to get down around forty degrees.  I thought that surely 2 fluffy comforters would get me through the night.  I may as well have slept nekkid on the wet grass, covered by a paper towel.  I tossed, I turned, I rotated, I got in the fetal position.  When I heard some roosters crowing, I thought THANK GOD my night is done!  I’ve made it! Time for coffee!  I grabbed my phone to check the time and it was………two thirty.  AAAAAMMMMM.  I had woken up no less than 30 times in FOUR HOURS.  Since the kids were in bags (and not moving) I assumed they were either frozen or asleep, and I limped into the house on my frozen icecube toes.  I have to edit this to tell you, but I woke up Mr. FrugalPants  at 2:30 a.m. to tell him that in no uncertain terms were sleeping bags EVER to be considered flip-flapping optional. And, for the record, no the children did not get cold, and were completely unscathed since they were…in sleeping bags. I guess you can tell, I was a complete camping virgin.  No longer.

So how was the trip?

I have only been to Arkansas one time before, as a young ‘un, so I had never actually driven through it.  When you cross into Arkansas on Interstate 30, you immediately notice that all new construction stops with the Texas side.  Which is actually pretty nice.  Urban sprawl drives me insane.  I don’t need a Bed Bath & Beyond and a Wal-Mart every 15 feet.  The next thing that you notice is that there is nowhere to turn around on the interstate.  I didn’t notice any overpasses.  Let me clarify….there WERE indeed cut-throughs, but they all had a sign which stated, “For Authorized Personnel Use Only”.  Well, I won’t tell you how we turned around, but we did.  The entire reason that we had to turn around was because of the third thing about Arkansas we discovered.  The road numbers apparently change with some frequency.  My map (a Texas map with a corner of Arkansas on it) told us to take Highway 4 out of Hope.  Well, there is no Highway 4.  I don’t know if there was ever a Highway 4 or if it was just a cruel joke by Texas cartographers, but we sailed right through Hope (no pun intended) and missed our turn.  After calling the state park, the friendly operator informed me that she was not aware of a Highway 4, but that I needed to take road #278 out of Hope.  Naturally, we had passed that six miles back, but oh well.

We noticed (and enjoyed) the small roads, which would be called Farm to Market, or FM, roads here in Texas.  A few miles out of Hope, the road shrunk a bit and we thought we had entered the 1800’s.  The road narrowed and 19th century houses lined the streets.  What really caught our eye was the thousands of Narcissus (daffodils and jonquils) in bloom over the entire town.  We found out that we were at the Washington State Park. Like a miniature Williamsburg.  I needed a map after our Highway 4 fiasco, so I picked one up at the Courthouse AKA Washington State Park visitor’s center, where I was informed that Arkansas ‘changes their road names all of the time’.  Hmm.  Maybe it’s the Arkansas cartographers with a sadistic sense of humor.  Anyway, we got back on the road.

Throughout our drive, we noticed no WalMarts…no urban sprawl.  This was small town livin’ right here.  Beautiful countryside very much like East Texas.  When we arrived in Murphreesboro, I was a little shocked to see that it was pretty much a blip on the map.  No Wal-Mart.  No CVS or Walgreens.  No strip centers or malls.  Which was GREAT.  Cause I hate all of that crap.  Here, minus the Dollar General, was small town life.  A church, a few family restaurants, a handful of gift shops, and a hometown grocery store.

Arriving at the park, it was everything that we hoped it would be.  Newly renovated as of 2010, the park is nestled in the piney woods.  It is spotless and the camping sites are just nothing short of pristine.  When I saw the recycling bins for the campers, I think I cried a little.

First things first, we set up our ‘house’ for the next 2 nights and 3 days.  We arrived around 6pm, so there really wasn’t very much to do other than go grab some chips at the grocery store for our first cookout meal.  After that, it was shower time, and the public bathrooms were just great.  They are a little small (3 stalls and 2 showers for our section), but heated, clean, and plenty of hot water.  Not that many people camp in a tent, so we had no waiting issues other than waiting on a goofy woman with a smartmouthed pre-teen daughter.  But other than her, everything was fine.  I have a slight issue about using a public toilet for…you know…NUMBER TWO, but fortunately that wasn’t an issue because we were only one of a handful of nutty people who actually chose to sleep in a parachute with poles.  Everyone else (with any sense) got to do their business in their RV.

We bedded down for the night…kids on exercise mats and we were on inflatable mattresses.  Oh…and we were in our new sleeping bags.  I probably shouldn’t have to mention that the very next day after I nearly froze to death in my pre-camping trial, I went and plunked down some money on a pair of nice, thick, 30-50 degree comfort sleeping bags.  Anyway.  So we laid there a while and after about an hour, I heard it.  Plink, plink.   Plink, plink, plink.

Rain.  Of course it would rain.  But not just rain.  We went through three separate thunderstorms, each one increasing in strength through the night.  When I heard the first rolls of thunder, I admit that I got a hot knot in my stomach.  What was I supposed to do?  Wake up the kids?  Then what?  Run to the truck?  Then what?  So, I covered my head like the proverbial ostrich and hoped that they wouldn’t find us the next morning in a pile of melted nylon, fiberglass rods, and burned pine needles.  But at least we’d die warm…in our sleeping bags.  I have to say that the night, other than the storms, passed rather uneventfully.  Well, there was one point at about 4 am where I had to go pee.  Of course I did.  Here I am in the woods, in a tent…pretty far away from the restrooms and my bladder has mysteriously shrunk to the size of a pea and I really think I may wet myself.  It’s thundering, there’s lightning, and I’m probably surrounded by hungry bears and rabid raccoons who are just waiting….just waiting for a virgin camper with her pea sized bladder to emerge from her tent at four in the morning during a thunderstorm so that my screams will go unanswered.  I could just see their hungry, red eyes and glistening fangs.  But a woman’s gotta do what a woman’s gotta do, and after all, I didn’t want to soak my new sleeping bag.  Heaven forbid.

I made it to and from the tent, event-free.  Not even a drop of rain on me.  As I laid back down, I heard a child scream, “HELP MEEEE”.  I sat up like a meerkat on crack, straining my ears.  Then the thunder cracked overhead, the rain came, and I could hear nothing else.  I guess that the bears and coons got what they wanted…another camper with a pea-sized bladder.  (Nothing apparently happened.  We chalked it up to a scared child.  Murphreesboro CSI wasn’t taping off any areas and we saw no body-shaped chalk lines, so I think that is all it was)  I thought we had made it through the night with no leaks, but as Mr. FP informed me the next morning. There was one.  Just one, and the drips landed right in his eyeball. Literally.  So he slept the rest of the night with a hat on his face.  So, back to the seam sealing for me.

The rain apparently was due to a cold front.  Of course.  The high for our ‘big day’ was fifty.  And windy.  Yes, digging for diamonds in the cold mud and screening dirt in 50 degree water was a little bit discouraging, but not too much.  The kids found mud and that’s really all they needed.  We drove 4 hours for them to play in the mud.  Oh well.

The rest of the trip was really glorious.  Really, it was.  I had a great time, even on the 50 degree day. True, we didn’t find anything that would pay for us to retire, but we did come home with lots of beautiful minerals.  You can take out any mineral that you find (read: gem, crystal, rocks, whatever).

So, for this farm girl, I’m a camping virgin no more.  And by the way, I loved sleeping in a tent.  Yes, while I’d love to have an Airstream or a ‘canned ham’ vintage trailer, it’s just not in the cards for us yet, so a-campin’ we will go again!

Grocery Challenge – Part 3

Well, I have the February total.

We spent 338 dollars on groceries.  This is 100 dollars more than January, however, I did buy some meat on sale and Jason made a few solo trips to the grocery store.

How did you do for February?  Were you able to track down your receipts and tally ’em up?  If you’d like to share, please tell us how many people you’re feeding and your grocery amount in a comment for this post.

Now for March!  I hope you all have your CrockPots dusted off and ready.  For this month, we’re going to keep track of grocery spending again (and you can also track fast food/restaurant spending if you’d like…trust me, it will help you to cook at home or learn how to cook!).  But this month, we’ll be cutting back when possible to see how much we can knock off of that grocery bill.  This can mean using coupons, buying store brands, and/or not buying convenience foods.  While February was simply a month to track spending, March will be a month to both track spending AND try and really reduce grocery spending.

It’s very easy to get swept up with impulse buys and convenience foods at the grocery…I still do!  I mean, I’m human.  However, by tracking my spending, I am much more conscious of doing so now….so, I don’t do it nearly as much as I used to.  I hope that February was an eye-opener for you!  If you haven’t started the Challenge yet, make this month your ‘February’ and follow along. I’d love to hear your results and how you were able to save.

For myself, I do not do a great deal of couponing.  Instead, I stick to non-brand name foods (as long as they taste good!!!) and I try not to buy a lot of convenience foods.  I do realize that some nights I will be too tired to cook, so yes, I will pick up some cheap frozen pizzas.  But usually, I will make my own.  (I assure you it is NOT difficult!!!)  I also shop at 3 different stores to find the best prices on items.  These stores are all very close to each other, so I’m not burning up my gas trying to save money.  I also try to remember how much items cost at each one so I can get the best deal.  Some people even have a price book…a small notebook where they record the best deals on foods.  Probably not a bad idea!

For March, since I am technically a month ahead, I’m going to do the Pioneer Days Experiment.  That is, I am going to try and buy groceries ONCE this month to see how it affects my grocery bill for the month.  I will report back on this.

I’d love to hear your comments…they always brighten my day!

Welcome To Insulation Nation

I’m going to admit something to you now.

My current house was THE coldest house I have ever lived in.  I could hang meat in my closet, with no fear of spoilage.  (I named it ‘The Closet of Death’) My floors, covered in tile, would cause frostbite to your toes.  I had to cook all day on cold days just to defrost my fingers enough to be able to use them.  My house, at its lowest temperature was 43 degrees.  With the heater on, it was about 53.

So, it was a couple of weeks ago during a rare outbreak of extreme cold that Jason and I were sitting at work. We had several days of bitter weather that people in East Texas aren’t accustomed to.  At all.

Our employees left, and our eyes met.  Neither one of us had to say anything. We didn’t want to leave and face the polar region also known as Home.  In fact, that night we stayed an extra hour at work.  I played Spider Solitaire while he looked at news on the internet.  It was then that we decided something had to be done. After all, if you don’t look forward to going home, what do you have to look forward to?  I was pretty much willing, at that point, to fall asleep at my desk rather than return to our house.

On the way to our abode, Jason said, “Either we’re going to move, or…or…or…”

“Or what?”

“Well, just pack anything important, go to your mom’s house, and I’ll see you in a few days.” (why could I envision my house going up in flames?)

We were a desperate people.

So, rather than commit arson or move into a storage building, we decided to insulate the attic.  For whatever reason, it hadn’t ever been done since the house was moved here in ’93 or ’94.  We’re talking NO insulation.  Either you were looking at bare boards or maybe an inch of rock wool (old kind of insulation).  We thought that anything at this point would help.

Let me describe to you how things were:

Obviously, you’ve gathered the home is frigid.  We have a 2 story home.  The stairwell is central to the house, and ends in a small ‘room’ with 4 entryways.  One is a bathroom (with a door), one’s a bedroom (with a door), one goes into the kitchen (no door because some goober removed it), and the other goes into my den (no door).  The thermostat is located in this little central room, and there are NO vents in this room. In the winter, when the heat is on, a 150 mph icy blast of air flows down the stairs, filling that room and gets sucked into the kitchen which is where the intake vent for the a/c is located.  I am 100% serious when I tell you that the temperature of this air was whatever temperature the outside air was.  So, on a 20 degree day, you can imagine how excited I was.

I was never really sure why this was, and I always assumed that whomever placed the thermostat in the little room had the mental capacity of a carrot since the room was forever the temperature of a glacier and therefore the heat would never turn off.  I don’t know much about air conditioning and heating, but I mean…come on.  SO, the poor outside unit would run and run until it literally froze itself and then I’d have to turn off the heat and wait until it thawed out (haha) until I could turn my heat back on.  AND, regarding the polar tornadic wind barreling down the stairs, I thought, “Aha! I’ll just tack up some sheets and block the airflow.”

(please excuse me while I laugh…okay, that’s better)

Oh, me and my big IDEAS.  No sheet was a match for the Category 5 winds which literally sucked the sheet I hung over the kitchen doorway completely into the kitchen.  I think I cried a little when I realized I’d been defeated.  What’s even better is that I devised this completely elaborate curtain ‘system’ which engulfed the exposed part of the stairwell.  Jason built a ‘rack’ made from pipe and I hung curtains on it to ALSO try and block the air.  Talk about defeat.

So after a week of 20 degree (and below) days, we’d had it and couldn’t/wouldn’t take any more.  I had baked no less than 10 loaves of bread, 2 pumpkin rolls, and 5 pots of beans and a roast that week just to stay warm. Hell, I was too cold to eat!  I’d carefully tended a fire all day, every day and still sat in my house wearing 3 shirts, a heavy coat, 3 pairs of pants, 2 pairs of socks, a wool scarf, and a toboggan (that’s a hat to you up North). And I was still cold.

So on a lovely Saturday, armed with 50 bags of cellulose and a commercial blower machine, I prepped myself for attic insulation.  I wore a heavy duty dust mask, a headlight, and a lovely Tyvek suit.  I’ve never done anything like that in my life, but at that point I didn’t care.  Using our house phones as an intercom I was able to communicate with Jason (the blower feeder).  It’s recommended for our area of the country to go with an R-value of 49 up to 60, for attics.  I went a full R60 without shame.  That meant putting in about 18 and a half inches of fluffy shredded paper all in my attic.  After three and a half hours of contorting myself like a pretzel, nearly poking out my eyes with roofing nails, and gingerly trying to stay balanced on joists while dragging a 100 foot hose throughout the attic, I was done.  It looked glorious.

That night, we were too tired to even think about results.  The ol’ grey mare ain’t what she used to be; my back felt like it had been beaten with 87 hammers and I was coated from head to toe in paper fibers. We had planned the insulation in preparation for another front which rolled through on Monday.  Monday night, Jason and I were sitting in front of the fire when he whispered, “Oh my God.  Look at the curtains.” I turned my head and immediately saw that my ‘Arctic chill blocking’ curtains were perfectly still. All of them. Even the one in the kitchen doorway.

“Well, surely the heat isn’t on!” I said.  Jason leapt out of his chair.

“No, no…the heat’s ON!” he cried.  Our eyes grew wide.

“My God, it IS warm in here!” “I know!” “Warm?  In our house? Is that possible?” “What happened to the Arctic air flow?” “I don’t know!”

Jason ran outside to grab his handheld infrared digital thermometer, which will tell you the temperature of whatever you are pointing at.

“Here! Here! See what it says!”

I pointed at the ceiling. I got choked trying to say, “It’s seventy one.  SEVENTY ONE!”

Suddenly, it became a game. The floor was 68.  The hearth was 95. The far wall was 63. The front of the chairs was 67. We ran around the entire house, delirious with joy.  We couldn’t have been happier if we’d won the powerball lotto.  “No more coats in the house!” we blubbered as we jumped up and down in our warm house.

I held the thermometer high above my head.  “With God as my witness, this house will never be cold again!”

Grocery Challenge – Part 2

Have you been saving food receipts?  Good for you!

I tallied up my January grocery bill and it was exactly half of what my December bill was.  Came to the grand total of $232!  Not bad for feeding a family of 4 for a month.  And, no, I didn’t cheat by buying more fast food.  We do eat some fast food, but no more than normal.  So far, at this point, we’ve spent about $150 for this month…possibly a little more because Jason did some shopping and I haven’t seen the latest receipt yet.

Will check back at the end of the month…

 

The 2011 Grocery Challenge – Part 1

Since May of 2009, we have been on a real frugal kick around the house, thanks to Dave Ramsey.  We were going along really well…and then sometime last summer, I spent way more than I should have and took a few steps back.  So, after reviewing my spending trends with my Mint.com account, I decided to super-amp up my frugality for 2011.  First place to cut spending?  The grocery bill.

Now, outside of home expenses, the second largest amount we typically spend our money on is food.  If you’ve never done so, for a single month save every receipt.  Every single one, even if it’s a stick of gum.  At the end of the month, whip out a calculator and categorize all of your purchases.  I can almost guarantee you that what you spend by eating out alone will make you sick!  For a while, I couldn’t figure out why we were always broke by the end of the month.  Once you track your money (and I’d highly recommend Mint.com if you use a debit card), it’s easy to see where all the ‘leaks’ in your budget are. Here’s a pretty good budget worksheet, based on a ‘zer0-based’ budget.  That is, you will allot all of your paycheck/income to a category, so you have ‘nothing left’ by the end of the month.  (of course, this can include funding your savings/retirement…you’re not going to spend all of the money except on paper)

Anyway, one of our own major ‘leaks’ was in the food category.  Number one offender was eating out and number two was overspending on groceries.  So, in May of 2009 we decided to make a change…and we have!  We started the gardens so we are now able to grow a lot of our own fruits and veggies, I bake our bread now, and the chickens give us plenty of eggs. We try not to eat out often, though Jason and I do have a date night every other weekend, and yes, we usually do go out to eat.  However, getting water to drink (drinks are up to 2.19 each around here) and splitting a meal helps a LOT.   I was being a lot more careful about grocery spending, but I kinda ‘fell off of the wagon’ so to speak.  Some months I’d spend up to 450 to 500 a month on groceries…and a typical month for us beforehand was between 250-350 dollars.  Now, even that may sound low to some of you, but we don’t buy a lot of convenience food.  If I can make it, I’ll usually not buy it.  So, I make our own rolls, hamburger buns, hot dog buns, sandwich bread, jams and jellies, pickles, canned tomatoes, and now I even have a pasta maker!  Lol.  Watch out, world!

Now that I’m back on track for 2011 and all fired up about becoming debt-free, I am issuing a challenge to you all.  Let’s see how much we can save on our grocery bill.  Now that that has been said, you’ll have to know how much you spend in a normal month, right?  So for the month of February, let’s do Part one and track your spending expenses.  If you want to go all out, categorize ALL your expenses, but for the sake of the challenge just track what you spend on food. Save all of your food receipts for the month of February.  I used to stash mine all in an envelope.  At the end of February add up your grocery expenses, and then add up your dining out expenses separately.  Meet me back here at the end of February, and let’s compare notes.  Then for March we’ll see how much money we can save and re-post what we spent.  Sound like fun?

Here are the results of my own personal challenge.  In December, I spent $458 on groceries.  This month, so far, I have spent $147.  Now, we did spend about $185 on groceries a few days before the end of the year.  We hadn’t gone to the grocery in about 3 weeks and went a little crazy! Of course, that food lasted for a few weeks, so I expect February to be a little higher.

Just a little about the food that I do buy:  There are some foods that I won’t compromise on, for example,  organic milk.  I refuse to buy the regular stuff.  It tastes plain nasty to me and I really do care what’s in my food.  Yes, I pay seven dollars a gallon for milk!  I also read ingredient lists. I don’t buy things with TBHQ (bye,bye Ritz crackers and chicken McNuggets ) and I also try to avoid things like partially hydrogenated oils and soybean oil (most soybeans nowadays are GMOs…no thanks).  I also try to buy food grown in the state, if possible and I don’t buy out-of-season produce (like tomatoes).  Rather than buy California citrus, why not buy Texas citrus?  Grown right here in the Valley and it’s delicious stuff.  Of course, that’s just my personal choice.  The point is, is that it’s very possible to buy good nutritious food and not spend an arm and leg.  BUT, you do have to cook and you do have to know what store has the best price on what.  That in itself will save you a ton.

If you are local to East Texas, I would recommend the following:

Sav-A-Lot (Jacksonville): Kind of like a mini-Aldi’s.  Great pricing on canned goods, boxed goods, and some frozen items.  Fruit/veggies are usually well priced.  Also, they carry dairy and meat. Most items are not name brand, but I have found that quality is still great.

Break N’ Bread (Jacksonville):  My favorite place to get the organic milk.  At 3.49 for a half gallon, it even beats WalMart’s price. I also get my spices here, since you can buy as little or as much as you need, and they are the BEST.

Super Gallo (Jacksonville): Big produce section, homemade tortillas, and an awesome meat department with a real butcher.  Not that we have steaks but once in a blue moon, but the ribeyes and T-bones looked awesome.  I went away with a pound of ground and it was great stuff.  Though it was labeled as 80/20, there just wasn’t that much fat in it.

So, dust off those CrockPots and recipes in preparation for March and let’s begin the challenge!

2010 in review

To my readers:  Thank YOU for making 2010 my most popular year to date!  I have many blogs already churning in my head for 2011, so I hope you’ll stop back by to see what’s going on.  Here is some statistics that WordPress emailed me.  My favorite search that pulled up my blog?  “Cat boogers”. That just says it all, doesn’t it?:

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

A Boeing 747-400 passenger jet can hold 416 passengers. This blog was viewed about 3,900 times in 2010. That’s about 9 full 747s.

 

In 2010, there were 45 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 88 posts. There were 134 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 86mb. That’s about 3 pictures per week.

The busiest day of the year was June 22nd with 83 views. The most popular post that day was About Me.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were maryjanesfarm.org, google.com, facebook.com, backyardchickens.com, and mail.yahoo.com.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for my little country, fertile chicken egg, cat boogers, peaches, and animal eggs.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

About Me December 2008
6 comments

2

I LOVE EGGS (and chickens, too)! April 2010
11 comments

3

Where’s Wayward? May 2010
1 comment

4

The Country Pantry February 2010
1 comment

5

No Good Deed Goes Unpunished June 2010
1 comment

Two Year Reflection

As of tomorrow, it will be two years since we packed up and moved to the country to begin our semi-self-sufficient life.  I have been thinking about lessons learned and goals I’d like to meet for the future.   It hasn’t always been terribly easy, but it’s never been terribly difficult.  I will be the first to admit that I have been pretty lazy this year with the canning, the gardening, etc.  I think that I pushed so hard that first year, I burned myself out a bit.  So, here are some things I have learned:

1.  It’s very easy to try and do too much, too quickly.  As I learned the hard way with getting in over my head with 12 goats, countless batches of baby chicks, and a mile-long list of projects.  It’s very easy to romanticize country living and get swept up in a farm fantasy life.  Truth is, it’s a lot of hard work and money and a lot of what I did was NOT worth the effort we put into it.   Animals (and plants) need a proper place to go before you bring them home.  And when you do, the work and expense of upkeep has just begun.

2. It’s more difficult than you’d think to live simply.  Initially, it was difficult giving up some of the things I had, but with time I have even sold my own car and have given up television.  I’m now going through a LOT of our ‘stuff’ and either selling or donating it.  Sure makes cleaning up around here easier, too!

3. No matter how much you plan, you’re going to have setbacks.  The goats are going to rip down your fence, the chickens are going to walk right through the 500 dollar fence you just put up to keep them in, or the roof is going to spring 5 new leaks in a downpour.  While it can dampen your spirit, you have to learn to laugh it off.  After Jason spent a week putting up a beautiful new fence to keep our chickens in the orchard, he shut the gate….and the chickens walked right through the wire.  Oops.  I was trying not to laugh (not at his expense, but it just figures!), and he had to stomp off and scream some obscenities at the chickens, but eventually we could both laugh it off.  Besides, they’ve now figured out if they stay in the fence, they’ll get fed, so they try not to stray far.  On a more frightening note, our house almost caught on fire this past February due to old wiring.  Fortunately, it didn’t, but it sure had us put out for several days, both literally and in spirit.  Always expect the unexpected.

4.  Take notes.  Lots of notes.  I have a garden journal that is indispensable.  I have recorded which vegetables and fruits do best, when they were planted and when they produced, and the location of each.  This will provide me with invaluable information for each growing season.  Every time I have neglected to write something down, it’s bit me in the butt.

5.  Read, read, read, and then read some more.  Our local library is such a great place for information.  If I find a book that I really need to keep on my shelf, I buy it used from Amazon.  The internet has a huge amount of great information.  If you haven’t done something, chances are, someone else has, so learn from them!

6.  Plan ahead without getting ahead of yourself.  There are so many things that I WANT to do.  I’d love to get into aquaponics, breed Cayuga ducks and heritage chickens, and do some terrace gardening on the back side of our house.  However, the reality is this: I’m busy as it is raising 2 kids and taking care of what we have now.  So, the current plan is to become debt free, then repair this house (by paying cash).  After that, who knows?  But for now, that’s the plan and I’m trying to do my best to stick with it.

Well, those are just a few things that I’ve learned out here on the farm, but I think they’re among the most important.  The last thing I would tell you is to laugh a LOT.  Laugh at yourself and at your own mistakes.

Junk in my Trunk

Once again, I made my semi-annual pilgrimage to Canton Trade Days, which is a HUGE flea market.  Without a doubt, it would literally take days to fully shop Canton, and it gets bigger every year.  As we did last year, we went again this past Friday as an early birthday present for myself.

This year, I have decided to spare Jason from Dog Alley (the only part of Canton where animal sales are allowed), since he absolutely would rather eat his toenails than walk through it.  Anyway, we headed on back to the unreserved section, which is, by far, my absolute favorite.

Need an antique wagon wheel?  We got it.  Need a Picayune Creole’s cookbook from 1945? Got it.  Need an orange payphone from the 70s? A Howdy Doody doll, or an entire coyote skin?  Check, check, ANNNNNND check. I’m telling you, if you want it, they HAVE IT.  Somewhere, someone at Canton will have what you’re looking for.  And, a cardinal rule is, if you see what you are looking for and think the price is a little high, KEEP ON WALKING.  Because, inevitably, unless the item is extremely rare, someone on the next row will have it for a lot less.

Take into consideration a vintage coffee grinder.  Ever since seeing one being used to grind spices in my favorite magazine, I knew I had to have one.  I am seriously insane about vintage kitchen utensils.  I mean, just loopy.  I have to force myself not to buy any that I know I won’t really use.  You know, like the vintage ice grinders I found.  (I mean, what would I use them for?  To crush ice for Jason’s martinis when he gets in from work?  With me standing there in my pearls and heels?)  So, I was on the hunt for this coffee grinder.  Well, I found three at one booth.  What a deal!  They had the cast iron grinding mechanism, and looked to be in good shape.  BUT, they were about 30 dollars each.  Now, that isn’t expensive at all considering they have made it this long in good condition, but I was sure I could find them somewhere else for less.  I walked on for about another hour and a half.  No more grinders. It was time to go, and Jason asked me if I wanted to turn around and go ask the vendor if he would accept less, when suddenly, I turned around, and there it was.  A beam of light pierced the clouds and shone upon MY vintage coffee grinder.  Better yet, it highlighted the prominently displayed price tag, which was for a mere $8.50!  I snatched up the grinder and held it above my head.  Eureka!  My search was over!  The Junk Hunter’s dream!  Granted, it wasn’t the nice cast iron like the others, but it was good enough for me.

I also ended up getting a clamp-style mini grinder for soapmaking as well as an old-fashioned meat grinder.  I’m not sure what it was about grinders last Friday, but I am now the proud owner of three more!  Who knows.

Canton is full of its own characters, as well.  Usually, the buyers are the most interesting to watch, and yet, you still have some reeeeeally interesting vendors, too.  Now, there are your more ‘normal’ vendors, like Doorknob Bob, who has an unending supply of doorknobs and vintage glass pulls, but then you also have folks like Superman.

Now, we’re not talking about Clark Kent here (in fact, I think that Canton Superman’s alter-ego is called “Alan”).  No, no, this is far more interesting and entertaining.  I met Superman earlier this year when I went junking in the spring.  Superman takes every opportunity to engage any person passing his booth (whether on foot, or even in vehicle) in conversation.  And, to boot, Superman is always wearing something interesting.  This time, it looked like an old band uniform hat.  What is even more interesting is that Canton Superman looks like someone you would be pretty wary of.  I mean, he could use a good shave and a really good haircut.  Judging by looks alone, he looks like he would be a frequent flier at the trashiest bar imaginable, BUT, now, that’s just going by looks, and we shouldn’t do that, right?  Well, at least not most of the time.  Anyway, I’m pretty sure that his parents must have been either carnies or perhaps snake oil salesmen.

“Hey there, little lady, now come on in!  I don’t charge for lookin’!”

“Well now, you dig you somethin’ outta that box there, I won’t charge ya’ an arm and a leg…I don’t want to take this junk home!  Oh, now you just get a handful and I’ll charge ya’ a dollar.”

“Hey, hey!  Well, now that you bought something, you are a reee-peat customer!  You come on back next time and see Superman, and I’ll give you the reee-peat Superman customer discount!”

(to people in a passing truck)  “Hey there, now!  I don’t charge no extra for people in cars!  Y’all come on in and find ya’ somethin!”

He also has poems and sings little ditties, unfortunately none of which I can remember.  I’m not sure what is more entertaining; watching Superman ham it up or the people’s reaction to him.  An older woman approached his tables and he shouted out, “Hey there, now!”

She looked up as if to say, “Who, me?”  Her face was completely bewildered at the sight of this slightly unstable looking individual in a funny hat coming towards her.  Her grip on her bag tightened.

“Oh, now!  Now come on in here and find ya’ somethin’!  Ol’ Superman always has somethin’ for everybody!”

She looked unconvinced and actually, a little terrified.

“Ok, let me see your license, maybe I can give you a Superman discount.”

She took a step back and stammered something, but he kept on going.  I was laughing too hard (internally) to watch anymore.  After all, I was standing right next to her and didn’t want to laugh right in her face.

I had to walk off to keep from bursting out laughing.  I looked down by my feet and there was the most pseudo-terrible painting ever.  I would call it a nude painting, but that’s not really it.  These people are clearly nekkid.  And blue.  And highlighted with day-glo yellow and orange.  Fortunately, their heads were not in the painting but unfortunately their naughty bits were.  I mean, the….artist was clearly showcasing a part/pair of the male anatomy which is typically not showcased.  And, for darn good reason.

See?  Canton really does have it all.

Christmas in…September?

I don’t know what it is this year, but I’ve been thinking about Christmas (and looking forward to it) since August.  So much so that I have once again volunteered to host Christmas at my house again, even begging people to come.  What kind of whacko WANTS to host Christmas, with all of the cleaning, mess, and chaos?  Well, I guess that whacko would be ME.

So what is it that’s so alluring about Christmas?  Well, I guess it would have to be that many of my happiest memories happened at Christmas.  Like the time I got the Barbie when I was about 3 or 4 that had the ‘magic’ solution that would perm her hair.  I remember my eyes going wide as Barbie’s lovely long blond locks shrunk and curled up into an Afro so tight, it could have rivaled Roberta Flack.  Or the year Great Uncle I.B. pulled out his false teeth, and I clearly remember my revulsion.  Or maybe just being at Mamaw and Papaw’s, with Mamaw’s tree in the corner, adorned with handmade ornaments and the house being so full of people there wasn’t anywhere to go.  Or, the year that my mom put up the biggest Christmas tree I had seen (besides one in, oh, Times Square) and it was piled with glass ornaments, all in shades of gold, white, or iridescent pearl.  Coincidentally, that was also the year she nearly stabbed out her eye with one of the branches, and had to wear a huge eyepatch all holiday.  And, the year of the big ice storm in the 80’s that knocked out power for days, and all there was to do was sit in the living room under a blanket and listen to the sound of ice pellets bounce off of the roof. ,

I look forward to most everything about Christmas.  Some of my favorite things are; the food (duh), baking, looking at Christmas lights (even in the rain), wrapping presents, playing Santa, getting to see everyone in one place, and decorating my SIX Christmas trees.  I especially love Christmas lights.  The bright fuschia ones, for whatever reason, just about make me drool.  I don’t use any all-white lights on my trees; I love the rainbow of colored lights.

Can you remember the Christmas trees you had growing up?  I can.  For years, we had a “White Trash” tree, that is, one with a multitude of colored lights and nine zillion ornaments in nine zillion shapes and sizes.  I call ’em White Trash trees because it seems that MOST trees you see nowadays all have the white lights with cutesy coordinated ornaments.  Not mine, honey! I have TWO White Trash trees and they are adorned with about 400 ornaments each, some of which really aren’t even official ornaments, just cool stuff I stick in it.  Like the plastic uber-tacky Nativity scene with plastic donkeys and the tiny, plastic, molded little baby Jesus.  I can’t bring myself to get rid of it.  Or, the clothespin reindeer with googly eyes that my Mamaw probably made in the 70’s, or, the funky gold-glittered bird made out of clothespins that takes up a good 1/16th of the tree.  I also have two vintage aluminum trees (one is the ‘pompom’ variety), which I haven’t put out in a while due to my children consistently trying to rip the aluminum from the branches.

Anyway, I am ready for the madness and joy of the season!  Are you?