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Extreme savings: Washed baggies and unflushed toilets

Posted Sep 22 2007, 08:06 PM by Donna Freedman
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Re-used any dental floss lately?

All together now: Eeeewwww!

Yet a reader of the Smart Spending message board knows a guy who did this. "There’s nothing grosser than dental floss hanging over the towel rack," said the reader, who posts as "Willowtears."

Sure there is. How about the folks who flush their toilet only once a day?  Or the guy who would re-use wash water "until it was black"?  Or the woman whose mom strained and re-used cooking oil regardless of pedigree: "Doughnut-flavored taquitos, yum."

All this came from the "Most Extreme Savings Tactics" thread on the message board.  I’m pretty extreme myself, but I flush my toilet each and every time, thanks.

I’d also like to note that floss is "a one-time-use item," according to my dental-hygienist sister.

That said, a number of the "extreme" suggestions seemed logical to me -- good ways to deal with temporary reversals of fortune or to help save for a long-term financial goal.

Besides, "it’s just stupid to spend more money than you have to on things you need," according to a woman posting as "ManyaP."  That’s why her all-purpose cleaner is a spray bottle full of a bleach-and-water solution. It smells like a product called Clorox Anywhere Spray.

Well, there’s one difference: Clorox Anywhere Spray costs $3, and ManyaP can make her version for about 3 cents.

TP is also a one-time-use item
People who wash and re-use plastic storage bags are the trainspotters of the frugality movement, derided as parsimonious kooks who waste time and energy to save a couple of pennies.  But compared to some of the stuff on that "Extreme Savings" thread, baggie-washers look downright mainstream.

Consider the paper-towel trisectioners and teabag triple-dippers, fridge-unpluggers and bathwater-sharers, spaghetti-sauce diluters and dryer-sheet stretchers ("three uses before they lose their ‘ability,’" according to one reader).

And then there are the toilet paper re-rollers, who turn two-ply paper into two separate rolls -- and at least one toilet-paper re-user. A reader posting as "ckf179" claims her elderly neighbor lets urine-damp toilet tissue dry for another go, as it were.

This is the sort of thing that gives frugality a bad name.  Yet it’s worth noting that some of these activities were only observed by readers, and actually performed by Depression-era parents or grandparents who did what they had to do to survive.

Not all of the old ways are good ways. As ckf179 noted, she’s learned a lot from her neighbor, but "I can’t quite convince myself to leave drying TP around the bathroom."

Build a cheaper pickle...
Smart Spending readers offered plenty of present-day ideas, too.  Some are clever, some obvious (turn off the lights when you’re not in the room), and some arguably false or unethical economies.  A few examples:

Stain won’t come out of your shirt?  Dye it black, suggests "Dallas1979."

After finishing a jar of pickles, "Jestjack" sliced half a 39-cent cucumber into the brine.  Two days later, he had more pickles.  He also "stretches" canned tuna with bread-heel crumbs, and re-sharpens utility-knife blades.

"E-Diva" has gone on "quite a few" dates with people she wasn’t interested in, just to get free dinners.

"CJs Babcia" volunteers to clean up after work-related parties, obeying the command to "throw out" the leftovers.  Kind of: "I throw it in the back of my car and then into my fridge."

Cute kids mean cut rates at garage sales.  Willowtears let her daughter negotiate for a small color TV.  She paid a buck, and has used it for more than a decade.

Buy only freezer-type bags because they’re strongest, advises "Ohio Belle."  She tosses hers in with the laundry.  "A box can last me for about a year."

(Full disclosure: My quart-sized Ziplocs are on their third tour of wild-blackberry duty.  However, I have never washed dental floss.)

I’m not cheap, I’m eco-friendly
Remember: You can always represent your tightwad ways as environmental awareness.  Explain that you’re being eco-friendly by shining your shoes with banana peels, wrapping birthday gifts in the Sunday funnies, and cutting the feet off worn-out socks so you can use what’s left as washrags.

So click on the Smart Spending thread and read some of the other extreme advice.  Some may strike you as hilarious, or appalling.  But it’s also optional.  Frugal tips are like any other financial advice: try what might work for your particular situation, ignore the rest.  You may be surprised to find what a difference it can make in your bottom line.

And speaking of the bottom line: Please feel free not to dry your toilet paper.  Or to use both sides of it.  (Eeeewwww!)

Comments

 

No one has yet mentioned something I read on msn.com sometime back...hypermiling.  I drive a Chevy Tahoe, thought it would be worth trying. Hey if you can save some money driving...do it. One of the suggestions is to shut off your engine if you will be idling more than 11 seconds (this is how much gas it takes to start your late model car/truck). Another is to coast on the approach to a traffic light, with the hope that it will turn green before you have to stop and then fully accelerate again. Or you can try the old stanby, "turn off your air conditioning" but the additional drag with windows down can be just as bad as the extra gas needed to run the compressor. But what I found to work best was to park the Gas Hog and ride with anyone going my way!

The latest item in recent years is a bidet, pronounced be day. After using the bathroom for defecation, water jets remove the residue from your body. Then a small amount of paper is sued to dry the water. This has been used in Europe for decades and is now being used in America.

Next is a two position commode; one for urination and one for defecation. Again this is slowly being incorporated in new homes. Millions of gallons of water are conserved using the above two items. Likewise the amount of tissue being saved and not clogging the sewer system is astronomical.

I am currently evaluating fluorescent bulbs using three way lighted toggle switches. If only one bulb is used with lighted three way switches even when turned off the bulb flickers at a rate of about 1 time per second. However when two or more fluorescent bulbs are used with the lighted three way switches they do not flicker.

To alleviate this flickering anomaly when using only one bulb, use one lighted three way switch and one that is not lighted.

When I comnplete the evaluation I will update this comment section

people are insane. where do we draw the line bewteen frugalty and truly disgusting.

I live in Wisconsin and never have turned my furnace on in 29 years. I wrap my pipes real good with insulation. Yes , when it get's real cold I lose a lot of pipes, but hey I'm a plumber anyway. Dress warm in the house in winter and sleep with a lot of blankets. Hey. I get a lot of action from the hunny on winter because she wants to get warmed up!

i don't like paying retail...for anything..it is quite a rush when you do a little research, find a great deal, then scan papers and ad's to ensure you are victorious in your money saving conquest..HAHAHA!!!!

you are sick and unhealthy!!

So, what is wrong with using handkerchiefs and cloth towels instead of the paper ones? Yes, you need to wash them, but you don't cut trees.  Don't look at those stupid commercials, please!  This is brain washing.  Better wash your towels.

What is wrong with using the dryer only when it rains outside? Or the hair dryer only when you need your hair fluffy, not when you go to sleep.

Even the electric can opener is a device you can get rid of.

The biggest problem is though the continue increase in the power or our cars.   People in America used to move around CONFORTABLY in a 60HP car.  Now they need a 360HP not to be outdone by their neighbours.  I lived in Asia and Europe and I did not feel bad in a 80HP car.  This is a foolish American brain problem.  And if we don't want to be sain, the Big Brother shoud tax the hell out of us.  We are crazy, so we deserve it.  Exxon and the Arabs will make enough money even if we use half of the gas.

My mother was the champion frugalist.  She has done a lot of the real frugal money-saving things listed here.  However, she didn't reuse toilet paper--she put it into a waste basket.  She did this because she didn't want to have to pay to have the septic tank cleaned out as often!  Actually, I think that this way she never had to have the septic tank sucked out.  So, the bathroom always smelled like pee. When I went to visit her I could never remember to throw the toilet paper into the waste can.  When she moved to a new house that was on the city sewer lines, she had a small little waste can near her toilet that seemed kinda smelly.  I never looked into it to see what was there!

Hey Christine, how do you know the local tightwads don't give to charity?  Because one of them won't give you a loan?   Saving money on soap and stuff does not automatically mean you won't support a worthy cause.  But, if you are conscious of the dollars and cents you spend on everyday stuff, you probably keep close track of the charity money too.  And it doesn't go to doorbell-ringers, it goes to someone who has been researched, and probably gives tax receipts.  

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