Search Smart Spending:

Extreme savings: Washed baggies and unflushed toilets

Posted Sep 22 2007, 08:06 PM by Donna Freedman
Rating:

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

 

Waste not, want not.  I am 59 years old and have never owned or driven a car.  Because of that I have an extensive wardrobe and absolutely no debt.  Cutting back on toilet paper sounds to me like penny wise and pound foolish.  Whereas by not paying auto insurance, I have probably saved $50,000 to $80,000 to date.  My company provides me with a bus pass and even though I pay $5 to my delivery man when he brings the food up my stairs, I feel this is a good deal over the price of gas.  Sometimes I use a shopping cart.  I do find that buy one get one free saves me a lot of money.  I just got back from a trip to Canada for a week which costs me $800.  I had a great time, stayed in a B&B for $45 a night.  My friend rented a car and I helped her with the cost.  We enjoyed ourselves.  I will spend for dining out and I will get my nails and feet done.  Everyone has to decide what to give up.  I use the 1,000 sheet toilet paper and make sure I never pay more than .50cents per roll.  I never re-use dental floss.  I remember a lady who lived through the depression that used to hang up her paper towels to dry and re-use.  I like paper towels because they are convenient but I don't have whatever it takes to dry moist paper towels. Get this, I never pay for drying at the laundromat.  I just hang my clothes around the house and put blouses on hangers to dry.  Of course this works because I live alone.  I very seldom pay for dry cleaning and make sure the clothes that I buy are iron-free.  I have not ironed in years, so think of the electricity I saved.  I do thin out shampoo but not dishsoap.  I am mingy enough to cut a soap pad in two and get a scissor sharpened at the same time.  Last night I purchased three sweaters for my son's Christmas presents, they cost under $20 but were labled combined for $115.  I won't find that kind of deal around Christmas.  I buy Christmas presents throughout the year.  I found "guy" gifts (you know for all the men who never get you anything) usually I pay $5 per person (about $50 total); this year I found walnut jewelry trays for a $1 apiece in July and snatched them up.  They are just token gifts.  I do give to charity and my church.  I believe if you set something aside for the Lord, then the Lord will watch your back and when I find a great deal, I consider it a blessing from the Lord.  Needless to say, I love flea markets and that is where I buy a lot of good jewelry at very low prices.  Sometimes when I am ordering out, I forget the soda altogether, another saving that is healthy for me.  I live on 50% of my salary:  10% goes to my 401k; 30% goes to taxes; 10% goes for tithes.  My cup is not half full and it is not half empty:  my cup is full and running over!

many things i found very useful and can be adopted easily. we should not feel bad about other's comments be sure that one day or other they will appreciate the ideas and who knows may follow strictly better than us!

prasanna / bangalore /india

Way to go Fred Bartley!

Think I'll go home and unplug my thermostat now.

Tip: always order water with meals.  It's free, and its heathy.  Saves lots of money over the long term.  Meals out are much cheaper without sodas and drinks.

For Lori who asked about about what a "guest" would use in a frugal bathrrom.

Extreme misers dont have guests or spouses or boy/girlfriends.

Isnt that obvious?  Loving takes sharing and some people cant.

Nothing wrong with being tight minded. But people, are some of you animals? I'm 43 with a wife and 3 kids. I'm on the frugal side too. We started with nothing and now have great savings and vacation home. We did not do it by reusing toilet paper or dental floss. We did it with hard work and solid savings plan. You gross animals that do that are like people bending over to pick up pennies all day. Ridiculous.

I think most of the issues that we see with the housing market has to do with young people not making the right decisions or for the most part not wanting to live within their means. New home $250,000.00, 2 new cars $900.00/mth payments, insurance, not 1 or 2 but 3 plasma tv's. etc.

This issue of want more than the neighbor all started in the 80's when "greed was good" now look where we are. I dont feel bad for anyone suffering from a loss of a home or car or anything else that they did not think about before getting into, you make your bed now sleep in it.

As for me I hate waste and I praise those who think just a little bit about what they should and should own or buy.

My motto is simple:  Don't buy anything you really don't need and make things last far longer than the manufacturer ever intended.  Best of all I have only spent a few times at a Mall, otherwise known to me as Monuments to Materialism.  I also mute all TV commercials, particularly anything having to do with medicine.  I mute the TV when the people begin to advise people that it is cold and allergy season.  Consequently, I have only needed the services of the medical community very few times.  No, I don't have health insurance, this also keeps me well.

New ad on TV regarding the new health coverage plan now being pushed through Congress regardless of the President's veto:  The child states:  And we can't even get sick because we don't have health insurance!  Wow!  Could this be a hint or a clue as to how to stay well?  Do you have idea how much money I and my family have saved by thinking in terms of "I am healthy" instead of thinking "I am sick."

Fuel in England costs almost $9 a gallonand is set to rise again soon. It is not uncommon for European cars to be designed to do 60 miles per gallon with diesel engines. There is an increasing demand for cleaner and enevironmentally friendly fuels and lifestyles. This will eventually become an American issue and for the sake of the future and not just our pockets we all need to set our mind to this now.

Insist on more fuel efficient cars when at your car dealer

why do people need 7 piece bathrooms anyway.  We are selling our house and it has a small master bath, you know in portant things like a sink, toilet and bath/shower.  Nothing fancy and small as we spend abou ten minutes a day in the thing.  This however has become the largest detractor according to buyers.  What gives, its where you pee/poop and bruch your fangs.  I agree totaly with PRaley

Send a Comment

Comments must be directly related to the blog entry. Comments with offensive language will be deleted. Your e-mail address won't be displayed.

(please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):