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See a penny? Pick it up!

Posted Dec 14 2007, 01:39 PM by Donna Freedman
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I'm superannuated enough to remember penny candy. Finding a cent was cause for celebration, because it would buy Squirrel Nut Zippers (the candy, not the band), Smarties, Pixy Stix or a host of other treats.

I still pick up pennies. Also nickels, dimes and any other American paper or specie I see on sidewalks, in parking lots or pooled in the rejected-change bin of those Coinstar change-counting machines.

All "found" money goes into a vase my daughter gave me when she was about 8 years old. (She got the vase from the "free" box at a yard sale. That's my girl!) Each December, I donate my finds. This year, $24.14 will go to PetSmart Charities.

Ain't too proud to bend
Some of you are probably thinking, "Eeewww, pick up dirty coins off a dirty street? Who'd do a thing like that?" A whole lot of Smart Spending message board readers, that's who.

In a thread called "Do you pick up pennies?," readers wrote about how and where they find funds. Some real hot spots: near parking meters, in vending machines, under fast-food drive-through windows and in parking lots (especially tavern parking lots, the morning after). Also check college campuses, amusement parks and the area around the self-service vacuum at car washes.

A reader posting as "retireddad" scores paper money in a brambly lot near an ATM: "The most I have found at one time is three twenties." He gets free blackberries there, too. (Note, however, that some states have laws requiring those who find more than $10 or $20 to advertise the lost cash or turn it over to the police.)

"Sunset Hiker" has fond childhood memories of the ball-crawl play area at Chuck E. Cheese. "The bottom was always loaded with money ... a few dollars' worth of change and several bills every time."

"Thrifty in ATL" and her boyfriend look for coins while they walk their dog. They're trying to train the pooch to become the pecuniary equivalent of a truffle hound. "If successful," she writes, "we would have three sets of eyes and one nose searching (for coins) on our walks."

And yeah, some families and friends are completely embarrassed by such behavior. "Suzeeque" says her teens consider coin retrieval as more proof "that their mother is an embarrassing dork."

But "drkonijn" did the math -- one second to pick up a penny -- and now has a snappy comeback. "I tell them I make $36 an hour picking up pennies. Since there are a lot of people who would jump at $36 an hour, why not bend down for it?"

What they do with what they find
Many readers give it away: school "penny drives," donation jars, organized charities. Reader "Toy Maker" lets the kids pick the charity; in addition, the family matches whatever is found that year.

Some set up funds for their kids or other young relatives. "Waslostnowfound," saving since the birth of a now 13-year-old son, has accumulated nearly $1,600 "for his first car." Reader "decayschampion" calls spare change a "college fund" for a couple of nephews.

Others save it for themselves. "Sangria" opened an investment account just for found money; after five years, the account is worth nearly $650. "Johnny Walker" and his wife call dropped coins their "retirement fund," even though they’re already retired.

And some people spend the money outright. "ItsEasyOnceYouStart" will put nearly $50 toward this year's Christmas presents. "Ponophob" uses it for movies or other entertainment, "things that I wouldn't have done had it not been for the extra money." And "PensionPete" dines out on free cash.

As a struggling single mother, "Emilysmom128" once dined in on found funds. At a financial low point, that's how she paid for a jar of cheap spaghetti sauce and some noodles, which stretched for several days. "Thank God for dropped (coins)," she writes. "Every penny matters!"

Take the dropped-coin challenge
Maybe these stories will encourage you not to walk by that nickel in the parking lot.

Or maybe you're more like "flygrl7112003," who claims to have passed at least a dozen $1 bills in the past year. "My motto is, 'If it's less than $5, I won't waste my time on it'," she writes, adding that "maybe when I get older, I might consider picking up a dollar."

I'm already older, and I won't pass up even a penny. That’s just how I roll, so to speak. And I'd like to propose a challenge to those of you who aren’t germphobic or proud: Start picking up any money you find.

Save it in a coffee can or a mayonnaise jar, and count it every few months. Put it against credit card debt, if you have any, and in your emergency fund if you don't.

So what if it's only $5 or $10? Baby steps, people, baby steps.

Hint: Don’t forget to look under the couch cushions.

Comments

 

I'm with Mr. MacDonald on this one.  The payoff is the exercise I get while bending over.  The BONUS is the cash.

I've picked up all sorts of coins in my life time. I wished i would have saved it I'd have a pretty piece of change now. I'm 74 years old now and i still pick up the pennies. Every once in awhile i find paper money. I always look at the ground when i walk.

December 19th 4pm

I myself pick up pennies, nickles, dimes even bills when the oppurtnity present it self with no problem. My son's father introduced me to the art of picking up coins laying on the groud that you come upon when you're walking down the street. I even got my young son to do it years ago and it's been profitable.This started 11Years ago I'm short and close to the ground so it's easy for me.I find my pot of gold during my travels when I'm out and about in the course of a day it's fun.

With the amount of money our banks are ripping us off for in "FEES", the change you find might just mean the difference between eating and not at the end of the month.

i have been picking up pennies 4 about 10 years  also dropped pennies and silver coins into a big a 5 gal(2) water jug that fits ontop an h2o cooler and just this past summer, i told my son he can it have so, he took it 2 commerce bank 2 their penny machine ( with his friends help) and he got over $1,000.00.

now, if i would  have known this ($ 1,000.00 ) i would have done it my self.

but really i was 2 lazy 2 do it myself. and guess what, i didn`t even get a dime :<

i've always picked up pennies. at $36.00 or $10.00 per hour, what else are you doing at that second, that its not worth it.

another advantage is that quite often where you find one penny another couple are nearby.

I worked as a manager at a car rental company for 4 years.  You would be surprised at home much loose change people leave behind in the cars, intentionally or not.  What never ceased to amaze me was how the guys being paid a modest hourly rate to clean the cars would not pocket change that was left behind.  Some guys wouldn't take anything less than a quarter, most wouldn't pocket pennies.  The crazy part is, that because they had to clean the car, they often would already have gone through the trouble of picking up the coins to remove them from the car, only to toss them on the ground or stack them on a nearby gas pump.  I routinely closed the location for the night and when locking up would pick up any loose coins laying around.  I figure in pennies alone I was accumulating at least $15 per year, but much, much more in total from all the change I found myself.  It all adds up, and at the end of the day I'll take any money I can find!

Children seem to think that pennies don't count.  Every penny I get I put in my change bank.  Its funny how they will drop pennies and won't pick them up, but when you do and save a few that adds up to be something, how they now want to beg you for what they threw away.  Keep looking down and you would be surprised as to what you find.

Each time I find a penny, I know it is the answer to a coming problem, that every thing is going to be all right- I truly beleive they are " pennies from Heaven". And the message never fails. I will keep on picking up pennies. I save them and give them to my great-grandchildren for their piggy bank.  They do add up!

another thing, who says our streets r not paved with gold.

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