Worried savers are stashing cash in the ground
Posted
Nov 20 2008, 04:20 PM
by
Karen Datko
Rating:
Florida homebuilder and entrepreneur Earl Snyder is ready for what he imagines to be a growing consumer demand. He designed the Midnight Gardener, a PVC container that keeps money clean and dry once it's in the ground.
Yes, it's come to that for some overanxious folks. A story at SmartMoney by Anne Kadet presents anecdotal evidence that people leery of bank failure and economic collapse are borrowing from Great Depression lore and burying money in the backyard.
Please note: We do not recommend this behavior. The money you have in the bank is safe.
As a wikiHow article about burying cash notes, "Inflation as well as the time value of money will lower the value of your (buried) cash over time." Besides, we have faith in the FDIC, which protects deposits up to $250,000.
Other people aren't so trusting. A manager at a Texas credit union talked one customer out of withdrawing $150,000 for burial at his place, Kadet reports. An Alabama man buried $8,000 on his farm. After Washington Mutual met its demise, some people in Washington state drew up treasure maps to make sure they could locate their buried stash.
Another story, out of Michigan, describes a run on Mason jars, apparently another popular underground storage container.
For those who succumb to anxiety, Snyder's Web site offers some tips. For instance, to remember where you planted your money, "develop a simple formula that doesn't need to be written down. For example, if you are right-handed and born in 1958, bury it off the right back corner of your home, 19 feet back, then 58 feet to the left."