September 25th, 2008
by
Penelope Pince and Madoline Hatter

Tiny leaks and evaporation put a constant drain on your resources. As discussed in our previous post, From Pennies One Million Dollars Grow, a few cents saved here and there can add up to be a significant amount. Here we offer 101 suggestions for plugging expenditures in various aspects of your life - around the house, in your personal care, transportation, recreation and more. Most of these ideas we currently use or have applied in the past.
101 Drops in the Bucket
Saving on Utilities
- Minimize electricity use during peak hours (weekdays during work hours). Do laundry, use hot water, etc. in the evenings.
- Cook enough for several meals at once.
- Turn off the tap when brushing your teeth.
- Turn off shower when shampooing and soaping.
- Work or read in the same room with family members or roommates to consolidate light usage.
- Take advantage of natural daylight to get your work done. Sleep when it’s dark, get up as soon as it is light (before sunrise).
- Hold off on personal phone calls that can wait until evenings and weekends when rates are lower or free.
- Wash things on the lawn to water the grass at the same time.
- Water the lawn or garden in the early morning or after sundown. Skip watering on windy days.
- Use curtains to keep your house cool in summer and warm in winter.
- Keep thermostat lower in the winter and wear extra layers.
- Don’t separate colors in your laundry; instead, hand wash items that bleed. This way, you can reduce the number of loads. Saves water, electricity and soap.
- Keep thermostat as high as can be tolerated in summer without harming your pets, antiques and musical instruments.
- Drink lots of cold water to keep cool and reduce need for air conditioning.
- Turn off air conditioning in late afternoon, open doors and windows and turn on fans.
- Using ceiling fans in summer and winter (reverse directions to push warm air down).
- For laundry, set a shorter dryer time. It’s better to have to do a touch up instead of using unnecessary gas or electricity. You’d be surprised how little time some clothing need to dry. If taken out still warm, damp things can still air dry quite quickly.
- Cancel cable, purchase a few DVDs a month (which cost less than cable and leave you with an asset) and watch current shows online at Hulu or network channel websites.
Saving on Food and Health
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Posted in Books, Finance, Frugality, Hobbies, Home, Money Management, Movies, Music, Shopping | 11 Comments »
June 23rd, 2008
by
Penelope Pince and Madoline Hatter

With the charms of summer also come not-so-charming and unwelcome visitors. With consistent 100+ degree weather in the desert we call home, 6- and 8-legged visitors (or really more like trespassers) are almost a regular part of life. But we have discovered a few safe and relative effective ways to keep the trespasser traffic under control without endangering our health or that of our children/pets Ludwig and Wolfgang.
Ways to Safely Repel and Kill Ants
Ants are the largest problem for us. In this desert, there are more types of ants than we have seen anywhere else we’ve lived - there are tiny red ants, medium ants, and jumbo ants (luckily the jumbo ones don’t see fit to come inside).
Prevention is the Best Medicine
The most basic, safest and easiest way to keep the ant traffic down is simply keeping the kitchen as clean as possible.
- Avoid leaving dirty dishes in the sink.
- Wash pots and pans immediately if you cook anything with meat or a lot of oil.
- Wipe the counters several times a day with soap. A minuscule crumb or little drop of something sweet can quickly bring a hoard of ants.
- Take out the kitchen trash everyday. Take out trash immediately if it contains meat, bones, greasy paper towels and napkins, meat packaging and sweet things.
- Avoid eating in bedrooms, and be careful of dropping crumbs in other rooms of the house.
- I’ve also found that having the air conditioner on helps.
Creepy Fact: When you dispatch an ant on duty, you are in fact killing a “she” and not an “it” (or “he”). Worker ants are all female. The males are only used for breeding.
Ways to Safely Kill Ants
Sometimes keeping clean doesn’t keep them away completely (scouts sometimes explore squeaky clean counters), or if you miss a crumb or two. If you have children or pets as we do, the fewer poisons you use around the house the better. Even if you don’t have children or pets, it is best to avoid using toxins as they will affect your health.
- Vinegar
Vinegar is our preferred ant killer. It kills small ants almost immediately and is completely safe. Simply spray the ants and wipe them away.
- Yeast and Sugar
Mix some dry yeast and sugar and leave it out in a place ants frequent. The sugar will attract the ants to the yeast, which once brought back to the nest and consumed, will expand in their bellies and kill them. This method might cease to work after a few times as the ants might wise up and avoid the yeast. Caution: Make sure the yeast is in a location that can’t be reached by your pet(s). It’s not poisonous, but ingestion can be dangerous.
- EcoSmart
I recently discovered a natural and effective insecticide called EcoSmart, which is made of organic vanilla, cinnamon and rosemary oils. It kills ants and other insects on contact and smells nice while at it. It is also affordable at $3.87 per can at Walmart. This is the only commercial insect repellent and killer we use in our house.
Keep reading for tips on repelling and killing other insects (spiders, roaches, silverfish, etc.)
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Tags: air conditioner, ants, bugs, Children, cockroach, cockroaches, eco-friendly, frugal, Frugality, health, Home, house, insects, kids, pesticide, pesticides, pests, pet, Pets, roaches, safety, saving money, spider, spiders, vinegar
Posted in Family, Frugality, General, Home, Pets | 3 Comments »