- Credit Crunch: How to Survive the Recession
- 20 Ways to Live On Almost Nothing
- 15 Real Ways to Conserve (and save money!)
- Putting Old Clothes To New Use
- Ways to Live On Almost Nothing - 2
- Ways to Live On Almost Nothing - 3
- It's Better Than Cheap... It's Free!
- Ways to Live On Almost Nothing - 4
- Craig's List: Great Resource or Scary Place?
- Vacationing on a Shoestring Budget
Necessary Household Basics: Recipes
May 28th, 2008
Clean, Green Living in 3 Cheap, Easy Steps
Part 2: Keeping Things Clean

In Part 1 of this 3-part series I listed some basic ingredients to purchase that can do double or triple duty in your home cleaning, disinfecting and treating small first aid issues while saving you big money and at the same time NOT polluting your home or our collective environment.
In this part of the series I’ll list some easy recipes for mixing your basic ingredients into useful household products. This doesn’t take a lot of time or heavy effort, and can be done on a weekend afternoon easily once every month or two (as they get used up), or mixed on the spot for particular jobs.
In The Laundry Room: Everybody must do laundry. Whether or not you’ve got an infant in diapers (cloth is best!) or small children who love to make mud pies, or older kids who sweat a lot, or just working adults who must wear good clothes or uniforms daily in their jobs, you’re going to have to wash clothes. And while the price of food and gasoline keeps rising out of sight, most people already know that good laundry products are a significant chunk of change out of the budget.
I mentioned in Part 1 how to make liquid soap out of the dregs of bars that melt all over your tub and sink by just putting them in a container with water and letting them dissolve. That’s good hand soap that can be put into a dispenser, but can also provide the basis of laundry soap if you’ve enough of it. I have a friend who must travel for her job, and who collects those little motel soaps through the year, gifting them to me at Christmas so I’ve got sizeable baskets of rock-hard teeny-soaps still in their wrappers. I use these to make liquid soap, and liquid soap to make laundry soap. Alternatively, you can use Fels Naptha laundry soap bars, which are inexpensive and go quite far. The three bar package can make about 6 gallons of laundry soap, which should get most households through at least that many months even if there’s a lot of laundry to do! Ivory soap bars or flakes work very well for baby laundry, and is still among the least expensive of basic soaps you can buy.
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Save Big Money On Necessary Basics!
May 20th, 2008
Clean, Green Living in 3 Cheap, Easy Steps
Part 1: The List of Ingredients

Now that it’s late May, it’s time to stock up for the summer - and our many summer visitors - on things like bug repellant (we really do live in the Deep Woods), anti-itch solution, insect sting remedies, poison ivy treatments, cut and scrape treatments, etc. The basic summertime First Aid Kit, all ingredients of which will be used as regularly as the usual household cleaners, deodorizers, detergents, polishes and disinfectants get used all year round.
Might as well get items that do double or triple duty as household cleansers and disinfectants as well as personal skin and hair care products too. I’ll use this post to make the basic list of things to buy, and later posts will give specific recipes and hints on how to use them to best advantage. And the best thing about these products? They’re Green and Eco-Friendly to boot!
Baking Soda: It all starts with good old baking soda. You can purchase generic or the primary name brand we recognize (Arm and Hammer). It’s cheap either way, and the same product though generic will tend to clump and solidify quicker and easier. Compared against the multitude of specialty chemicalized products you could be buying to do many of the same tasks, you could save hundreds of dollars a year with a cleaner, fresher house and a healthier family to show for it!
Filed under Alternatives, Conscious Living, Do It Yourself, First Aid, Green Living, Recipes, Shopping | Comments (6)Is It Depression Yet?
May 13th, 2008

As we start moving into summer I thought it might be interesting to take a look at some economic predictions made way back in 2007 by an “informed” opinionator over at Sustainable Living’s Natural Hub, a Q&A piece entitled Timing of a depression triggered by high oil prices.
An Overview of unfolding recession as the oil economy fades was published in 2006 explaining the various factors that would mark a worldwide recession due to increasing oil prices. Some of its indicators have long since come and gone, others have been with us for years already, and some of the predictions have come true in these last few months. For those of us living in the real world, recession and ’stagflation’ have been facts of life for years despite the mainstream news media’s reluctance to actually use the word when reporting on where speculators have taken futures on oil and food supplies lately. They won’t use the ‘D’ word either [depression], but here’s a list of signs that it’s already upon us.
Sign 1. “For there to be a deep recession, there first has to be a credit bubble - a high level of personal indebtedness in the community.”
Well, this one’s sure a no-brainer! Hopefully most readers of this blog have made real efforts to minimize or get out from under personal debt over the past few years (exempting mortgage issues), or were never deeply in debt in the first place. Those who consolidated credit card and other installment loan debts by refinancing when the mortgage boom was on may be facing serious issues with that mortgage now, but that’s such a huge issue that if mortgage debt is the biggest of your worries, you’re doing pretty well.
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Mortgage ‘Crisis’ Got You Down?
May 6th, 2008
Consider Squatting in Your Own Home
Today the New York Times reports that governmental expectations that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will somehow keep the housing market afloat is starting to look like a pipe dream. With defaults and foreclosures rising drastically, administration officials, regulators and lawmakers are starting to get very nervous…
Will the next big taxpayer bailout have to go to these government-guaranteed mortgage giants? Well, since we got to bail out private investment bank Bear-Stearns, I’d guess so. Too bad we can’t bail out the families losing their homes.
Speaking of which, I got to wondering what happens to the people who lose their homes, given that the rental market is in just the same trouble. Is anybody keeping track of the homeless population? And if the person who used to own the home is now homeless because it’s been foreclosed, what’s the new designation for that family if they decide to simply stay where they are?
I did a little searching and found lots of news and opinion about how neighborhoods decimated by the mortgage crisis are now hosting increasing numbers of “squatters”. Here’s a CBS News video on that issue:
Filed under Alternatives, Economic Recession, Housing, Surviving | Comment (1)What’s For Dinner? …Anything?
May 1st, 2008

The market news reports that consumer spending is up again this month. The problem is that this is not as a sign of possible economic recovery from the deepening recession we find ourselves in. It’s a reflection of the fact that people must spend more on basics like fuel and food - prices for both rising much faster than regular people can keep up with - thus must spend less on all that consumer junk our capitalistic system expects us to buy with our overrated “disposable income.”
If you’re reading this blog, chances are you’re like me - I have no “disposable income” because all the income we have must go to simply pay for the necessities of life, and there’s hardly enough even cutting corners. Food, clothing, shelter, transportation, utilities. I have previously posted about the clothing thing, as I haven’t actually purchased new clothing for at least a decade. Used clothing is good enough - even suits and formal clothing - though I don’t dress up much. But the mortgage is what it is. Gas prices are what they are, they cannot be bargained down. And as the price of fuel rises, so does the cost of food and electricity. Thus more of our money must be spent on necessities, even if we never had any left over for junk in the first place!
Filed under Bulk Buying, Economic Recession, Farmer's Markets, Fuel, Garden, Grow Your Own, Nutrition, Staple Foods, Surviving | Comments (7)
