Our Frugal Lifestyle

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Passionate about eco-frugality. I used to party hard, clubbing my way from pay-packet to pay-packet. Never getting ahead, just getting by. Then came our much wanted baby with no savings in the bank - only an old car. Changes were made to our lifestyle and we didn't turn back. In the past 6yrs we purchased a flat, found employment, lived below our means, built an emergency fund, purchased a reliable car and saw the financial benefits of our frugal lifestyle. Our only debt is our mortgage. Our aim is to manage our cash flow wisely, pay off our home quickly and eventually work for pleasure, not necessity. Join us on our journey, share insights, tips and tricks to help us and others to get ahead while having a good time.

Thursday, March 31, 2011

Inexpensive Home Help

The tourist season is on in our region again. So we are getting many requests from backpackers to sleep on our couch and have a meal in exchange for some work.

I ask for 3 hours work for what we offer. Our helpers J&J have just left us to discover Litchfield National Park where another person has accepted them for some gardening work. They stayed with us for 3 days and we really enjoyed their company.

Here are some of the jobs they did for us:

  • Helped at the school for the Garden Working Bee.
  • Cleaned the lounge fan.
  • Washed up dishes.
  • Helped with dinner.
  • Cut back a bothersome fishtail tree in our backyard.
  • Hang up laundry to dry.
  • Put together a clothes rack.
  • Played Dolls and Read books to Dolly.

All this stuff really helps me out as I am time poor and messy as there are so many things I want to do each day, get enough sleep and have time for The Rambling Expat and Dolly.

But Best of All they entertained us and played music with Dolly. I had my own band right here at home.
Dolly Examining the Song Words.
Dolly Playing Along with her Bongo Drum.
Dolly had the best time and loved it so much. My cheeks hurt from smiling and trying not to laugh. I Loved having them stay with us.

For those concerned about having strangers near their kids, I wish to point out even though I am a huge fan of HelpX and think it's a great way to travel and be part of a travelling community, I am still careful of who I choose to stay in my home or in who's home I stay in as a guest. I never give keys and I never leave Dolly out of my eyesight, not even for 1 minute with strangers. Dolly sleeps in the same room as us with her bed against ours or in our bed. We have lots of trinkets hanging on our bedroom door which make a racket when it is opened because she is a sleepwalker. When the time comes that she is in a room of her own we will no longer take strangers into our home.

Do you frugal travel or have your own musicians in your home?

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Dinner Influenced by Bloggers

We had left overs in the fridge.
  • Bolognese sauce from Sundays spaghetti bolognese dinner.
  • Puff pastry and grated cheese from Mondays Spinach (from garden) Quiche dinner.
  • Steamed Potato, pumpkin, carrot and fried onions from Tuesdays dinner of kangaroo and veggies.
I was going to lay the table with some of the left overs but instead thought of some of the creative bloggers I read such as Frugal Queen and Premeditated Leftovers. So I recreated the left overs into a couple of Cottage Pies. I'd never made something like this before. It just took 5 minutes to prepare it and 30 minutes in the oven. I was delighted with the delicious result.

1st I placed my puff pastry down and layered the bolognese sauce.
Then I layered the vegetables that I mashed together.
Next sprinkled cheese.
Then ate! Yum!!!!
What have you done with your leftovers lately?

Monday, March 28, 2011

Gardening Day - We Got A Plot

We had a super charged Sunday with lots of Garden work!

The 1st part of Sunday we spent 2 hours at Dolly's Pre-school with a few other parents and the teachers working on the school yard garden. It was a working bee to get it looking better after a very wet, Wet Season. The Rambling Expat even came home early from him fishing trip to join in the fun.
PreSchool Backyard where we Buzzed.
Our new Help Exchange guests (just off the plane) came along and we dug, pulled, chopped, clipped and sweated. It was great. I love a bit of physical work, makes me feel alive. Helping the school out, gives a feeling of pride and community ownership. Dolly was so excited to go to the Working Bee and it means a great deal to her that we participate in school activities. She loves her school and her self confidence has grown immensely in the past 8 weeks.
The Preschool Frontyard ready for the students to start their veggie patches.
We then went home together for a quick and easy lunch of bread roll sandwiches stuffed with cheese and ham and many glasses of thirst quenching cold water and apple juice to get our sugars level up.

After lunch Dolly and I left everyone to relax while we headed out to the Botanical Gardens Permaculture Area for a meeting and some gardening. And WE GOT OUR OWN BRAND NEW PLOT!!! I was so excited, we were on a waiting list since 2009! Not only do we now have out own gardening space a few minutes walk from home but we will be gardening with other like minded people who have a vast amount of knowledge and skills that we can learn from! So we spent 3 hours there and headed home when the sky was pouring rain and it was past dinner time. Oh such Happiness!
Our Brand New Plot.
Our new plot needs a couple of months of mulch breakdown to build up it's gardening goodness. In the meantime we have been given another plot that a previous owner no longer uses. It already has a few eatables that I'm pulling out or pruning to make room for other veggies and fruits.
Our Meantime Plot.
Wild Spinach, Egg Plant, Lemon Grass and a Vietnamese Cooking Green.
However we will endeavour to use as much as possible of what we pull out to be sustainable and be frugalistic green.
Our Garden Loot - Veggies for cooking and Flowers/Tall leaves for Vases.
Any garden delights in your backyard?

Saturday, March 26, 2011

I Sold A Book.

I have about 70 books listed on Fishpond, but this year I've only sold 2 books so far! My prices are a fraction of the Retail Price and most of my books are in "new, near new or very good" condition but it's been slow.

I think people are starting to move away from books on paper as they join the Kindle ranks. Also book sellers like to Book Depository just make it hard to compete against as prices are very low and they have free shipping. Individual sellers like me flipping a handful of books to build up the holiday fund are just a spec of dust in mountains of reading options available worldwide.

For now I'm not going to purchase too many books to flip online as they take up valuable real estate in my home. So unless I know they're a sure thing, a current academic text book or a book I must read/have, I will be leaving them in the op-shop.

The book I sold this week brought a profit of $17.48 to go to our Borneo holiday fund. It was a Signed Copy of Due Inheritance by Ted Egan in new condition, out of stock in most online stores. I purchased it for only .50 cents!

Here are 3 books I purchased last week for the total sum of $4.00. I think they are a sure thing (I sold a copy of the Diversity book within 24 hours last year) and I hope to read them before they sell online or at my market stall.
Books with Brain at Bargain Prices.
And today I purchased these great 8 books at a local op-shop for a total of $20.

Popular Reads, Near New Condition.
They were $2.50 each. A bit on the expensive side for me but I feel they will sell well at my market stall next weekend. The book "The Man Who Never Sleeps" has docket inside it's pages. It was purchased for $20 just 6 weeks ago at a local university - and it's in new condition!

I did a lot of buying today as I restocked for my market stall but prices were high. I'll shoot photo's of my new stock in the next few days and let you see my goodies.

I once had this Michael Jackson book that I picked up for 50 cents and had no idea it was valuable collectible. Once I read it, I gave it away to an acquaintance. I hope she didn't toss it as she could have done with some extra cash.

Are you a hard copy book lover? Buy them, Borrow them, Beg them? Or are you moving with the times and reading ebooks.
Do you hoard books to gather dust or do you give them/sell them on?
What is the future of books?
I'm interested in your thoughts....

Friday, March 25, 2011

Take Away Wanted!

Today when it was time for my lunch break at the office I craved badly Asian takeaway. I wanted a nice warm meal and something sweet. All I had at my desk was fruit and it wasn't enough.

I have a problem of liking junk food wayyyy too much. If I could live on takeaway I would. Salt, Sugar, Fat and MSG saturated food! Yum says my Tongue, Yuck says my Stomach, Unreasonable says my Brain. "Hey" it says "Your supposed to be frugal, smart and eco!!!"

Anyway as I started heading towards a Indian takeaway I stopped and took control of myself.. kind of.. A takeaway meal would cost me $12 and that would not include my sweet treat. So I popped into the supermarket instead and this is what I got for myself:
Supermarket Takeaway
Not as nice as the Indian takeaway but good enough to deemed as fastfood in my mind. Fills the stomach and is much cheaper on the purse. This lot of junk cost me $6.59.

Plus my work place has a large tea room with this AMAZING view. I gaze at the sea and dream.........
How Lucky Am I!
Do you get cravings for junk food and fast food too? What do you do to save your purse from being empty?

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Guppies and Nappies

2 years ago someone gave me about 10 guppies to place in a pot plant that has a plant in plenty of water. It's like a little pond with happy fish that keep the mozzies down. However the fish have been too happy and have bred beyond capacity of the pot.

I was having a dilemma.. What to do.. No one I knew wanted any and I certainly did not want to kill them. But then I had the idea to place an OFFER ad on my local Freecycle and in the past week I have been able to give away about 60 Guppies. Yay!
A Glass of Guppies
Whilst browsing the Freecycle Offers and Wanted ad's I saw a woman with 2 small children was looking for some cloth nappies. I was happy to declutter 5 cloth nappies in her direction. I've been hoarding the nappies as they are a great size and useful for lots of different chores and projects. However 30 nappies is a bit much and they are here, and there and everywhere in my home.
Cloth Nappies to Go.
I placed a Wanted ad for large Bricks for a small upraised garden bed I want to build. I've had no success with my request. However I noticed a building being demolished in the city - so I might try and get the courage to ask the builders for 20 bricks... We'll see... as I feel a bit shy :-(

Do you Freecycle?

If you don't yet, look up a Freecycle organisation in your community or region or another similar organisations. It keeps stuff out of landfill and will allow you you to save money in the process.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Beachy Frugal Fun.

On Sunday Dolly and I spent a frugal morning hanging out at the Waterfront. I love swimming in the open sea but crocs and Box Jellyfish just make it too risky at this time of year. The Waterfront is a great compromise. It's sea water with a net to eliminate things getting in, lifeguards keep on eye on people and... now... they have tubes for free use. Which I had fun with.
Free Use of Tubes

There is free parking for 2 hours and we go early-ish so there is hardly anyone about the place. I took along fruit that was getting soft and needed eating, drinks that are left over from Dolly's party and frozen water.
Snacks.

We took along a few plastic op-shop toys (Dora Dolls and cooking gear) however Dolly had more fun with the flowers she gathered from the ground.
Creative Gene.

I love outings like this, it really does give me the impression I've had a real break. It cleanses the weeks stresses away and prepares me for a new week. It's like a mini holiday.
Life in the Tropics

Do you have frugal fun on your day off or weekends? What kind of activities do you do?

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Last Country on Our Holiday - Singapore

After Bali, France and Switzerland we headed back home to Oz. However we had a 23 hour wait in Singapore. At 1st I had thought we would spend it in the airport as it has great facilities; sleeping areas, restaurants, massage, fishponds, entertainment, a butterfly enclosure, playgrounds and even 3 free cinemas! However due to our exhaution from our lovely gastro we decided to get a cheap hotel.

I spoke with Hotel Information staff at the airport. I was given options in my price range. One looked okay at $60AUS but.. was in the red light district. In the past this would be no issue for me, now with Dolly I desire a cleaner bedroom then usual. I quietly asked if the sex workers and customers used the hotel rooms... Yes many of them did.

We decided to go for a small hotel in Little India at $80AUS a night. The hotel patrons were Indian families in Singapore for the shopping. And shopping they did! As they waited for taxi's for the airport to return to India their baggage was boxes and boxes of stuff! The only shopping we did was for fruit and a $5 box of tiny offering tea cups for Dolly. Dolly has a couple of Miniature Cups and a Serving Plate from Vietnam, a hand me down Porcelain Tea Pot from France and a little Jug I picked up in an op shop for 50 cents. So these were a great addition to her fragile collection.
Each cup has a different image.
Pretty when removed from all the kitch and glitz in the over flowing shop.
Has now become a new addition to Dolly's fragile tea set collection.
I'm so glad we got ourselves a hotel because we were still sick and weak. And my whooping cough was really getting me down. We made it out of the hotel for a couple of hours to wander and have dinner. This is what we had (Yes another food pic...)
Quick Indian Dinner Served on Eco "Green" Banana Leaves
I love Indian food, but I was just too sick to eat. I had 3 bites and that was it. They were closing when we arrived for dinner but they kindly served us and boiled an egg for Dolly. We drank bottled water and Coke to try and ease our stomach bugs. The staff that served us spoke no English (Singapore is an English speaking country) and we saw people bedding down in the street when we returned to the hotel. Little India is very different to the rest of modern bustling Singapore and the food was super cheap. I love the area, it feels more relaxed then the rest of the busy city.
The Rambling Expat Had No Problem Eating.

Friday, March 18, 2011

Then We Went to Switzerland

During our holiday in France we popped over the border to Switzerland for 1 night to see my ex-employers and the girl I once nannied :-)

We caught a train on a super discount because we were travelling with Dolly. It's part of a program that the French govt encourage people to travel with children so they get a chance to see and learn. Once in Switzerland my ex-employer had someone pick us up at the station and took us to a gorgeous Hotel Krafft on the Rhine in Basel. My ex-boss also picked up the cost of hotel and meals.
I Love Swiss Simplicity.


I was so thrilled to catch up with them. And the girl has now become a stunning young woman. Brought up wealthy with everything she wants and yet she is kind, gracious and thoughtful. I am so proud of her and have missed her a great deal over the past 15 years years.
My ex-employers met us in the evening for a delicious dinner in the hotel restaurant. This was perfect because Dolly and The Rambling Expat got tired and were able to go to bed while I stayed on and chatted for another hour. Eventually they left me and I may not see them for quite a few years. I stood on the cold dark street waving them off, feeling very sad.
View From the Balcony.
However not only did they treat us to the hotel and meals but also slipped 500 Euros into my hand!!! This paid for our 3 France-Switzerland return tickets and much more. A gift I was very grateful for. Due to such a gift and the kindness of friends and family we were able to keep our entire trip costs down and not use my Credit Card once. I actually returned home with money in my purse which can go to other necessities of life and contribute to my early retirement..

Anyway, moving on... the Hotel Krafft follows some green principals. No cute little bottles of shampoo, the food is mostly organic, the hand towels in the restaurant bathroom are cloth and are washed and reused. This made me feel very happy.
Big Bottles of Products (no minis')
The decor was simple and stunning. Each floor had a bookshelf with glasses, water, tea, apples, books and games and also a table with computer and free internet access. The hotel also gave a free 2 day tram pass each. Which we used to return to the train station for our departure. As we left the hotel we were asked if we wanted a taxi, which we decline to their total amazement! I explained we were traveling on a backpackers budget and only afforded their gorgeous hotel because my ex-Boss paid. The tram was only a 3 to 5 minute walk away and went to the station. So no changes or difficulty.
Bookshelf full of goodies.
View of Our Tram Line to the Train Station from our Balcony - just a skip away..
It was a long trip just for a dinner meet up, but wonderful to see the family I had lived with for 2 years anyhow. Also staying in a hotel room 1 night, just the 3 of us... allowed us to regroup as a family. And with the generous money gift I was able to budget for other items in our life.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

Food in France

I totally tortured myself working on this post. My mouth is salivating and my stomach rumbling. Each photo was more and more torture and the nectarines are just not satisfying enough! Be warned.. if you love food your mouth may salivate....

Glorious food we ate in our friends and family homes and 1 inexpensive restaurant. Unfortunately we were so sick in our last 5 days in Paris that we couldn't stomach much. And this occurred after we had purchased about 10 different variety of cheese at Lidle. Cheese that I can't get or that cost the earth here in the tropical north. So we ate none in those last days - boohoo :-(

In Lyon one of my favourite dishes was Hare with Chestnuts and Green Salad. The salad has a delicate mild taste in France. The leaves are softer. I don't know if it's a different type of lettuce then in Australia or if it's the growing conditions, but I'm always amazed at the taste difference.
Salad with a vinegrette of oil, vinegar and garlic.
Preserved Hare purchased from a farm via catalogue.
Our friend Jean Charles used to run a restaurant so his cooking skills are pretty amazing. He prepared a sauce of artichoke hearts with prawns and scallops, placed on a bed of fettucini and garnished with bacon wrapped asparagus. 

He purchases his artichokes when they are in season, cleans, chops and freezes them ready to prepare off season. Frugal and wise.
Dinner is Served.
Delicious and Mouth Watering
Our lovely Ex CouchSurfing guests Florence and Cyril cooked many amazing dishes for us. The night before this shot, Florence had offered Dolly cook with her the next day. The first words of the day from Dolly were "Is Florence awake now so we can cook".

They made a Galette De Roi - a traditional cake in France eaten in homage to the 3 kings that gave gifts to baby Jesus. This is one of my all time favourite cakes. We ate 6 of them whilst in France. Inside the layers is a hidden porcelain charm. The person who finds it, is the King or Queen for the day and receive a golden paper crown. Small children hide under the table and call out who each portion is for.
Making of the Galette De Roi.
Dolly under the table getting ready to call the portions out.

Golden, Crispy, Soft, Buttery and Warm! In other words Divine!!!
We Purchased pre-prepared snails at Lidle. They were so cheap it was beyond belief. I took advantage of one of my favourite dishes. I sometimes make them in Oz - but the cost is pretty high.
Quick Lunch before heading out. Escargot - Snails.
More food at Florence and Cyril's! Cyril makes handmade (not machine) bread most days. Here is a gorgeous snack of Tasty Bread and Homemade Terrine from Florence's sister.
Heavenly Snack.
Every lunchtime my cousin races home from her full time job and cooks for her 2 teenage children and herself. This allows her to eat properly at lunch and dinner time. I think this would stress me out. But Food is a serious issue with the French. You wont see people eating a sandwich at home. Here she prepared and cooked 2 different types of quiches in the space of 30 minutes!
Fast Food, Fast Cooking.
1 in the oven, 1 more to go.
On our last few days the 3 of us were so sick with gastro we could barely move. The Rambling Expats family drove many hours to Paris to see us for a couple of hours! They were going to take us out for lunch at a nearby restaurant. However we were so sick I spent the day in the bathroom puking and The Rambling Expat in the loo. Our poor family was left to order pizza and had very little of our company. The local Italian Pizzaria's pizza's smelt so good - but we stayed right away as our flights were only 48 hours away. Once our family left, the 3 of us collapsed into bed together and slept for 16 hours!
Italian Pizza.
We did make it to 2 restaurant stops during our trip. And one was my favourite from my youthful days. We headed to Barbes in Paris - the Arab / North African area near the red light district. I ordered my favourite Couscous dish. A lot of people don't like the area because it's rough and there are many pickpockets. But I don't have much to steal and it used to be my old stomping ground. So I say live a little and enjoy the inexpensive delights it has to offer!
One of my all time favourite dishes - Moroccan Cous Cous.
Florence and Cyril also cooked up a Oriental (Moroccan?) chicken dish which was cooked in a Moroccan Clay Cooking Pot. Lots of lovely flavours with the herbs and spices. I've never cooked in a clay pot - it's on my To Do One Day List.
Moroccan Style Cooking.
So is your mouth watering yet??? Isn't food wonderful!?!?!? Hope you enjoyed a tour of some of the dishes we enjoyed in France during our trip. Of course we ate way more then this - everyday was a burst of flavours. But I was busy eating and not taking photo's :-)

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Our Frugal Holiday In France

Our trip to France in December and January was an exciting adventure of reconnecting with family and friends. Dolly was thrilled to meet cousins as we don't have much family in Australia.
Cousin Love.
We kept things frugal as we stayed with family and friends and enjoyed their warm hospitality and FANTASTIC FOOD!!! Some places we stayed 1 or 2 nights and others more.
Lyon - The Rambling Expat's Aunt Cooking Rabbit.
Paris - My Cousin rushes home each lunchtime to cook and eat - making Goats Cheese Quiche.
Paris - My Godmother gave up her lovely mezzanine bedroom for us, with view on Sacre Coeur!
Lyon - The Rambling Expat's childhood friend cooked up a storm for us and gave internet time.
Lyon - Great Company (Family) and Great Food (Rabbit and Chest Nuts).
We tried to replenish people fridges if there was the possibility of time, accessibility and shops. Sorry to those we did not - come to Australia and we will return the favour :-)
Lyon - Tourism in the supermarket - The (seafood?) section - Frog Legs on the left.
Lyon - Enjoying part of the cheese selection in the Supermarket with my Brother (not) In Law.
Paris - I Discovered Lidl - So Inexpensive!!!! Bought pre-packed snails too! Yum.
Lyon - Gift for Host, Marie Antoinette is not the only one who Loves Patisserie.
If you don't have family and friends in France do look at Helpx and CouchSurfing. I highly recommend both for inexpensive accommodation, great local knowledge and a "community" way to travel. There are many other similar sites but these are the ones our household uses.
Reims - Stayed with our former CouchSurfing Guest, as they were back in France - Now friends for life.
We used public transport to get around; buses, metro, trains and trams and we learnt to ask about cheaper options. Counter staff are a wealth of information and know the good deals which may not be obvious or advertised. Asking saved us a lot of Euros as; different times, travelling with a child or buying 10 tickets, all meant special rates and discounts.
Paris - Public Transport Tickets; RER, Metro and Buses.

France - Easy Train Travel.
We didn't shop for much useless stuff but instead spent our money on experiences for Dolly which we also enjoyed.

My only purchase was a handbag which was 25 Euros after being reduced by 50% and it's already falling apart. I purchased 6 French children's books, 2 French DVDs for Dolly and 2 French CD's for myself. Other than that I had no interest in shopping which was different to my past life where I used to want to hit the shops in Paris and Lyons and shop till I dropped. I really wanted to browse some Op-Shops (Thrift Stores) and Flea Markets but never got the opportunity.

Come back soon as I will be posting shots of FOOD in France! And also some friends and family interiors. A interior designer friend in France has told me due to small spaces people must decorate not the square meter but the cubic meter. This was a light bulb moment for me.