We made it in the LA Times!

After 10 years of work we finally made it in a big paper!

Check it out!

I just had to share this “moment”. :-)

Tawra

Fixing Clay Soil

I wrote how we have horrible clay soil here. It literally took us over 30 minutes to dig one hole for a small 5 gallon tree! It’s like digging in rock. Well we got several great suggestions! I have done some of this in a small scale over the years. Mostly just laying down newspaper with wood chips, compost, leaves and grass but these are some great ideas so I thought I would pass them along.
Thanks everyone! Tawra

Clay soil + scraps of drywall that you get for free from a nearby construction job, + grass clippings which your neighbors put out for the trash, = nice topsoil next spring, all for free.
Drywall you see is a mixture of gypsum and lime, a little paper of the faces, but all natural stuff that will not hurt anything. You should keep it wet while it is decomposing.
(I asked, how he did it. Tawra)
Whatever is convenient for you, the drywall gets wet over a winter and will decompose by next summer, if there is grass clippings in there it helps too, maybe a few kitchen scraps.
Lime and gypsum, is about 95% of the drywall, paper is the other 5%, all natural stuff.
I guess if you bust it up with a shovel it might decompose faster.

I learned this when I had to do a quick cleanup job after the drywall crew left a mess of scrap in my house, I just opened a window and tossed it out the window, planning to pick it up the next day…………..well of course the next day it rained……..and then it snowed…….
and by the time I got back to it next spring, it was almost all gone into the former clay soil.

I never could figure people spending so much money on fertilizer and water for their show place lawns, and then throw the clippings out in bags on garbage day. If you let the bags sit for a month or so, the clippings rot inside the bags, and really make good compost — if you slice them open in front of the roto tiller.

Amazing what people toss out on garbage day. Cash, antique coins, jewelry, very expensive stereos from 30 years ago, a person can support themselves fairly well, and tax free too! Soon I might figure out how to start selling stuff on eBay!
Doug

We too have a have clay like soil here. Have you ever done something called Lasagna gardening? Do a google search, that’s how I found it. It really does help build up the soil over a years time…without a whole lot of EXTRA work. Good luck to you with your gardening efforts. Roxie

Clay Dirt!
I hope I can help you. You wrote and told that
you have a lot of clay dirt. So do I, we live
here in Tennessee on top of a mountain and there
is very little topsoil and a lot of clay dirt.
Five years ago in the spring I went all out and
planted everything that I could find. I also so
used compost, humus and topsoil to improve the
dirt. It worked great on the larger plants that
needed larger holes. The smaller plants did
badly. I called a good friend of mine that
simply explained to me, that all I did with the
small holes was make inground clay pots.
(Duh!) The water had no were to go. I know now
that when I plant small plants I need to still
dig larger and wider hole, so that the water can
get away from the roots. I hope this will help
you this spring. Happy Gardening!!!
P.S. Love your web site.
Sincerely Trena

What I Learned from an Electric Bill

What I Learned from an Electric Bill
The Dollar Stretcher
by Gary Foreman
gary@stretcher.com

Sometimes finding out where your money is going proves to be an interesting journey. I remember a time years ago when I wanted to reduce our electric bill. It was summertime in Florida. I put the family on notice that we were going to reduce our consumption of electricity. And we did. Lights went off. Thermostats went up. My wife and kids were helpful.

The next month our bill came and it was down substantially! We had won! Of course, being a bit of a fanatic, I decided that we’d really attack our bill the following month. So I got even more aggressive in finding ways to cut power usage. This time my family began to grumble a little. And, they probably had a point. August in Florida is no time to see how little you need the air conditioner!

Finally the electric bill arrived. I was about to be vindicated! But, wait…what’s this? The bill was almost as high as it was two months ago before we started all the energy saving moves. How could that be?

It took a little tracking but I figured it out by looking at old bills and doing a little detective work. In past summers there was always one month were our bill was lower than normal. And the following month always had higher than typical usage.

It wasn’t until the following summer that I finally realized what happened. I just happened to be home when the meter reader came through our neighborhood. To my surprise they didn’t visit every house. I can’t be absolutely sure, but it appeared that in the summer they’d skip some houses and enter an estimate of usage for that house. They’d purposely guess low so that the homeowner wouldn’t complain. Then the next month they’d read the meter and the electric company would get what they were due.

It was just a coincidence that the first month of my savings plan happened to coincide with the month that our meter wasn’t read and a low estimate was used to calculate our bill. Ultimately we did find a way to reduce our bill. Our air conditioner was 12 years old. And even though it cooled, it wasn’t that efficient. So we replaced it with a more energy efficient model.

Why do I tell this story? Because it demonstrates a lot about achieving financial goals. And, the many ways that you can sabotage your own efforts. So let’s see what we can learn.

Are you sure that you know what you know? Sounds strange. It should. But the question is important. You’re basing your decisions on certain assumptions. Are those assumptions true? In my case I assumed that the electric bill represented the amount of electricity we used the prior month.

Turns out that wasn’t always true. At least not during the two months that I counted on. So I really didn’t know what I thought that I knew. It pays to examine about your assumptions. Test them if possible. It’s foolish to build anything on a shaky foundation.

Enlist your family to work with you. It’s easier to accomplish a goal as a team. Because I made reducing the electric bill my personal mission, my family felt that their efforts were unnecessary. In fact, by nagging I probably pushed them into hoping that I’d fail.

Instead I could have asked them to help analyze the problem and set the goal. That would have made them partners in the solution. Not only would I have gotten help reaching my goals, but I would have created a teachable moment.

Look for trends, not quick flashes. Trends tell you a lot more about what’s going on. They usually indicate an underlying, ongoing situation. If your bill goes up (or down) month after month, you know that whatever is causing it isn’t likely to just disappear.

I went for the flash of two electric bills. One high and the other low. I would have been better off with a goal of reducing the bill by 15% over a 6 month period. I could have avoided using bad information to make a decision. And, any change in the way our family consumed electricity would have been much more likely to become permanent.

Sometimes you find answers in unusual places. I expected that turning down lights and adjusting the thermostat was the solution to lower bills. Then I thought it was the meter reader! Turns out that ultimately the answer was a new air conditioner. Don’t be afraid to go where the leads take you.

Be prepared for mid-course corrections. It’s easy to go in a straight line. Pretty much anyone can do that. But, if you’re heading in the wrong direction you won’t reach your goal. You’ll need to adjust your course.

There’s nothing surprising about that. If you take a driving vacation every so often you look at a map. You may find it necessary to change your route. That’s just what we do with financial goals. We need to continue to collect information. And, then to take appropriate action based on what we’ve learned. New information led me to a couple of course corrections in my search for lower electric bills.

We finally did get a lower bill. A combination of turning off lights and a new air conditioner did the trick. It took us awhile, but that’s ok. Not only did we reduce expenses, we learned a lot in the process!
______________

Gary Foreman is the editor of The Dollar Stretcher.com website and ezines. You’ll find thousands of articles to help you stretch your day and your dollar. Visit today!

Cleaning forclousures

I am often asked how Mike got his part time job cleaning up dumpy foreclosures.
Our loan officer told us about it. Basically you just need to call realtors and loan officers and see if they have any foreclosures that need to be cleaned up and that you would be interested in doing it.

Tawra

BTW, after many requests Mike charges about $50 a hour. He bids on the price per house but that’s what it averages out to.

Look all year.

One way to save a ton on Halloween costumes is to look all year. I found this one for David last year in the summer. He wanted to wear it for his birthday party so we let him and then he also used it for Halloween. I paid $1 for it at a yard sale.

Tawra

A day in the life.

We are having fun taking pictures now that I’ve finally figured out how to do it.

Here’s one of Mike faithfully hauling compost for the new trees and lilac bushes. Our poor wheelbarrow sure gets a work out! This one we got at a yard sale for $20 but use it constantly!!

Of course I had to put in a “cute kid” picture of David watering my lilacs.

And I always get asked “How do you do it all when your sick? Well, I don’t. This what I looked like at the end of the planting day and I didn’t do any of the work! LOL We are trying to get some stumps burned on the yard so we don’t have to mow around them. This one is going slow but sure!

Tawra

Oh Yum!

This is from Gwen. Thanks for sharing!! Tawra

Just passing on a recipe: I had a bag of
cinnamon donuts left over from a church gathering
that I didn’t want to go stale on me. I recalled
that there was a can of apple pie filling in my
cabinet. I greased a dish with butter then
layered with donuts cut in fourths, poured a
little melted butter over that layer, added the
pie filling,another donut layer then a little
more butter. Heated in oven until bubbly. Pretty
good.

Great Grandma’s Lilacs are happy!

After we got the compost Mike planted our new fruit trees and Great Grandma’s lilac bush.

The lilac bush has a long history with us. Great Grandma gave a start to my mom 20 years ago. Well, mom has a black thumb! She could not get that thing to grow at all! After about 10 years it was probably 2 ft. high.

Well, after we got sick she had a friend’s son mow the yard for us. One day he mowed it down! Believe it or not the next year it came up again.

Well, she moved that thing to Idaho when we all moved there and the silly thing still wouldn’t grow! So I took it with us when we came back to Kansas and have had it in this pot since 2000! I have been nursing the silly thing along for all these years and almost killed it twice myself.
Link
Well, last week we got it in the ground FOR GOOD and it is so happy! After only 7 days it already has new shoots on it! We divided it into 7 pieces to start a new hedge so I can see it off the back patio.


It’s great to finally be settled some place after moving 13 times!!! I know I’m settled when the lilac bush is finally in the ground! :-) Even though I was really sick that day, I just had to take a picture with it!

Tawra

Gotta love Compost!

We went to the compost place the other day. Wow, I was in compost heaven!

I can’t wait to get all of my plants in the ground. I was sick that day so Mike and the kids were so kind and picked up a load for me!


We don’t have a pick-up so we put it in the back of the station wagon. LOL, I will haul anything in the back of my car! :-)
Tawra