dizie wrote:Wish I could figure out the xtreme coupon thing.
What are you unclear about, perhaps we could help?

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dizie wrote:Wish I could figure out the xtreme coupon thing.
phil_in_cs wrote: Get your rice and beans now, when you don't have to pay for them in blood.
squinty wrote:You wear "chaps" to break a bronco, you wear "assless chaps" because civilization has collapsed and you've gone feral.
Blacksmith wrote:That is an excellent topic for another thread. You should start one about that. Really.
prepper7 wrote:dizie wrote:Wish I could figure out the xtreme coupon thing.
What are you unclear about, perhaps we could help?
NamelessStain wrote:prepper7 wrote:dizie wrote:Wish I could figure out the xtreme coupon thing.
What are you unclear about, perhaps we could help?
For me its that I don't want to register at sites to get the coupons.
I also have issues coordinating sales and coupons at the same time.
And finally, I can't bring myself to buy stuff I won't use.
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

NamelessStain wrote:For me its that I don't want to register at sites to get the coupons.
I also have issues coordinating sales and coupons at the same time.
And finally, I can't bring myself to buy stuff I won't use.
phil_in_cs wrote: Get your rice and beans now, when you don't have to pay for them in blood.
squinty wrote:You wear "chaps" to break a bronco, you wear "assless chaps" because civilization has collapsed and you've gone feral.
Blacksmith wrote:That is an excellent topic for another thread. You should start one about that. Really.
duodecima wrote:But half of my good deals are just by knowing what a good price for something is and stocking up when there's a good sale.
phil_in_cs wrote: Get your rice and beans now, when you don't have to pay for them in blood.
squinty wrote:You wear "chaps" to break a bronco, you wear "assless chaps" because civilization has collapsed and you've gone feral.
Blacksmith wrote:That is an excellent topic for another thread. You should start one about that. Really.
kklll wrote: <snip> I have a good 3 month supply of food and water. I know that seems small, but it's better than nothing and it's growing everyday. <snip>
phil_in_cs wrote: Get your rice and beans now, when you don't have to pay for them in blood.
squinty wrote:You wear "chaps" to break a bronco, you wear "assless chaps" because civilization has collapsed and you've gone feral.
Blacksmith wrote:That is an excellent topic for another thread. You should start one about that. Really.
kklll wrote: I have a good 3 month supply of food and water. I know that seems small, but it's better than nothing and it's growing everyday. My preps are not strictly food & water either. I have medical, communications, defense, sanitation, clothing and a bunch more important stuff. I don't have a lead-lined steel reinforced concrete bunker, but I do have a solid basement that keeps everything cool and dry. It's not as neat as the youtubers, but it is efficient for me and that’s all that matters. I have a roll-away bed down there and a wood stove. I also have a gun and ammo locker.
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

squinty wrote:Safety isn't a lever on a gun, a guard on a knife or any other mechanical device. Safety is a behavior.
zombiepreparation wrote:This is possibly info others already know but just in case I thought I'd post it anyway. K?
I have the prepping version of writer's block.
I began prepping November last year. I have now had two periods of time during this last almost eight months when I came to a point when I didn't know my next prepping move and I got stuck. I am stuck right now. I was PMing another poster who mentioned this can happen which relaxed me a bit because I was coming down on myself a bit for losing my momentum again.
A new life-event is trying to take all my $$, way past discretionary and possibly deeply into just the plain ole budget in general. So that's one thing.
Then, I'm to a point in my TINY place that I am not easily finding places to put the little storage I keep bringing in a can or a [something] at a time so my living area is dragging me down a bit because I have lost the livability. It's crowded here now.
Then as the poster I PMd mentioned is doing too, I'm getting way behind on my inventory.
Then the news is frightening about the world and my country's economy and feeling I'm running out of time, and I am finding myself frozen in place rather than motivated. Drat!
Then I'm seeing that some of the stuff I've been successful in accumulating may need a better long-term packaging than I'm doing which might make it necessary to spend $$ to 'keep' what I now have without it deteriorating, and I don't have the $$ for that and that would be a whole new area of educating myself and I don't know how or where to begin to learn this NEW stuff. So I'm starting to feel overwhelm beginning.
And I'm 'wanting' to smoke cigarettes, which I can't afford, and drink wine, which I don't afford, and go back to oblivious living, which will be a bad decision to afford.
I'm trying to internalize and figure out how to use all the wonderful useful tips I'm getting, but I can't figure out how to accomplish and/or apply them all so I'm frustrating myself on top of everything.
I got to thinking; there may be other newbies like me coming in who are surprised being stuck or overwhelmed or down because they, like me, are not moving forward as fast or as well as the moneyed preppers we read posting or the really prepping educated posters seem to be doing, and they might find it useful to know this just might be part of the process. Or at least that this newbie is experiencing it too.
So since I'm Poor and I'm Prepping and I'm running into all these things someone else who is Poor and Prepping and reading The Poor Man's Prepping thread might hit the same lows and highs I find in prepping and take some solus and comfort knowing they're not alone. One never knows.
KentsOkay wrote:....and then I reached for the Vasoline.
mr_slappy75 wrote:All hail Dread Lady GoofyGirl of the Magnificent Mile! High mistress of wise shopping and judicious thrifts!

silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

prepper7 wrote:duodecima wrote:But half of my good deals are just by knowing what a good price for something is and stocking up when there's a good sale.
To get the most saving on your purchases, you must know what the best prices are, the interval at which they appear, and where they are offered. This necessitates that you keep track of what you pay for your items.
[snip]you will need to use a price book.
How to Develop a Price Book
Online Price Book w/ integrated grocery list and analysis
free downloadable price book spreadsheet (they have a more sophisticated version for sale and lots of other free spreadsheets.
prepper7 wrote:duodecima wrote:But half of my good deals are just by knowing what a good price for something is and stocking up when there's a good sale.
Ding-ding-ding!![]()
To get the most saving on your purchases, you must know what the best prices are, the interval at which they appear, and where they are offered. This necessitates that you keep track of what you pay for your items.
After a period of paying attention to this information, some of it will simply stick in your head (typically for the most frequently purchased items), but unless you posses an eidetic memory, you will need to use a price book. Don't panic, this isn't complex or particularly time consuming. The information you require is printed on your receipt. But since you don't want to have to sort through weeks or months of receipts every time you sit down to your make up your shopping list, you need to put it into an easy-to-use format.
You price book can be a little spiral notebook, forms you downloaded, or a spreadsheet that you maintain on your computer. Electronic price books have the advantage of being searchable and sort-able and if you have a smartphone or PDA, you have the advantage of being able to see and enter information wherever you happen to be.
How to Develop a Price Book
Online Price Book w/ integrated grocery list and analysis
free downloadable price book spreadsheet (they have a more sophisticated version for sale and lots of other free spreadsheets.

huntingohio wrote:Canned goods generally last 3 years from manufacture according to the date stamp, however i will not that i have eaten a can the was 5+ years expire and was just fine.. tasted the same as the same brand would off the shelf
KentsOkay wrote:....and then I reached for the Vasoline.
mr_slappy75 wrote:All hail Dread Lady GoofyGirl of the Magnificent Mile! High mistress of wise shopping and judicious thrifts!

Caenus wrote:The easiest way to get into couponing is scour the "junk mail" and paper for coupons on things you usually buy or want. Keep them in a pile, then go through your local grocery stores ads. When things go on sale, check the coupons to see if you have one. Don't get caught up on a specific brand for your stockpile. Buy what's on sale. Check with your supermarket to see what their coupon policy is and if they match competitors sale prices. If they do, you'll save time & gas going from store to store. Our local store matches, and automatically doubles manufacturer coupons.
Example: I like Bush's beans. But, the local store recently had van camps on sale for $0.80. I had 10 $0.30 coupons which automatically doubled to $0.60. I ended up paying $2 for 10 cans of beans. Free? No, but much cheaper than paying regular price (which would have been $13).
Also make sure you are in their "Preferred customer program" or "VIP" or whatever they call it. Some sales only apply to those customers. Usually it's free and I'm sure you've seen them before. Watch the cashier and make sure all your coupons are entered and applied to your purchase.
To me, that is the minimum couponing effort. TX Trinity makes it a hobby and has some strange system I couldn't explain.
Don't expect staples like flour, sugar and rice to go on sale often. Also, don't buy something just because it's not on sale. That is how the "extreme" couponers advertise their great deals.
If you start with the basics above, it will eventually evolve as you get better.
KentsOkay wrote:....and then I reached for the Vasoline.
mr_slappy75 wrote:All hail Dread Lady GoofyGirl of the Magnificent Mile! High mistress of wise shopping and judicious thrifts!

goofygurl wrote:[The price book. The whole point of a price book is this. To know what regular prices are so that when items go on "sale" you'll know the true value of the sale. 9 out 10 times? A store is advertising something as a "sale" in their ad and it's not..not at all. People just see it advertised in the ad and assume...because they don't realize.
Head to the store with your spreadsheet and start writing down the SHELF prices of what you normally buy. Also be sure to add in the per oz, unit, etc price. To really save money, you'll need to start figuring out which is cheaper unit for unit or oz for oz, lb for lb, etc.
Don't attempt to do your price book all in one trip. Do it over time or you'll wear yourself out.
zombiepreparation wrote:goofygurl wrote:[The price book. The whole point of a price book is this. To know what regular prices are so that when items go on "sale" you'll know the true value of the sale. 9 out 10 times? A store is advertising something as a "sale" in their ad and it's not..not at all. People just see it advertised in the ad and assume...because they don't realize.
Head to the store with your spreadsheet and start writing down the SHELF prices of what you normally buy. Also be sure to add in the per oz, unit, etc price. To really save money, you'll need to start figuring out which is cheaper unit for unit or oz for oz, lb for lb, etc.
Don't attempt to do your price book all in one trip. Do it over time or you'll wear yourself out.
I began prepping last November. I began keeping all my receipts at that time thinking eventually I'd learn how to shop more efficiently. To be clear I have very few receipts since I am financially challenged so my receipts are 98% prep stuff with 98% of that being grocery receipts.
I have just finished entering the purchases on these receipts on the downloaded price book spreadsheet. It was easy since I really only purchase basic things and shop infrequently. My diet is simple (that's what I enjoy), my needs are kept simple (I'd really like way more 'stuff' if I had the funds). My purchases rarely vary and I don't shop the store. My entries on the sheet are probably few compared to lots of others. Just at a hundred things on my list.
So now I... ???
a. Print a copy to take with me shopping and shop prices for everything I buy each time I enter a store to keep track of changing prices?
b. Refer to the copy if I see adds? (I have never seen an add for anything I buy)
c. "If" I see a coupon for something I use (very very very unlikely for the things I buy) I check the book?
d. Use the book to buy at the store with the best buys.
Here is where everything gets muddy to me:
1. How is this going to keep me alert to that 'cycle' thing when prices drop or whatever?
2. All my prices seem to have been store stable for months but when they do change what do I do with the new price? Replace the old one? Create a new entry beside/under the old one?
3. Where am I seeing the comparison tracking of ups and downs? Or am I mistaken in thinking I'm tracking that?
KentsOkay wrote:....and then I reached for the Vasoline.
mr_slappy75 wrote:All hail Dread Lady GoofyGirl of the Magnificent Mile! High mistress of wise shopping and judicious thrifts!

graingurl wrote:Thanks for this reminder. I had one years ago (a la Tightwad Gazette) but didn't keep it up. Now I'm learning how to store and plan better I need to get back to this mindset.
Thanks for the links, they look like a great resource.
phil_in_cs wrote: Get your rice and beans now, when you don't have to pay for them in blood.
squinty wrote:You wear "chaps" to break a bronco, you wear "assless chaps" because civilization has collapsed and you've gone feral.
Blacksmith wrote:That is an excellent topic for another thread. You should start one about that. Really.
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