"As I keep three hens in my backyard, I started a "chook bucket" in the office kitchen and now all the leftovers go home to three very appreciative ladies each night -- sometimes they eat better than I do!"
Great idea, Bernie. Now here's a challenge for corporates and government agencies that claim to be environmentally friendly: have a chook bucket and add "Chook friendly" to your corporate credentials (and business cards!).
Patricia from Auckland has this very good tip for saving money at the supermarket.
"Check your docket! I did this a year ago and found I'd been overcharged. Luckily my supermarket has a scanning policy to let you keep overcharged items and refunds what you've paid as well.
"Since that day I check every week and find that I'm regularly overcharged and I've never found it works the other way. So savings as well as keeping the supermarket honest!"
There are a few other tips we suggest for supermarket shopping:
-Think of your grocery bill in terms of work hours. If your after-tax pay is say $15 an hour (in the hand) then a $150 grocery shop is 10 hours of hard labour!
-Don't shop when you are hungry. Those rotisserie chickens are just too tempting, and the cream doughnuts ... oh they are irresistible!
-Always check out the specials before you shop.
-If you buy fruit and vegetables, buy only in season. Better still grow your own.
-Shop at supermarkets near closing time to pick up bargains of perishable items.
-Ask your local deli if it has "end pieces" -- the ends left over that they can't reach when cutting with the electric slicer.
-Allow plenty of time to compare prices and find those hidden specials. This may involve complex calculations like dividing the price by the quantity, so take a calculator!
-When shopping look on the lower shelves for cheaper alternatives. The least expensive items are usually the least convenient to reach!
Patricia also has this very good tip. "I've found that the plastic supermarket vegetable bags work very well in the microwave and for storing leftovers in the fridge."
The vegetable bags are the very thin but very strong plastic bags you will find on a roll in the supermarket vegetable area. Very handy.
Vicky from Wellington has this bathroom cleaner recipe. "White vinegar mixed with baking soda.
"Rub it on water spots on a shower door, leave for a few minutes then wipe clean. Far more effective than anything else I've ever bought!"
Don't forget to send your money-saving tips to share with the oily rag community by visiting www.oilyrag.co.nz or by writing to Living Off the Smell of an Oily Rag, PO Box 984, Whangarei.