Personal Finance Roundup
Great Deals on Used Cars [Kiplinger] "Snap one up before demand pushes prices higher."
Five Money Lessons for New College Grads [Wall Street Journal] "Here are five broad financial lessons that can pay dividends for a lifetime."
Top 10 Investing Rules of Thumb [ETF Database] "Here are 10 investing rules of thumb that can help you make the most of your long-term portfolio."
10 Common Mistakes Home Sellers Make [Smart Money] "To get the best deal when selling your home, try to avoid these all-too common mistakes."
25 Ways to Eat For Free (Really): Get Free Food! [Military Finance Network] "If you are looking to get free food, here are 25 ways that you can eat for free."
— FREE MONEY FINANCE (Photo: frankieleon)
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Comments:
@ElizabethD: I thought the same thing and when I went to the website it was all about "treading lightly on the earth" and "anti consumerism"
Hippie communes.
@ElizabethD: There IS a difference. I used to work for a supermarket, and in produce, as an example, we had two modes of throwing things out. Trash went into gray cans w/bags, which got thrown in the compactor. Food stuffs, though, went into blue bins, which were then put out as soon as they were filled/every night(whichever came first). These only had food and were picked up by pig farmers/other processors to be sorted and fed to animals. So there was only food in there, and we had to powerwash them all the time when they were empty, so they didn't smell. So the food in there was actually almost no different than when it arrived in a box/sat on a shelf, at least for a few hours. In the sun outside, you would have to get it quick, if it wasn't an item w/a "shell", like citrus.
@ElizabethD: i'm surprised this is the first time you've heard of the term.
i draw the line at eating food from a dumpster, but i have no problem "repurposing" other people's trash.
when i was in college, you could get some premo furniture on student move-out day by "dumpster diving" (although most students were too lazy to actually put the furniture in the dumpster - it was often just curbside). in fact, one guy in town made a pretty lucrative business by collecting up the furniture & selling it back to students 2 weeks later (on student move-in day) from his used furniture storefront.
they caught him stealing furniture from behind goodwill one nite though. sleazeball.
In eating for free: "Forage. Look for wild growing foods."
A local preserve (Wildlife Prairie State Park, [wildlifeprairiestatepark.org] , it's awesome, you should go, there are buffalo. Roaming ones, even.) hosts an event where you go for like a one or two hour hike, foraging for native plants along the trails, and then you go back to their gourmet kitchen and learn to prepare a meal consisting primarily (but not exclusively) of the foraged foods.
It's so popular it took me three tries to enroll fast enough that my husband could take it. (No hour-long hikes for me!)
And, of course, remember it's not legal to forage everywhere or for every kind of plant.









Is that kitty pooping money? I'll deal with the allergies if I can get a cat that poops money.