Hello dear friends! Firstly, I want to thank all of you that sent me get-well wishes. I am getting better, but it is going a lot slower than I had hoped. I am one of those sorts of people that thinks I can by force of will to get better. Nope. Ha! BTW, I went to the emergency room with an extreme pain in my side and thought perhaps it was my gallbladder or appendix. I was concerned because my son had appendicitis and his pain wasn't in the usual place. By the time the doctors figured it out, it started to turn to gangrene. So I thought I should get it checked out. So off to the hospital I went. After blood tests and a CT scan, they couldn't find anything wrong with me, and since they didn't have any diagnosis, they couldn't give me anything for the pain. So I came home and while I was getting undressed I noticed a rash. Yep, shingles! My mother told me I never had the chickenpox so I thought I was immune to them and came as quite a surprise. The pain I was experiencing was nerve pain. If they only would have given me a physical exam they might have discovered it, but modern medicine is quick to use all their diagnostics instead of doing good old-fashioned doctoring. A month later I'm still suffering from nerve pain, but it is lessening and I have my good days and my bad days. I don't intend on letting the pain stop me from getting what I need and want to get done. Just have to work through it. Anyhow....
Still, I managed to get some things done. I managed to meet my goal of finishing the bottom half of a Beidermeier-style sampler I'm stitching.
The top should go much more quickly than the bottom half and I hope to finish it by the beginning of summer. Just in time to hunt down a frame for it at a garage sale. What sort of frame do you think would look good with it?I also finished knitting this fischu.
BTW, that is not a cobweb on the bottom left-hand corner, it's just some strands of my hair when I bent over to take the picture. Some people are so critical! My hair gets into everything and I'm sure I have knitted quite a few strands into my work over the years.Late Winter Jobs
February is a big month for canning here. Foods that are root cellared must be canned before they spoil, so we canned potatoes and winter squashes. We grew a lot of potatoes this past year. I also canned all the organic grass-fed beef that I wrote about in an earlier post. And we canned some dried beans. Annieh asked if I would explain how to can, but really there isn't more than I can add to what is already written in a good canning book, such as Ball's Blue book, and by studying the manual that comes with your pressure canner. For canning beans, I can them exactly (except I can mine at 10 pounds of pressure) as this lady does on YouTube. She is very knowledgeable about canning and I would recommend her channel to anyone that wants to learn how to can. Always check the information you are given on any blog or channel with the Blue Book or a canning book written by an extension office. There's a lot of very bad advice out there. Unfortunately, a lot of people are attracted to slick looking blogs and channels, rather than those that are written by actual knowledgeable and experienced people. BTW, Ran and Jamie were a major help to me in canning. They really could have done it themselves, but lack the confidence, I guess. Ran even made up a batch of cranberry catsup (recipe in the Ball Blue Book) and all I needed to do was to fill the jars. More things cleaned out of my freezer! We are getting ready for the fishing season.
The snow is melting quickly and we have begun maple sugaring. I wrote about how we do small-scale processing here.Since I didn't feel much like leaving home this past month and the weather wasn't cooperating anyhow, Jamie spent his down-time organizing and inventorying our pantry. Such a big job! I can truly say that we are well-stocked. Taking inventory is a major aid in keeping a budget. Ran is one for always wanting to buy more, but when he saw our stock list, he was finally convinced we didn't need to buy any more. We really only need to spend a few dollars a month on groceries. We prefer to eat our own fruits and vegetables that we either root cellar, freeze, dehydrate or can, rather than eat fresh fruits and vegetables from the stores during the winter. We keep a jar of seeds sprouting during the winter to get our green leafies, as well as our frozen spinach, broccoli and nettles. We start lettuce in cold frames and we collect dandelion greens and nettles as soon as they show up on the lawn. Lettuce, kale and spinach can grow late into the fall, so really there's only a few months when we don't have "fresh" fruits and vegetables. My ancestors have lived like this for centuries and they were a long-lived bunch, most living into their late 80s and 90s and quite a few centenarians. So I guess it works for us.
Ran has also started our onion seeds and sweet potato slips. It is too early to start any other seeds, as our last frost date is in late May.
Live Well Below Your Means
Ran and I sat down and made a bare bones budget. We really don't enjoy spending money just for the fun of it. It is just the way we are. Some people might look askance at some of the things we do, such as we only have the minimal Medicare (no cost to us that you are required to take when you turn 65) that only covers hospitalization and hospice. We simply do not believe in running to the doctor for every little thing. Last month I made a trip to the emergency room (why does every emergency happen on the weekend?) Anyway, I had a CT scan and blood work. The bill ended up being less than two months of the "extra" supplements. We have a fund for those sorts of things. And the hospital and labs always give us a discount because we pay promptly and they don't have to file all the paperwork. If we don't use the funds, which we rarely do, the money is put into savings. When the doctor told us we needed to start coming in twice a year, because of our age, we told him no. Ditto for the dentist. When I see the sackful of medications the average oldster is using, I really question modern medicine. A long time ago, the doctor said my cholesterol was getting up into the danger zone and suggested I might need medication. I went home and started exercising more and eating more vegan meals. Never had a problem with cholesterol since. Good food from the good earth grown by ourselves benefits our bodies, much more than anything the doctor has ever prescribed. Our philosophy is to eat what the Good Lord has provided for us.
We don't spend money on trips, dining out, or expensive hobbies I am content to sew, knit and embroider from supplies I find at thrift stores and not to be boastful, I think I make as nice of things as people that spend hundreds of dollars on their hobbies. As a matter of fact, I find it a fun challenge to use "found" supplies rather than go out and buy precisely what the project calls for. We are content to travel only within our county and the surrounding ones. Our entertainment is going to church rummage and bake sales and an occasional church supper. In the summer we like to stop at garage sales on our monthly trip to do our grocery shopping. If an estate sale is nearby, we like to go just to poke about, but we do not feel the need to buy anything. We are content to garden and sit outside and listen to the birds. We buy DVDs from the thrift store and have our favorite series that we watch sometimes for entertainment. There are some interesting channels on YouTube also. No need for cable TV.
We save on heating by using our wood stove. We do have a natural gas fired boiler for our hot water and it supplements our wood heat also. The highest bill we have ever had is $75, but in the warmer months it usually runs us $25. Every three years we buy a truckload of wood which runs around $1000. Our electric bill averages about $65 a month. We do not have a lot of electronics. We don't keep our house lit up like a Christmas tree at night.
Our water bill is $100 a month, but includes sewer and trash pick-up. Our property taxes are low because our home is small and not grand. It's about $1200 a year, but we just got a tax assessment and it is going up 20% this year. And then there's house insurance and car insurance (Michigan has the highest car insurance rates in the country) and license plates and all those other little taxes that they tax us to death for, (sigh), no one is ever truly free are they? Groceries and medical funds, etc. Anyway this is a long-winded way of saying that we figured that our bare-bones budget adds up to $950 a month that we could live on. And that is what we intend to live on this year. We intend to live well, well beneath our means. If all this seems like misery to you, I can assure you that we are truly content We live such a blessed life!
11 And that ye study to be quiet, and to do your own business, and to work with your own hands, as we commanded you;12 That ye may walk honestly toward them that are without, and that ye may have lack of nothing.
1Thessalonians 4: 11-12
I'm sharing this with you to be an encouragement. Don't let others tell you how to run your life. If you like spending money and can afford it, do it. If you enjoy extreme thriftiness ( someone once commented that they thought that term was an insult) enjoy it. Why do people feel the need to follow the crowd? Wouldn't it be a boring world if everyone thought the same? BTW, sorry about the font! Professional blogger, I am not. If these sorts of things bother you, please feel free to go elsewhere. Well, I hope this long post makes up for my absences in February. So as we bid adieu to winter and March toward spring, I hope your days are pleasant and filled with contentment and joy. It really was a beautiful winter.
Hope to see you soon!Hugs
Jane
Hi Jane! So sorry you have been ill! Shingles! I think the ER visit should be free since they didn't diagnose you!! I find the same thing, they never know what I have and I wasted my time and money. Beautiful sampler and knitting...I bet that feels good to wear, cozy and warm. Every state is different; our Medicare costs $177/month and has minimal coverage. But you then can choose an Advantage plan which is free (or can cost more if you want all the bells and whistles). So it doesn't make sense for anyone here to not get the extra plan with it.
ReplyDeleteyou are busy canning! You are so smart and hard-working. I should write down our bare essential bills. All our property taxes combined are low, not as low as yours but around $2200/year.
I don't like to spend money like when I was young. I figure I can't bring it with me in the next life, so I prefer weeding out stuff to the local thrift store. hugs, andrea
Hi Andrea! The doctor didn't even give a physical exam. If he did, he probably would have discovered the rash. My mother always told me I never had chickenpox, so it was unexpected.
DeleteYour house is much grander than ours, so I'd say that's a pretty good rate for your property tax. Our problem is we are getting a lot of those bohemian types moving into the village and they will vote yes on any millage. Painting turtles on the crosswalks? Sure! Build an atrium onto the library that no one uses? Why not! Artsy people with lots of money and no sense!
Our supplemental Medicare is $400 a month for the two of us.
I think as we get older our wants become less and we care less about the latest styles and such. Maybe because we've already "been there, seen that". I've been weeding out a lot of stuff too. What I want to know is if it will ever come to an end? I've been getting rid of things for several years now and not bringing much into the house, yet there always seems to be more to give away.
Hugs
Jane
Your pictures are lovely. Your stitching project is so sweet and pretty! I love all the frugal wisdom you shared here. It is so helpful! It sounds like a practical and peaceful way of life. I hope you feel much better soon! God bless!
ReplyDeleteIt is, Mrs. White. Hope you are feeling better.
DeleteHugs
Jane