Archive for December 12th, 2008

Super Savings: CVS & Krogers

Quite awhile ago I did some posts about my CVS and/or Krogers shopping trips. I thought it would be appropriate to bring these posts back again as part of the Surviving on One Income series.

First up is CVS…

I haven’t shopped at CVS in a couple of months because we haven’t needed anything. However our stockpile is getting low and I wanted to start again. This week was perfect because the larger ECB (CVS money) items were something I could use – chocolate and laundry detergent. :)

Because I haven’t shopped at CVS in awhile, I didn’t have any ECBs to use initially. I purchased the above items in 3 transactions, starting with the deal that would give me the most ECBs.

Transaction #1: Buy $20 worth of Hershey’s candy, get $10 ECBs
3 bags Hershey’s Miniatures (18.5 oz each)
3 bags Hershey’s Bliss (9.6 oz each)
1 Reese’s Christmas Tree (needed this as filler because my total came to $19.50!)
Total before coupons: $20
Coupons used:
$1.50 off 3 bags of Hershey’s holiday candy
$2.50 off 2 bags of Hershey’s Bliss
$1 off Hershey’s Bliss (CVS coupon)
Total after coupons: $15 plus $10 ECB earned
Since this was my first transaction, I paid $15.57 out of pocket (OOP)

Transaction #2:
1 Tide original, 100 0z
1 Duracell AA battery, 4 pack
Total before coupons: $15
Coupons used:
75 cents off Duracell
I wish I had a Tide coupon, but couldn’t find any. :(
Total after coupons: $14.25 plus $5 ECB earned
I paid with $10 ECB from transaction #1 and $4.55 OOP

Transaction #3:
1 Always pantiliner
1 Colgate toothpaste (6.4 oz)
1 Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups (8.5 oz)
Total before coupons: $7
75 cents off Colgate
$1 off Colgate (This CVS coupon printed at the bottom of my 1st transaction receipt.)
Total after coupons: $5.25
I paid with $5 ECB from transaction #2 and 27 cents OOP

I didn’t think through Transaction #3 as well as I should have. I forgot to deduct my original Colgate coupon, and my total was too short to use the $5 ECB. I grabbed the bag of candy and used the extra Colgate coupon too. If I had planned better, I would have added something practical like shampoo. But chocolate is always good. :)

So all total, I spent $20.38 OOP for 7 bags of candy, laundry detergent (average retail price is $12), toothpaste, pantiliners and batteries. According to my receipt, I saved $42.17. And while the manager was ringing up my transactions, he commented that this was the smart way to shop. :) He also told me that if I didn’t get back to the store before my ECBs expired, I could still use them as long as they weren’t horribly out of date. (That made my day since we don’t travel that way very often.)

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Next up is Krogers…

I love Krogers for two reasons – they double coupons and allow e-saver coupons (the kind you put on your shopper’s card).

Oh, and the best reason? You can get free and really cheap food! Honest!

On this trip, I scored the following free items:

  • 2 – 8 oz containers of Daisy sour cream
  • 1 – Betty Crocker pouch potato (with 5 cents overage)

I scored the following really cheap items:

  • 3 – Fleischman Yeast 3 packs for 10 cents each
  • 1 – Swiss Miss hot chocolate 10 oz box for 45 cents
  • 1 – Pillsbury Crescent roll dough for 27 cents
  • 1 – Pillsbury Crescent roll dough for 77 cents

Besides some basic fruit and veggies, I purchased diet coke ($1), bread (88 cents – $1 loaf), spaghetti sauce ($1 jar), Kraft shredded cheese ($2), Creamette pasta ($1), Dole canned fruit ($1), Gatorade ($1), OJ, Velveeta, turkey lunchmeat, refrigerated pie crust, Lipton tea bags, and parmesan cheese.

(That might sound like a bizarre list but the only meat I need to purchase is chicken since our farm supplies us with beef, pork, and venison. Plus our freezer and the farm cellar house are well stocked with corn, potatoes, onions, green beans, jellies, and more.)

Before coupons were deducted, my total was $99.36. After coupons? $79.60

By purchasing sale items and using coupons, I saved $51.52.

This trip finished stocking our pantry and freezer so I probably won’t return to the grocery store until mid-January except for a few basics like orange juice and a couple of fresh veggies.

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A Laundry Room Visit

So I thought you’d like to see what’s been happening in our laundry room. You’re in for a treat!

When the temperatures started dropping low at night, we allowed the puppies (oldest is 8 months, youngest is 4 months) to come inside, but only as far as the laundry room.

Unfortunately, they loved this luxury and are now making it a habit. Not that we as their humans have anything to do with the habit! :) So here’s what goes on…

Spot, the GIANT puppy, always goes to the old flannel sheet first. (By the way, I honestly think Spot’s going to be as big as horse. He’s only 4 months old! What a beast!)

Then Sadie, a miniature collie mix, decides she wants the sheet. And somehow, even though she’s considerably smaller than Spot, he gives it to her. Spot’s the “baby” (a GIANT one) of the pack so maybe that has something to do with it. That’s Mandy at the bottom trying to decide if the camera was something she should howl at or not.

Isn’t Sadie precious? She’s my ever energetic baby who’s already been through a lot in her 5 months including being run over by a car.

Mandy, the beagle, is the queen of the dog bed. Being able to spend the night inside has mellowed her temperament some…which is a good thing. :)

Innocently sleeping… They are generally very quiet at night. I love how Spot has his paw on Sadie. Sadie was sooo excited to have a playmate when Spot arrived on the farm back in September. Oh wait, Sadie gets excited about everything…

For lack of chew toys, and not wanting a hole chewed in my walls, they have an old dustpan to chew on. I think I’ll give them some rawhides for Christmas, but for now, the dustpan will do. Plus it’s teaching them to share – something Mandy wasn’t very good at, but seems to do okay with now.

Look at that GIANT mouth! Even though Spot looks like a big dog, he still has puppy teeth, which cracks me up because he’s so big with these itty bitty tiny teeth.

And occasionally, the dustpan just isn’t as much fun and they must chew on each other. We laugh when we hear them squealing and yipping because we know they’re having fun. Having the pups in at night also helps us learn their different barks and noises so when they’re outside we know the “important” barks to respond too.

So what’s going on in your laundry room?

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Review: Engaging Father Christmas

This week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Engaging Father Christmas (FaithWords, October 30, 2008) by Robin Jones Gunn

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Miranda Carson can’t wait to return to England for Christmas and to be with her boyfriend, Ian. She has spent a lifetime yearning for a place to call home, and she’s sure Carlton Heath will be it, especially when a hinted-at engagement ring slips into the conversation.

But Miranda’s high hopes for a jolly Christmas with the small circle of people she has come to love are toppled when Ian’s father is hospitalized and the matriarch of the Whitcombe family withholds her blessing from Miranda. Questions run rampant in Miranda’s mind about whether she really belongs in this cheery corner of the world. Then, when her true identity threatens all her relationships in unanticipated ways, Miranda is certain all is lost.

And yet…maybe Father Christmas has special gifts in store for her after all.

If you would like to read the first chapter of Engaging Father Christmas, go HERE

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
Robin grew up in Orange County, California and has lived in all kinds of interesting places, including Reno and Hawai’i.

She and her husband currently live near Portland, Oregon and have been married for 30 years. They spent their first 22 years of marriage working together in youth ministry, and enjoying life with their son and daughter who are now both grown.

As a frequent speaker at local and international events, one of Robin’s favorite topics is how God is the Relentless Lover and we are His first love. She delights in telling stories of how God uses fiction to change lives.

Robin is the recipient of the Christy Award, the Mt. Hermon Pacesetter Award, the Sherwood E. Wirt Award and is a Gold Medallion Finalist. She also serves on the Board of Directors for Media Associates International and the Board of Directors for Jerry Jenkins’ Christian Writers’ Guild.

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