digital cameras

I have a love/hate relationship with digital cameras. I love ours, I love the quality of photos it takes. I love the storage capacity. I love the simple deleting process for bad shots.

But all of our photos are trapped on our computer. I rarely get prints.

Then, when I see a free prints deal like the one I posted last week, I freeze up. I’m so overwhelmed by the amount of pictures on our computer, that it’s hard to just pick 25 or 50 to get printed. Same with the photobook deals I always see. I want to do it, but sitting down and putting a few dozen pictures on a flash drive, I just never get to it.

How do you organize yours?

Hamburger Helper & schizophrenic shopping

It’s being discussed again on hcw and it’s a comment I hear quite a bit. The “I’d love to save money with coupons like you do, but we don’t eat Hamburger Helper.”

Guess what? Neither do we.

Or the “well, we don’t really eat processed foods.”

Ha ha. Yes you do. Find me something, anything, that is in today’s supermarkets that isn’t processed in some way. You can’t. I suppose you could drive up to Lancaster county and get yourself some raw milk. Barftastic.I’m not really a fan of diarrhea, so I’ll take mine pasteurized thankyouverymuch.

But I get what you’re saying. You don’t want to eat or feed your kids foods that have a lot of sodium and other preservatives in them. Neither do I. I try to strike a balance. Not going to lie, my kids eat (probably too many) spaghettios. But they also eat tons of fresh produce from the growers market too.

The Today show did a segment on what they called “Schizophrenic Shopping” this morning. I didn’t watch all of it, but the gist of it was–there’s a new trend (not new to me!) to save money on the things that aren’t important to you, so that you have extra money to splurge. Hmmm, that sounds familiar!

That’s what I try to do. These are the things, that literally, I have not paid for, in years: breakfast cereal, diapers, wipes, printer ink, paper, pens, pencils, tape, deodorant, shampoo & conditioner, hair spray & other products, razors, batteries, tampons & pads, most office supplies and crayons, baggies & ziplocs, soft drinks (Snapple, Gold Peak, Fuze, Sobe), spaghetti sauce, macaroni & cheese, lotions, body wash, facial cleansers, any home cleaning product you can think of, paper towels, napkins, toilet paper, most of my greeting cards, photo prints & photo books, granola bars, kids juice boxes, laundry detergent, fabric softener, dish detergent, dishwasher detergent, movie passes, makeup, ice cream, frozen veggies, canned soup……..and I’m sure my couponing friends will think of more items that we get for free.

So while I certainly do bargain my way to free macaroni & cheese and spaghettios, as you can see, it’s not all about the Hamburger Helper. Yes, it is very easy to find deals on the processed foods. I could build a house out of all the free Poptarts I could get this week if I wanted to. But I also scored free whole wheat bread and skim milk too. I get lots of very cheap or free yogurt.

It is possible to eat healthy and save money. Because I’m not spending $5 on a box of Cheerios, I don’t bat an eye at the fresh mozzarella at $8 per lb. I don’t want to pay $4 for a stick of deodorant, because I don’t have to. I’d rather spend that $4 on fresh cantaloupe at the growers’ market.

I’ve even gotten FREE organic vodka.

According to this article from the  Wall Street Journal, your average extreme-couponer “tend to be females under the age of 54 with college degrees and household incomes above $70,000.”

Unfortunately, the people who need to be doing this activity are not. Those folks are eating Hamburger Helper. Because sadly, that’s all they can afford.

Penny prints at Snapfish

Great time to get rid of some of those digital photos from the holidays that are lurking in your camera–

Snapfish is offering 50 digital prints for $0.50. Use the code newyear50 when you checkout. Deal ends 1/7/10, so hurry. One offer per customer and you’ll still pay shipping.

Get a best friend for Half Price!

Now that’s a bargain. In case you were unaware, Pennsylvania has a huge puppy mill problem. As a result, new, stricter laws were passed and went into effect 1/1. As a result, many of these “commercial breeders” (read: puppy mills) find themselves unable to comply and have turned in their dogs to the Lancaster Humane League. Lancaster county is home to over 10% of the state’s puppy mills.

For the month of January, they have reduced their adoption fees by half price. Due to so many turn-ins, they currently are housing over 350 dogs and are turning people away who want to turn in animals. Their website doesn’t give very many photos or bios of the animals, as the staff is just too busy actually caring for animals to be updating the website. But you can be sure they have all shapes, sizes & colors of dogs. Lots of purebreds too, since many are from the commercial breeders.

Visit their website for hours & location.