Frugal Friday
Nov. 22nd, 2024 06:58 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

Rule #1: this is a place for polite, friendly conversations about how to save money in difficult times. It's not a place to post news, views, rants, or emotional outbursts about the reasons why the times are difficult and saving money is necessary. Nor is it a place to use a money saving tip to smuggle in news, views, etc. I have a delete button and I'm not afraid to use it.
Rule #2: this is not a place for you to sell goods or services, period. Here again, I have a delete button and I'm not afraid to use it.
Rule #3: please give your tip a heading that explains briefly what it's about. Homemade Chicken Soup, Garden Containers, Cheap Attic Insulation, and Vinegar Cleans Windows are good examples of headings. That way people can find the things that are relevant for them. If you don't put a heading on your tip it will be deleted.
Rule #4: don't post anything that would amount to advocating criminal activity. Any such suggestions will not be put through.
With that said, have at it!
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-24 12:38 am (UTC)I became a car owner for the first time three years ago, which has been a learning curve after enjoying the bike/bus/walk lifestyle for years up until that point. Needless to say, there's a lot to learn and know about cars, but I found a good mom-and-pop mechanic shop through a personal recommendation, and they've been good to me and to all my rookie questions.
Early on I decided to stretch myself and save money by swapping my own seasonal tires. In my part of the world this is a thing you have to do twice a year, otherwise you take your chances skidding on snow all winter. Mechanics are typically booked solid with tire appointments every November and April (or thereabouts) and so doing it myself also saved the scheduling hassle.
I learned from a young lady on the farm I worked for at the time how to do this in my own driveway with a simple scissor jack and a cross wrench, which I keep in my trunk with the spare tire so that I can do it in an emergency flat situation as well. When I haul the alternate set of tires out of the basement I make sure to put them in the trunk and take them to the nearest gas station to confirm they're all adequately pressurized *before* installing them on the car.
I will echo the original poster that it is important to approach these 'stretch goals' with lots of time to think it through and pay attention to what you're doing in an unhurried, unstressed way. This week while putting on the snow tires I mistakenly applied the jack to the wrong part of the car's underside and then panicked when I saw the resulting dent, thinking I had damaged the gas tank or something. I asked my friendly and knowledgeable neighbour, who came over and confirmed that all I had done was create a bump in the floor near the back left seat, which in my immense relief I found kind of funny.
Live and learn! One day I may work up toward doing my own oil changes too.
Dylan
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-24 09:06 pm (UTC)Thanks for that story. I am way too cautious about the car. So is my husband. We are taking the ferry and driving in to town to have the tires changed at a garage. This is expensive and wasteful. I will work on this.
Maxine
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-25 02:01 am (UTC)There are a surprising number of things after that, you might watch the YT tutorial on and decide... you know, I could probably do that...
For me, that has included, replacing the distributor cap and spark plug cables, replacing the fuel filter, replacing a clutch cable. Have stopped short of trying to replace a starter or a belt tensioner by myself. I called in help for those, but still managed to avoid taking it to a mechanic -- it's also good to have friends who know about cars ;)
This week, will be troubleshooting noisy power steering... wish me luck!
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-25 02:16 pm (UTC)Thanks for this! It’s one I need to work on. Luckily my husband is good with cars so it’s not a matter of money, but I’d rather walk a hundred miles (which I have done, so I know of what I speak!) than touch the [redacted] car other anywhere other than the key and steering wheel—and barely that. It’s not practical for us to go without a vehicle these days, so I should probably suck it up and learn…but I just don’t want to!
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-25 07:49 pm (UTC)Since each of us only has so much time, it seems to me that each of us picks and chooses from a menu of frugal choices.
Re: Have the guts to try things that intimidate you
Date: 2024-11-27 03:04 pm (UTC)It took about 2 months to get my schedule and lifestyle to fit. I was already a cyclist and took the bus when my car was being worked on all the time. It was mainly a matter of scheduling.
Biking, bussing and walking were the way I commuted the last 10 years before retirement. My bike and walking route were along an old canal towpath trail and abandoned railroad track. I would tell my coworkers about the traffic jams with the deer and the ducks!
I could never go back to the costs, hassles and headaches of the "open road!