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Edwin wrote:You are correct about the rising costs of food. We spend more and get less than we did just a few years ago. Our daughter takes her calculator to the store and adds the price of everything she puts in the cart. We have a granddaughter living with us, and her mother allows us about $200.00/month for food money, so now we take the calculator, and that is my job to add up the groceries, so that we don't over spend before we get to the cash register.
Between our daughter and us we raise a large garden and that helps. We are still eating things that came out of that garden, and they are much better than what you buy from the store. I think it is the goat/cow/chicken manure that does the trick! No, I don't know, but it is good food. Then our daughter milks a cow and some goats, and I do that when she is gone, otherwise she won't let us help her with her chores. She used to follow me around when she was a little gal, while I did the chores, and now the roles have reversed. I drink more milk than anyone here, and eat more eggs as well, and Carol, I, and our granddaughter use more milk and eggs than their family does, so I contribute money for feed for these animal, and our daughter does the work, and we get all the produce from them we want, and that is really wonderful. She has to operate here as a business in order to keep her land in open space, and so that helps too. It was part of my great grandfather's homestead, and land our family donated to the school district so that they could hold school here for many years. Now the school has returned that land to our family, and my mother sold this property to our kids. It is 40 acres, and our kids invited us to live by them, so we are in a double wide about 600 feet or so from their house.
I also eat a lot of Adam's Old Fashioned Peanut butter, honey, and I drink milk with that, and I think that helps keep me healthy as well. We don't like all the things they do to our food before it goes to the grocery store, but what can a person do? We eat a lot of oatmeal, rasins and milk. Carol is a diabetic, so we do limit the amount of white refined sugar that we eat. We also try to use whole wheat flour as well. We get the wheat from our neighbors and grind our own flour. I try to stay away from the doctor as much as I can. You know if you go to see the doctor he/she is going to tell you that you have something wrong with you, and you need medications. I don't take medications for anything, not pain, not headaches, not flue. If it would become necessary I would take them, but I believe most people are over medicated and that causes them troubles as well. My wife, Carol, takes lots of medications, but she has to for her diabetes. She also takes something for depression, which is hard for me to understand, but I have never suffered with depression.![]()
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chaychay644 wrote:Edwin wrote:You are correct about the rising costs of food. We spend more and get less than we did just a few years ago. Our daughter takes her calculator to the store and adds the price of everything she puts in the cart. We have a granddaughter living with us, and her mother allows us about $200.00/month for food money, so now we take the calculator, and that is my job to add up the groceries, so that we don't over spend before we get to the cash register.
Between our daughter and us we raise a large garden and that helps. We are still eating things that came out of that garden, and they are much better than what you buy from the store. I think it is the goat/cow/chicken manure that does the trick! No, I don't know, but it is good food. Then our daughter milks a cow and some goats, and I do that when she is gone, otherwise she won't let us help her with her chores. She used to follow me around when she was a little gal, while I did the chores, and now the roles have reversed. I drink more milk than anyone here, and eat more eggs as well, and Carol, I, and our granddaughter use more milk and eggs than their family does, so I contribute money for feed for these animal, and our daughter does the work, and we get all the produce from them we want, and that is really wonderful. She has to operate here as a business in order to keep her land in open space, and so that helps too. It was part of my great grandfather's homestead, and land our family donated to the school district so that they could hold school here for many years. Now the school has returned that land to our family, and my mother sold this property to our kids. It is 40 acres, and our kids invited us to live by them, so we are in a double wide about 600 feet or so from their house.
I also eat a lot of Adam's Old Fashioned Peanut butter, honey, and I drink milk with that, and I think that helps keep me healthy as well. We don't like all the things they do to our food before it goes to the grocery store, but what can a person do? We eat a lot of oatmeal, rasins and milk. Carol is a diabetic, so we do limit the amount of white refined sugar that we eat. We also try to use whole wheat flour as well. We get the wheat from our neighbors and grind our own flour. I try to stay away from the doctor as much as I can. You know if you go to see the doctor he/she is going to tell you that you have something wrong with you, and you need medications. I don't take medications for anything, not pain, not headaches, not flue. If it would become necessary I would take them, but I believe most people are over medicated and that causes them troubles as well. My wife, Carol, takes lots of medications, but she has to for her diabetes. She also takes something for depression, which is hard for me to understand, but I have never suffered with depression.![]()
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it really saves a lot of money to have garden just like what you have..and the foods are totally safe compared to the one we buy at the store wherein they are all processed foods...
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