Cheapskates Corner

We "temporarily" went down to one car during covid. We figured at some point we would have to buy a second vehicle again, in reality once we made the adjustments to a single vehicle we realized we could get by with one. When I drive to work I drop my wife off and pick her up, then we mix in transit, adjust/coordinate schedules, shop local, motorcycle, bicycle.... This saves us easily 7K a year after taxes, WELL above 10K before taxes. Be it payments, depreciation, TVM, repairs, consumables, insurance etc.

We were convinced we needed two, turns out we didn't once we forced the situation and adjusted--I bet this is the case for many.
We did the same when I switched jobs and gave up a company truck. Figured we'd give it a go and see. In the summer it's painless when I can just take the bike if there's an overlap, but there are occasional pinch points in the winter. Uber/taxis sort that out, though, and it's amazing how many of those trips are covered just by deleting insurance on a second vehicle...
 
I often buy less than premium roasts and steaks and cook it peasant style , in a Dutch oven with vegetables and a tomato sauce . Slow cookers take a crap twenty buck roast to a better place .


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I changed the Telluride to winter tires a week ago (great timing BTW), saves me $70 + also allows me to check out rotors and pads to see where they are in the wear cycle.

Kia told at at 89,000 km that my original front brakes were toast and needed to be changed. At that time I questioned how the previous check was over 7mm and 8,000 km later they're < 3mm??? Made no sense and said I'd think about it and get back to them. Desk guy then shared a harrowing story about pads worn so severely the calipers were ground away and ruined, so don't wait too long...............

Have checked pads several times since 89,000 and last week, at 110,000 km, the pads are 4 or 5 mm, rotors still smooth and lots of life left. So, aside from saving $70 twice a year changing out tires it also gives me an opportunity to avoid early and costly brake jobs
 
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Yeah….. Toyota told me my rear brakes needed a cleanup , looked like they had gotten wet . Tacoma TRD Pro , their premium off-road truck had gotten wet …. At eighteen thousand Kms


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I'm retiring (hopefully) in two years so I'll be 60 at that time...plan to buy a new car then (I'll probably only have 80,000 km or so on a 2013 Elantra GT by then) so will I need one, no, but should I splurge/spoil myself, yeah :D we really only use hubby's truck on weekends and most of the summer months when we're both off so we'll probably go down to one vehicle at that point too...depending on whether we go with a motorhome to travel around or not, will determine what we end up getting...
 
We often cruise the meat isle early mornings to look for discounted near expiry deals. Zehrs will mark stuff at 50% off and the others like Sobeys will do a dollar amount or 30% off etc.

Beef, we grab what we can. Other stuff we are selective. Chuck it into the freezer and take it out when needed. Whatever I can do to afford more bike parts!
 
Not sure if the math works out now but quite a few years ago if you didn’t drive for a living and your commute was reasonable it worked out cheaper to take a cab and rent when needed otherwise rather than own a car. I suspect with gas prices that's not quite true these days but prices of new cars may also offset that.
 
We got rid of cable tv many years ago. We watch Netflix on an extended membership with one of the kids.
The only time I miss it is during world Junior Hockey tournament at Christmas time. Best hockey ever, with tomorrow’s stars shinning so brightly and before pro sports crushes the soul of the game.
 
We got rid of cable tv many years ago. We watch Netflix on an extended membership with one of the kids.
The only time I miss it is during world Junior Hockey tournament at Christmas time. Best hockey ever, with tomorrow’s stars shinning so brightly and before pro sports crushes the soul of the game.

Cord cutters here as well.

Saving a lot of money, but the live sports is the hardest loss. Olympics and tennis are the big ones for my wife. We tried doing the TSN and CBC sports subscription for the month(s) those are on and suspending it after the event is over, but the interface is clunky, video quality is hit-and-miss, and CBC Gem still makes you watch commercials *EVEN* after paying for the service.

Dislike. :mad:
 
Cord cutters here as well.

Saving a lot of money, but the live sports is the hardest loss. Olympics and tennis are the big ones for my wife. We tried doing the TSN and CBC sports subscription for the month(s) those are on and suspending it after the event is over, but the interface is clunky, video quality is hit-and-miss, and CBC Gem still makes you watch commercials *EVEN* after paying for the service.

Dislike. :mad:
I found Olympic coverage on Prime was pretty good if you have that.
 
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