What interesting things low spending people do, that others know nothing about?

13 points by evolve2k 13 hours ago

A question on the home page is concerned with a similar question but for wealthy people. I’m interested in things low income and low spending folk do that others engaged in ordinary commerce maybe barely do or better yet never think to do of know anything about.

Keen to hear your stories. Sometimes the best things in life are free.

evolve2k 13 hours ago

Friends of mine really like spending time outdoors in nature, hiking trails, finding nice spots to just sit and be in nature.

Interestingly for me, they often carry a hammock with them and when they find the most beautiful of spots, they tie it up across a couple trees and just hang out. Once they had it slung across two trees at the water’s edge and hung there above a lovely creek. They picked it up second hand, and there no cost to head out in nature with it week after week.

thinkcontext 12 hours ago

I'm in a food buying club with a few dozen others. We mostly buy staples in bulk from distributors and divide things up. We'll get things like 50 pound bags of rice, 5 gallons of oil, etc. A side benefit is less plastic waste since everyone bring their own containers. An even better side benefit is that acquaintances become friends.

  • satvikpendem 5 hours ago

    You are your own Costco, smart idea, bulk discounts too.

  • hcwilk 11 hours ago

    Love this idea! Does the group coordinate manually or is there an app/service that helps organize this for people near you?

    • thinkcontext 9 hours ago

      Manually. Its an old group, it predates widespread use of email. Nowadays it uses Google Sheets to coordinate.

  • HenryBemis 5 hours ago

    I'm doing this with apple picking once a year. 10-12 of us go to pick apples, we pay for the wholesale price, and have fun while at it. We each end up with 10-15kg of apples, gives us a fun day out in 'nature' (we're mostly goofing around than working).

ednite 13 hours ago

Oh, this is such a great topic for a frugal person like me. Sure, I’ll occasionally splurge on a gadget I probably don’t need, "For Research", but most of the time, I try to live simply and frugally.

I try to DIY everything. In my head, every piece of hardware, broken furniture, or random screw has a future use. My default mindset is always repair before replacing. And even if I can’t fix something, I’ll go on a mission to find some other way to use it and look for a used replacement. I don’t know if that’s a good or bad trait, but I do know it drives my wife a little nuts at times!

Still, I take pride in being the guy with the only 20-year-old Toyota on the street, rust patches and all.

  • potholereseller 8 hours ago

    >In my head, every piece of hardware, broken furniture, or random screw has a future use.

    For me, this mentality has lead to a sort of hoarding, in which everything I own has a potential future use, but little of it has been used, even after years of being in my possession. This is partly due to the fact that the quantity physically obscures many of the items and I forget that I own them. It is also because many of the items have near-zero use-value; I can imagine a use for almost anything; I can only actually use a small fraction of that.

    Recently, I have been aggressively throwing away possessions; if I see it and I can't remember using it (or I have replaced it with something I use more frequently), then I throw that thing in the trash ASAP. I don't care how much it's worth; space, time, and labor; every possession has mental load.

giantg2 an hour ago

There are usually tons of free or low cost things on Craigslist or FB Marketplace. Some of the stuff you could even flip for a profit if it's not useful for you.

  • AStonesThrow an hour ago

    Do you actually engage in this practice, or are you just spitballing from the sidelines, based on what you've read?

    Because most people can relate horror stories of finding some janky "free" listing and they show up to the place and it's not as-described, and often gets weird. Or, they list something for "free" or cheap, and a stream of takers comes by, and again, gets super-weird because they don't seem to understand/care about the "seller" terms.

    Perhaps there are "pickers" with a temperament for sorting through the dross and finding diamonds in the rough, but most of the "free stuff" seems to be like "come pick up this white elephant we can't be arsed to transport", and I can see a lot of wasted weekends and occupied storage space just holding crap.

    I brought it up with my mom again yesterday -- she said her best friend's granddaughters love to "go thrifting" but thrift stores just ain't what they used to be. Due to Antiques Roadshow and eBay and Etsy and retail arbitration and American Pickers, every thrift store and "free stuff deal" is picked clean by some professional, before an amateur can put his boots on.

harryquach 13 hours ago

Utilize your local public library. Reading is a great hobby and can be done for free at any local library.

  • dyingkneepad 12 hours ago

    Well, my local library has not only books, but also video-games, movies, series, board games, toys, pressure washers, popcorn machines, parachutes (!!!) and even a chess club.

    • andrei_says_ 11 hours ago

      And magazines, via Libby. Like the New Yorker, the week, and many others.

    • tocs3 11 hours ago

      several local libraries near me also have "maker spaces" with 3D printers,laser cutters, and other DIY stuff.

austin-cheney 7 hours ago

I wrote my own media application to generate a media player with static playlist for the browser with dynamic sorting and filtering so that I can play media on my phone from a media server I own instead of paying for streaming.

I drive way across town to go to a wholesale grocery stores to buy produce in bulk. This is what I look forward to on the weekends. I have to pass nearly a dozen supermarkets to get there, but its worth it. I can typically get a 30 pound box of tomatoes for $19. Sometimes I can get 40 pound box of bananas for $20 or less. I can sometimes get a giant 10 pound wheel of Brie from France for $7 or a 40 pound wheel of Asiago for $19. Last week they were selling 12 6-packs of flour tortillas for $1 and 40 pounds of high quality dog food for $29.

I have a tiny yard, but I also have multiple fruit trees. I get several dozens pounds of grapes off one grapevine (pink Iona) and this year expect to get thousands of figs off my large fig tree (florea) and several dozen persimmons. For my persimmon tree I ordered a mini-chocolate persimmon, which is like an Asian Hachiya persimmons that are just a little larger than American persimmons with deep brown fruit, but immediately after I planted it the tree genetically divested a second trunk producing American persimmon leaves and American persimmon fruit. Next year I am also hoping for dozens of pounds of cherries off a Lapins Cherry tree. We also in the past grown cabbage and broccoli, but by far the most productive salad crop is okra.

I bought my second Kia Soul for $17,000 and still drive it 8 years later. I have never had a mechanical failure on it. I am on my third battery and only gone through a flat tire once. I don't need any security package because it is a manual transmission, and of course who wants to steal an old Kia Soul?

bjourne 6 hours ago

You can dilute soap and shampo (if you have regular men's hair) 3:1 with water and it will still work fine.

gcheong 5 hours ago

Look up what's available under the local Parks & Recreation department. They often have cheap classes and activities, local pool schedules, park info, etc.

zippyman55 12 hours ago

I started volunteering at the local food bank. There are no restrictions on who can use the service. Some of the food availability is pretty good. I could see a $100 a week savings if I used the service.

chistev 12 hours ago

They make a budget and stick to it.

tocs3 12 hours ago

- Grocery shopping.

- Ride public transportation.

- Everyday sorts of maintenance (Home/auto).

They are not necessarily "interesting" but I (a low spending person) hove done, enjoyed, and gained from these activities.

zoowhomint 13 hours ago

Some of my most innovative workarounds in life have come about as a result of the handicap of having to spend less money. Keen to hear similar stories from others here.

babyent 11 hours ago

I don’t spend much money on clothes. But bulk cotton t shirts in grey and dark grey. Three pairs of jeans.

Lasts me forever. Presentable for all occasions

  • WalterGR 10 hours ago

    What brand of jeans? Every pair of new jeans I buy wear out within a year. Even Levi’s.

    • giantg2 an hour ago

      Depends on what you're doing with the jeans. I've never worn my normal jeans out I'm just a year. I also only wash them if they smell or are visibly dirty. If I'm doing something particularly messy or rough, I use my older jeans. It's similar to the old wisdom that two pairs of boots used together will last longer than two pairs consecutively, because you can "rest" the wet ones which puts less wear on them.

      Someone else mentioned Carhart. I have some Duluth cool max pants that are also highly durable.

    • perilunar an hour ago

      Dry your clothes on a line instead of a clothes dryer and they'll last twice as long.

    • tocs3 4 hours ago

      I was wearing out jeans in a month or less and started buying Carhartt pants and it was much better. If I was working as much on my knees as I used to I would also try sewing patches on the knees.

    • zolotorevich 6 hours ago

      try military grade pants, they're expensive, but last forever. U can find them in casual, more civilian appearance, even jeans-like.

HenryBemis 5 hours ago

There are thousands of _great_ books on gutenberg.org (classics, ancient Romans/Greeks, etc.). You can read for 100 lifetimes and spend 0 on (e)books

I got a laptop that I bought in 2015 and I took care of it nicely so it works great! I got my phone (new) from a pawnshop, for a fraction of its real price.

Cycling to work (to save on tickets (I don't use a 'monthly card') and squeeze in a 20km bicycle round-trip to work)