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8 Fun, Frugal Family Activities to Enjoy This Fall

August 28, 2019 By MelissaB 1 Comment

Ah, fall. The weather becomes more comfortable, the kids are back in school, and there are plenty of activities to enjoy before the cold weather blows in. Make the most of your family time with some of these fun, frugal family activities.

Pick a Pumpkin & Carve It

fall fun at the pumpkin patch

This seems so simple, but kids love picking their own pumpkin and carving it (with help if they’re young, of course). Sure, there are some pricey pumpkin patches out there that charge an exorbitant fee, but there are also mom and pop pumpkin patches that don’t charge as much. These are the ones you’ll want to choose.

For younger kids, stop by the store and pick up the safe carving knives and consider buying a stencil to make the design element easier. Don’t forget to wash off the seeds and roast them for a yummy treat!

Enjoy a Corn Maze

Let the kids try to find their way out. Depending on the complexity of the maze and your kids’ sense of direction, you may be wandering through for a while.

Pick Apples & Make an Apple Dessert

apple picking and  pie making for frugal, fall fun

Nothing tastes better than fresh apples that you just picked in the morning. While picking apples from the orchard costs about as much as buying them at the grocery store, you’ll get the experience of picking them as well as a much better taste.

Take your apples home and make some yummy homemade apple pie or apple butter to enjoy later in the year.

Enjoy the Fall Foliage

Take a drive out to the country, preferably to a hilly or mountainous area, and just soak in Nature’s beauty. There is nothing that beats the beautiful reds, yellows, and golds of the leaves changing color.

Go on a Hike

Now that the fall temps are here, it’s a perfect time to take a hike with the family. This is a great way to get exercise and take in more of the beautiful fall leaves changing.

Go to a High School Homecoming Football Game

The local high school football game only costs a few bucks to attend, and you can cheer on the local high schoolers. Make this more fun for your kids by attending the homecoming football game. The homecoming court will be dressed in their fanciest dresses and suits, adding another element of fun to the night.

Decorate the House

frugal fall home decorations

Pull out your fall decorations and decorate the house. Or, stop by your local craft store and buy small gourds and other items to make your own wreath for the front door or table arrangement.

Attend a Fall Festival

Most towns host at least one festival in the fall, if not more, which can offer a fun, frugal way to entertain the family. Travel and Leisure has created a list of the best fall festival in each state. Is there one near you?

Fall is one of the best times of the year to get out and enjoy yourself without spending a lot of money. Enjoy one or more of these low-cost fall activities with your family.

What other frugal, fall activities would you add to this list?

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Frugality, Uncategorized Tagged With: Family activities, frugal

Is Free Money the Best Money?

October 5, 2012 By Shane Ede 7 Comments

How many of you would turn down free money?  If someone just walked up to you in the middle of the street and offered you some money?  How about if the Publishers Clearinghouse van pulled up in front of your house, and they presented you with a big ol’ check with your name on it for $5000 a week for life!?  Would you turn it down and walk away?

Not many would.  Heck, I don’t know if anyone would actually say no.  I know I probably wouldn’t.  And, if I had to guess, I’d say you wouldn’t either.  The fact of the matter is that we all like stuff for free.  Free money is great (although rare), but we hunt down free products, free trips, and anything else that someone might be giving away for free.  Some of us spend entirely too much time hunting down free.  But, is free money (or items) really the best money?

What we obtain too cheap, we esteem to lightly; it is dearness only that gives everything it’s value.

-Thomas Paine

Paine was on to something, I think.  After all, how many stories have you heard about lottery winners spending all their millions only to end up on the docket at the local bankruptcy court?  The truth, should we really think about it, is that we do assess a portion (at least) of a things value based on how much effort it took to get it.  For you and I, a nice sandwich at the corner deli might not be something of great value simply because it can be easily attained.  An hour or so of work, and a short walk down the road and there you have it.  Those starving kids in Ethiopia that our mothers were always telling us about, on the other hand, would likely value that sandwich a little higher.  It’s not every day that they have the opportunity to eat bread or meat.  They may have to work for days in order to actually afford something like that.  If they can find work.

Don’t get so carried away in your search for free money that you forget the true value of the thing.  A dollar bill still has the same value no matter the method of getting.  Or, maybe spend some time assessing the value that you have for things, and making adjustments.  Maybe it’s not the thing you want, so much as the feeling it gives.  Freedom doesn’t have a price.  Freedom is free, but you have to be unchained from your debts and you desk in order to attain it.  It’s the long battle to unchain ourselves that gives freedom it’s value, even if it’s price is free.

Shane Ede

I started this blog to share what I know and what I was learning about personal finance. Along the way I’ve met and found many blogging friends. Please feel free to connect with me on the Beating Broke accounts: Twitter and Facebook.

You can also connect with me personally at Novelnaut, Thatedeguy, Shane Ede, and my personal Twitter.

www.beatingbroke.com

Filed Under: Financial Miscellaneous, ShareMe, Uncategorized Tagged With: Debt Reduction, free money, freedom, money

Don’t Be A Fool, Focus On School

August 3, 2011 By MelissaB 19 Comments

The back to school season is upon us, and many newly graduated high school students will head off to college for the first time.  More than ever, college students feel financial pressure.  The cost of college tuition continues to rise, and a student is often forced to decide to go into student loan debt to pay for her education or to work many hours to try to pay for the tuition without going into debt.

As a former college teacher I have a few thoughts on the subject.  If a student is going to college full-time, I cannot stress enough that school should be the main focus.  If a student needs to work, he should work part-time, 10 to 20 hours a week.  Yes, there are plenty of college graduates who brag that they worked full-time and went to school full-time and did just fine.   Yet, what were their grades?

Graduated!

I routinely had students in my class who worked full-time and went to school full-time.  In this scenario, education almost always gets shortchanged.  A student cannot neglect their employment, or they will be fired.  Instead they neglect their school work and get low grades, often not even passing grades.  A good rule of thumb is that for every hour in a credit course, plan to study three hours outside the class for a liberal arts class and four hours for a science or math class.  That means a student taking a 3 credit hour rhetoric course should plan on spending 9 hours outside the classroom doing homework.  If the student is taking a 4 hour anatomy class, he should plan on spending 16 hours outside the classroom on homework.  A full load of classes can range anywhere from 12 to 18 credit hours.  Those hours represent the time spent in the classroom.  Even if all the classes are liberal arts classes, the student should still be putting in 36 to 54 hours on homework a week to obtain optimal grades.  So, be sure to take your degree options into consideration when deciding on a job. Because, unless the student doesn’t plan on sleeping, working a full-time job is too much.

There is nothing wrong with reversing the situation and working full-time to avoid taking on student loan debt.  However, the student should only commit to taking a maximum of 2 classes a semester to obtain optimal grades.

College students should accept that they can’t do it all.  Either go to school full-time and work part-time and accept that you will have to pay off debt when you graduate or work full-time and go to school part-time and accept that you will graduate debt free, but it will take longer.  If a student takes on too much and earns low or failing grades, they have ultimately just wasted their time AND money.

photo credit: ralph and jenny

MelissaB
MelissaB

Melissa is a writer and virtual assistant. She earned her Master’s from Southern Illinois University, and her Bachelor’s in English from the University of Michigan. When she’s not working, you can find her homeschooling her kids, reading a good book, or cooking. She resides in New York, where she loves the natural beauty of the area.

www.momsplans.com/

Filed Under: Education, ShareMe, Student Loans, Uncategorized Tagged With: college, college loans, education, financial aid, Student Loans

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