Your Cheapskates Club Newsletter 14:18
In this Newsletter
1. Cath's Corner
2. In the Tip Store - MOO Fabric Softener; MOO Fabric Whitener; MOO Cleaning Wipes
3. Share Your Tips
4. On the Menu - Mum’s Meatloaf
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - The Rule of Half
6. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
7. Last Week's Question - Frugal birthday cake substitutes for school needed
8. This Week's Question - Mortgage v Work v Wedding Dilemma - please help!
9. Ask Cath
10. Join the Cheapskates Club
11. Frequently Asked Questions
12. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
Welcome to this week's newsletter, it's full of great ideas to save you money, time and energy.
Remember, if you've just subscribed to our weekly newsletter, or you've misplaced an older one, they are archived on our website, ready for you to read at any time.
Happy Cheapskating,
Cath
PS: Love our site? We love referrals! Send a note to your favourite newspapers, magazines, radio stations, TV stations, friends and relatives, and tell them about us!
2. From The Tip Store
MOO Fabric Softener
This MOO fabric softener is not only cheap, it's gentle on your clothes and won't clog up your washing machine like commercial fabric softeners do.
Ingredients:
2 cups white vinegar
2 cups bicarb soda
4 cups water
Method:
Combine vinegar and bicarb SLOWLY over sink, add water, and pour into a plastic bottle. Shake gently. Shake well before each use.
To use: Add 1/4 cup of softener per wash.
MOO Fabric Whitener
Use this solution to whiten and brighten tea towels, face washers, tablecloths, t-shirts. It works really well, and costs less than 2 cents per batch - so much cheaper than a traditional soaker.
Ingredients:
2 teaspoons bicarb soda
1/2 bucket cold water
To use:
Mix water and bicarb soda. Soak items for 30 minutes. Wash as normal and hang in sun to dry.
MOO Cleaning Wipes
You will need:
1 round baby wipe container*
1 roll of paper towels**
2-4 cups cleaning solution (see the recipes below)
Recycle a used round baby wipe container. Cut a roll of paper towel in half, (an electric or serrated knife works best for this). Remove the centre cardboard. Place half of the paper towels in the baby wipe container. Pour cleaning solution into the container. (The amount will depend of the absorbency of your paper towels.) Pull the first paper towel out of the centre of the roll, through the hole in the container lid. If the paper towels dry out before they are all used, add more solution or some water. These can be used for window cleaner, all-purpose cleaner, or disinfectant cleaner.
*If you don't have a baby wipe container, you can use a round plastic container and just drill or punch a large hole in the centre of the lid.
**It is best to use expensive, thick paper towels. The cheap ones won't hold up to scrubbing.
For Face/Hand Wipes:
2 tablespoons liquid baby bath
2 cups water
For Bathroom Wipes:
1/2 cup pine cleaner
2 cups water
For Window Wipes:
1 cup methylated spirits
1-1/2 cups water
There are currently more than 12,000 great tips in the Tip Store
3. Submit Your Tip
The Cheapskate's Club website is over 3,000 pages of money saving hints, tips and ideas. Let's get together and make the Cheapskates Club Australia's largest online hint, tip and idea library. Share your favourite money saving, time saving or energy saving hint and be in the running to win a one-year membership to The Cheapskate Club. We publish a Winning Tip each Thursday, so enter your great money, time or energy saving idea now.
Share your favourite hint or tip that saves money, time and energy and be in the running to win a one-year subscription to The Cheapskate Journal.
Remember, you have to be in it to win it!
Submit your tip
4. On the Menu
Meatloaf
Meatloaf has a bad rep, and it can be just as bad as it can be good. It is still a tasty meal, and a good one for the budget too. I make my Mum's recipe, it reminds me of home and Mum, and is just as good cold as it is hot.
Mum’s Meatloaf
Ingredients:
600g mince beef
1 grated carrot
2 tsp marmite
1 tbsp chopped parsley
1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
3 tbsp tomato sauce
1 tsp mustard
1 egg lightly beaten
1 cup grated cheese
Method:
Combine all ingredients in a bowl, mixing well. Place mixture in foil lined loaf tin. Blend together a little extra tomato sauce and mustard and spread over meat loaf. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 190 degrees for 45 – 50 minutes.
Notes: I check the meatloaf after about 20 minutes, and very carefully drain any excess fat/grease/oil out of the tin, then continue the cooking. The finished meatloaf isn't as greasy when it's cold, making it much nicer to eat on a sandwich or with a salad.
I've also used chicken mince and a mixture of beef and sausage mince, depending on what I have in the freezer when I'm making meatloaf.
This week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Chicken
Monday: Sausage Wellingtons, mushroom gravy
Tuesday: Saturday Night Sour Cream Pasta Bake, salad
Wednesday: Meatloaf & vegetables
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Singapore noodles
Saturday: Homemade veggie burgers
In the fruit bowl: Bananas
In the cake tin: Scones
There are over 1,600 other great money saving meal ideas in the Recipe File.
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge
Good morning everyone, I hope you all enjoyed a lovely Easter break and didn't overdose too much on the chocolate and hot cross buns.
This week I'd like to talk about The Rule of Half, and how it helped me way back in those dark days after Disaster Struck, and how even now, in 2018, when our income has improved vastly, it helps us to stick to a minimal grocery budget without depriving ourselves of groceries we need, like or want.
I dilute just about everything!
Why?
Because most things can be diluted up to half and still give the same excellent results.
Case in point dishwashing detergent. I buy the Tandil Ultra Dishwashing Detergent from Aldi. I buy six bottles a year and dilute each bottle 50:50 with cool water, giving me twelve bottles for the price of six - enough to last a year.
I add 500 grams of bicarb soda to the dishwashing powder to stretch it. That 1.5 kilos of powder then does at least 60 washes (two level teaspoons per load, and yes I measure it, there is a spoon in the detergent container). I only need to buy six boxes of dishwasher powder a year, saving $7.20 (I buy Savings brand dishwasher powder from Coles - and it's back in stock after being off the shelves for a few months).
Shampoo and conditioner are diluted 50:50 with water and then dispensed with a pump - one pump for short hair, two pumps for long hair. They both do the job they are meant too do, at half the cost. A little tip from a hairdresser friend of mine: make sure your hair is thoroughly soaked through before shampooing and you won't need to use as much and it will do a better job. Ditto the conditioner, and remember to rinse properly between each treatment.
I also “dilute” groceries: I use half the quantity of mince in a recipe and bulk it out with either rolled oats, TVP, rice or grated vegetables; I add MOO stock to dilute soup; I add milk to salad dressing and mayonnaise; I add breadcrumbs to grated cheese in a recipe; there are so many ways you can stretch your groceries when you get creative.
Baking is diluted too. Biscuits are no more than two teaspoons of dough, rolled and flattened. I use the smaller cutter to make scones. When I make a slice, it is cut into 3cm squares; that gives me 15 pieces from one slice tray, three more serves than most recipes give.
Diluting groceries saves a lot of money, and no, it's not being mean. It is frowned upon by manufacturers and grocers. I've been told in person that they don't like me sharing the Rule of Half - that's fine, they're not living on my grocery budget and they absolutely hate the $300 a Month Grocery Challenge. If they were they'd be diluting too - and loving it just as much as I do.
If I dilute something and it isn't just as good then I don't bother again. But I always try because I just love getting double the groceries for half the cost.
Do you practice the rule of half? What do you dilute? Are there somethings you just won't dilute?
The $300 a Month Food Challenge
The Post that Started it All
6. Cheapskates Buzz
Most popular forum posts this week
How do I Clean a Handbag?
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3737-How-do-I-Clean-a-Handbag
Be Strong and Say No More Often
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3728-Be-Strong-and-Say-No-More-Often
Question: What are Your Financial Goals?
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3693-Question-What-are-your-financial-goals
Most popular blog posts this week
The Frugal Habits of the World's Richest Man
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2011/04/frugal-habits-of-worlds-richest-man.html
Free for All
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2012/02/free-for-all.html
Banana Hot Dogs
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2014/05/banana-hot-dogs.html
7. Last Week's Question
Last week's question was from Michelle who asked
"My daughter is in Prep and has a birthday coming up. At kinder we could take ice blocks instead of birthday cake, but her school has a "no food" policy for birthdays because of food allergies etc. She wants to take something to celebrate with her classmates and teacher but with 26 in the class I need some really cheap, fun ideas please."
Paula Davis answered
My grandies take a special book from home to be read to the whole class. My littlies love it.
Chris Peachey answered
The Reject Shop has a kit for cutting different shapes or use small cookie cutters. Watermelon, strawberries, apple, kiwi fruit, small berries etc. are great options. Just remember to cut the point off the stick once the threading is done.
Kate Bradshaw answered
Kmart has a great range of cheap 'gifts' that could be handed out - the sort of things that would go into a loot bag after a party. Packs of erasers, crayons, miniature toys can be split into gifts that work out very economical when calculated per child.
Noeline Rowsell answered
Why don't you make some pinwheels? Really simple and cheap. Spend some fun time together making pinwheels for everyone. Craft paper, brads and strong plastic straws are all you need. You can make it a project for home and the kids will enjoy playing with them in the playground.
Peta Fowler answered
Raid your local resource recycling centre for reusable coffee cups that your daughter could decorate (probably with goodies from the same place). You may also be able to get some tissue paper, small fairy bags or wrapping paper. Now for the fun bit. Wander around your garden, visit people you know who have lovely flowers or veggies in their garden. Wrap all the seeds up, put the cups together and voila you have a living, loving garden to give to everyone. It is cheap, economical, ecological (you'll be saving products from going into waste) and a lot of fun!
10. This Week's Question
HD writes
"My fiancé and I have a 1-year old baby, a very large mortgage that we are paying interest only on and about 5k left on our car loan. My fiancé is paid about 55k and I'm not back at work yet due to mental health reasons. We will be moving sometime next year interstate and have booked our wedding for NYE this year. I've sent out the save the dates to our 130 guests, but we really expected to be on a higher wage by now, and we thought I would be back to work as well. I have no idea how to make a wedding work when we are barely getting by as it is. Do we just sell our house and get a rental that is cheaper than our mortgage interest payments? If I hadn't already sent the save the dates I would decrease the guest list, but propriety is so important to me, I just can't un-invite someone."
Do you have the answer?
If you can help HD let us know. We'll enter your answer into our Tip of the Week competition, with a one-year membership to the Cheapskates Club as the prize too.
Send your answer
11. Ask Cath
We have lots of resources to help you as you live the Cheapskates way but if you didn't find the answer to your question in our extensive archives please just drop me a note with your question.
I read and answer all questions, either in an email to you, in my weekly newsletter, the monthly Journal or by creating blog posts and other resources to help you (and other Cheapskaters).
Ask Your Question
12. Join the Cheapskates Club
For just 10 cents a day you can join the Cheapskates Club and get exclusive access to the Cheapskate Journal, the monthly e-journal that shows you how to cut the costs of everyday living and still have fun.
Joining the Cheapskates Club gives you 24/7 access to the Members Centre with 1000's of money saving tips and articles.
Click here to join the Cheapskates Club today!
13. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. Members can update their email address or any other details by clicking on "Edit Profile" directly under their membership number after they have logged in to the Member's Centre. Subscribers to our free newsletter can use the Change Your Address form (under Customer Service in the menu) and fill it out. Once you've filled it in click the send button and we'll do the rest. Please remember to include your old email address so we can find it in the list as well as the new one.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
When you login to the Member's Centre you will be told how many days of membership you have left once you have 30 days left. Just click on the link to renew and your membership will just continue on, uninterrupted.
What will you do with my email address?
We never rent, trade or sell our email list to anyone for any reason whatsoever. You'll never get an unsolicited email from a stranger as a result of joining this list.
How Did You Get on Our List?
You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member
14. Contact Details
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
Contact Cheapskates
1. Cath's Corner
2. In the Tip Store - MOO Fabric Softener; MOO Fabric Whitener; MOO Cleaning Wipes
3. Share Your Tips
4. On the Menu - Mum’s Meatloaf
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - The Rule of Half
6. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
7. Last Week's Question - Frugal birthday cake substitutes for school needed
8. This Week's Question - Mortgage v Work v Wedding Dilemma - please help!
9. Ask Cath
10. Join the Cheapskates Club
11. Frequently Asked Questions
12. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
Welcome to this week's newsletter, it's full of great ideas to save you money, time and energy.
Remember, if you've just subscribed to our weekly newsletter, or you've misplaced an older one, they are archived on our website, ready for you to read at any time.
Happy Cheapskating,
Cath
PS: Love our site? We love referrals! Send a note to your favourite newspapers, magazines, radio stations, TV stations, friends and relatives, and tell them about us!
2. From The Tip Store
MOO Fabric Softener
This MOO fabric softener is not only cheap, it's gentle on your clothes and won't clog up your washing machine like commercial fabric softeners do.
Ingredients:
2 cups white vinegar
2 cups bicarb soda
4 cups water
Method:
Combine vinegar and bicarb SLOWLY over sink, add water, and pour into a plastic bottle. Shake gently. Shake well before each use.
To use: Add 1/4 cup of softener per wash.
MOO Fabric Whitener
Use this solution to whiten and brighten tea towels, face washers, tablecloths, t-shirts. It works really well, and costs less than 2 cents per batch - so much cheaper than a traditional soaker.
Ingredients:
2 teaspoons bicarb soda
1/2 bucket cold water
To use:
Mix water and bicarb soda. Soak items for 30 minutes. Wash as normal and hang in sun to dry.
MOO Cleaning Wipes
You will need:
1 round baby wipe container*
1 roll of paper towels**
2-4 cups cleaning solution (see the recipes below)
Recycle a used round baby wipe container. Cut a roll of paper towel in half, (an electric or serrated knife works best for this). Remove the centre cardboard. Place half of the paper towels in the baby wipe container. Pour cleaning solution into the container. (The amount will depend of the absorbency of your paper towels.) Pull the first paper towel out of the centre of the roll, through the hole in the container lid. If the paper towels dry out before they are all used, add more solution or some water. These can be used for window cleaner, all-purpose cleaner, or disinfectant cleaner.
*If you don't have a baby wipe container, you can use a round plastic container and just drill or punch a large hole in the centre of the lid.
**It is best to use expensive, thick paper towels. The cheap ones won't hold up to scrubbing.
For Face/Hand Wipes:
2 tablespoons liquid baby bath
2 cups water
For Bathroom Wipes:
1/2 cup pine cleaner
2 cups water
For Window Wipes:
1 cup methylated spirits
1-1/2 cups water
There are currently more than 12,000 great tips in the Tip Store
3. Submit Your Tip
The Cheapskate's Club website is over 3,000 pages of money saving hints, tips and ideas. Let's get together and make the Cheapskates Club Australia's largest online hint, tip and idea library. Share your favourite money saving, time saving or energy saving hint and be in the running to win a one-year membership to The Cheapskate Club. We publish a Winning Tip each Thursday, so enter your great money, time or energy saving idea now.
Share your favourite hint or tip that saves money, time and energy and be in the running to win a one-year subscription to The Cheapskate Journal.
Remember, you have to be in it to win it!
Submit your tip
4. On the Menu
Meatloaf
Meatloaf has a bad rep, and it can be just as bad as it can be good. It is still a tasty meal, and a good one for the budget too. I make my Mum's recipe, it reminds me of home and Mum, and is just as good cold as it is hot.
Mum’s Meatloaf
Ingredients:
600g mince beef
1 grated carrot
2 tsp marmite
1 tbsp chopped parsley
1 cup fresh breadcrumbs
3 tbsp tomato sauce
1 tsp mustard
1 egg lightly beaten
1 cup grated cheese
Method:
Combine all ingredients in a bowl, mixing well. Place mixture in foil lined loaf tin. Blend together a little extra tomato sauce and mustard and spread over meat loaf. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake in a pre-heated oven at 190 degrees for 45 – 50 minutes.
Notes: I check the meatloaf after about 20 minutes, and very carefully drain any excess fat/grease/oil out of the tin, then continue the cooking. The finished meatloaf isn't as greasy when it's cold, making it much nicer to eat on a sandwich or with a salad.
I've also used chicken mince and a mixture of beef and sausage mince, depending on what I have in the freezer when I'm making meatloaf.
This week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Chicken
Monday: Sausage Wellingtons, mushroom gravy
Tuesday: Saturday Night Sour Cream Pasta Bake, salad
Wednesday: Meatloaf & vegetables
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Singapore noodles
Saturday: Homemade veggie burgers
In the fruit bowl: Bananas
In the cake tin: Scones
There are over 1,600 other great money saving meal ideas in the Recipe File.
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge
Good morning everyone, I hope you all enjoyed a lovely Easter break and didn't overdose too much on the chocolate and hot cross buns.
This week I'd like to talk about The Rule of Half, and how it helped me way back in those dark days after Disaster Struck, and how even now, in 2018, when our income has improved vastly, it helps us to stick to a minimal grocery budget without depriving ourselves of groceries we need, like or want.
I dilute just about everything!
Why?
Because most things can be diluted up to half and still give the same excellent results.
Case in point dishwashing detergent. I buy the Tandil Ultra Dishwashing Detergent from Aldi. I buy six bottles a year and dilute each bottle 50:50 with cool water, giving me twelve bottles for the price of six - enough to last a year.
I add 500 grams of bicarb soda to the dishwashing powder to stretch it. That 1.5 kilos of powder then does at least 60 washes (two level teaspoons per load, and yes I measure it, there is a spoon in the detergent container). I only need to buy six boxes of dishwasher powder a year, saving $7.20 (I buy Savings brand dishwasher powder from Coles - and it's back in stock after being off the shelves for a few months).
Shampoo and conditioner are diluted 50:50 with water and then dispensed with a pump - one pump for short hair, two pumps for long hair. They both do the job they are meant too do, at half the cost. A little tip from a hairdresser friend of mine: make sure your hair is thoroughly soaked through before shampooing and you won't need to use as much and it will do a better job. Ditto the conditioner, and remember to rinse properly between each treatment.
I also “dilute” groceries: I use half the quantity of mince in a recipe and bulk it out with either rolled oats, TVP, rice or grated vegetables; I add MOO stock to dilute soup; I add milk to salad dressing and mayonnaise; I add breadcrumbs to grated cheese in a recipe; there are so many ways you can stretch your groceries when you get creative.
Baking is diluted too. Biscuits are no more than two teaspoons of dough, rolled and flattened. I use the smaller cutter to make scones. When I make a slice, it is cut into 3cm squares; that gives me 15 pieces from one slice tray, three more serves than most recipes give.
Diluting groceries saves a lot of money, and no, it's not being mean. It is frowned upon by manufacturers and grocers. I've been told in person that they don't like me sharing the Rule of Half - that's fine, they're not living on my grocery budget and they absolutely hate the $300 a Month Grocery Challenge. If they were they'd be diluting too - and loving it just as much as I do.
If I dilute something and it isn't just as good then I don't bother again. But I always try because I just love getting double the groceries for half the cost.
Do you practice the rule of half? What do you dilute? Are there somethings you just won't dilute?
The $300 a Month Food Challenge
The Post that Started it All
6. Cheapskates Buzz
Most popular forum posts this week
How do I Clean a Handbag?
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3737-How-do-I-Clean-a-Handbag
Be Strong and Say No More Often
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3728-Be-Strong-and-Say-No-More-Often
Question: What are Your Financial Goals?
http://www.cheapskatesclub.com.au/memberforum/showthread.php?3693-Question-What-are-your-financial-goals
Most popular blog posts this week
The Frugal Habits of the World's Richest Man
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2011/04/frugal-habits-of-worlds-richest-man.html
Free for All
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2012/02/free-for-all.html
Banana Hot Dogs
http://www.debtfreecashedupandlaughing.com.au/2014/05/banana-hot-dogs.html
7. Last Week's Question
Last week's question was from Michelle who asked
"My daughter is in Prep and has a birthday coming up. At kinder we could take ice blocks instead of birthday cake, but her school has a "no food" policy for birthdays because of food allergies etc. She wants to take something to celebrate with her classmates and teacher but with 26 in the class I need some really cheap, fun ideas please."
Paula Davis answered
My grandies take a special book from home to be read to the whole class. My littlies love it.
Chris Peachey answered
The Reject Shop has a kit for cutting different shapes or use small cookie cutters. Watermelon, strawberries, apple, kiwi fruit, small berries etc. are great options. Just remember to cut the point off the stick once the threading is done.
Kate Bradshaw answered
Kmart has a great range of cheap 'gifts' that could be handed out - the sort of things that would go into a loot bag after a party. Packs of erasers, crayons, miniature toys can be split into gifts that work out very economical when calculated per child.
Noeline Rowsell answered
Why don't you make some pinwheels? Really simple and cheap. Spend some fun time together making pinwheels for everyone. Craft paper, brads and strong plastic straws are all you need. You can make it a project for home and the kids will enjoy playing with them in the playground.
Peta Fowler answered
Raid your local resource recycling centre for reusable coffee cups that your daughter could decorate (probably with goodies from the same place). You may also be able to get some tissue paper, small fairy bags or wrapping paper. Now for the fun bit. Wander around your garden, visit people you know who have lovely flowers or veggies in their garden. Wrap all the seeds up, put the cups together and voila you have a living, loving garden to give to everyone. It is cheap, economical, ecological (you'll be saving products from going into waste) and a lot of fun!
10. This Week's Question
HD writes
"My fiancé and I have a 1-year old baby, a very large mortgage that we are paying interest only on and about 5k left on our car loan. My fiancé is paid about 55k and I'm not back at work yet due to mental health reasons. We will be moving sometime next year interstate and have booked our wedding for NYE this year. I've sent out the save the dates to our 130 guests, but we really expected to be on a higher wage by now, and we thought I would be back to work as well. I have no idea how to make a wedding work when we are barely getting by as it is. Do we just sell our house and get a rental that is cheaper than our mortgage interest payments? If I hadn't already sent the save the dates I would decrease the guest list, but propriety is so important to me, I just can't un-invite someone."
Do you have the answer?
If you can help HD let us know. We'll enter your answer into our Tip of the Week competition, with a one-year membership to the Cheapskates Club as the prize too.
Send your answer
11. Ask Cath
We have lots of resources to help you as you live the Cheapskates way but if you didn't find the answer to your question in our extensive archives please just drop me a note with your question.
I read and answer all questions, either in an email to you, in my weekly newsletter, the monthly Journal or by creating blog posts and other resources to help you (and other Cheapskaters).
Ask Your Question
12. Join the Cheapskates Club
For just 10 cents a day you can join the Cheapskates Club and get exclusive access to the Cheapskate Journal, the monthly e-journal that shows you how to cut the costs of everyday living and still have fun.
Joining the Cheapskates Club gives you 24/7 access to the Members Centre with 1000's of money saving tips and articles.
Click here to join the Cheapskates Club today!
13. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. Members can update their email address or any other details by clicking on "Edit Profile" directly under their membership number after they have logged in to the Member's Centre. Subscribers to our free newsletter can use the Change Your Address form (under Customer Service in the menu) and fill it out. Once you've filled it in click the send button and we'll do the rest. Please remember to include your old email address so we can find it in the list as well as the new one.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
When you login to the Member's Centre you will be told how many days of membership you have left once you have 30 days left. Just click on the link to renew and your membership will just continue on, uninterrupted.
What will you do with my email address?
We never rent, trade or sell our email list to anyone for any reason whatsoever. You'll never get an unsolicited email from a stranger as a result of joining this list.
How Did You Get on Our List?
You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member
14. Contact Details
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
Contact Cheapskates