Your Cheapskates Club Newsletter 22:21
In This Newsletter
1. Cath's Corner
2. From the Tip Store - MOO Mouse Baits; Change of Season Clothes Swap; Draught Stopper for Sliding Doors
3. Share Your Tips
4. On the Menu - Quick & Easy Chicken Curry
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - Ditch Brand Loyalties
6. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
7. The Cheapskates Club Show
8. The Weekly MOO Challenge - MOO Condensed Cream of Chicken Soup
9. 2021 Saving Revolution - To Bulk or Not to Bulk?
10. Ask A Question - Have a question? Ask it here
11. Join the Cheapskates Club
12. Frequently Asked Questions
13. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
How are you this week? As I write this, it's freezing cold, but beautifully sunny. One of those deceptive days where you look out the window and think short sleeves and light clothes. Nope. Definitely long sleeves and warm clothes - guess how I know!
It's been a frugal week here. Even with lockdown Hannah and I have managed to send a few things to new homes via marketplace and contactless pick-up. It is nice to think that things we're no longer using will stay in use, just at another home. Now though I need to slow her down, she's on a decluttering roll and I swear if I stand still long enough she'll snap a photo and I'll be gone.
Have a great week everyone.
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 Mouse Baits
If you can't get rat/mouse bait a MOO alternative is rolled oats with plaster of Paris in paper bags as bait stations. Any food that's appealing to rodents will do.
Contributed by Lisa Norris
Change of Seasons Clothes Swap
At the change of seasons I am tempted to purchase something new. This year for the second time as I unpack the winter woollies for the coming chill, we are having a clothes swap. I've found clothes I couldn't send to a goodwill store in the past can be parted with when I know a friend will love them and get a buzz from their new item. A few tips on organising a clothes swap: Invite a group that includes 2 of every size group ask them their shoe sizes if someone doesn't feel they have much to bring, ask them to bring some snacks or a bottle of wine Extend to accessories, books and even kitchenware Last time the room was full of "are you sure you really want to give THIS away?" ,"Can I really have this???" and so on. Plus it's a fun girls night and you can cross pollinate some of your groups of friends! Don't exclude pregnant women - their size may be different for a while after the birth or they may use the clothes of someone larger than them. Have a ball and come home with new free gear! Last time I got a beautiful jumper, dress, jacket & top. Even if bought at a second hand store that would have cost me$100-150, new who knows? Next one will be kids clothes, toys and books!
Contributed by Carmen
Draught Stopper for Sliding Doors
To stop draughts between the fixed window part and the sliding door, I came up with the following solution. Buy a 'Dual Draught Guard' from a 'dollar shop' for $3.50. (This item is designed to stop draughts by sliding under an interior door) It consists of two narrow 78cm pieces of foam covered and connected by a strong robust black material. To utilise this for the sliding door, I cut it down the middle of the material and then placed black stick-on Velcro dots ($2.50 a packet) along one side of the material and pressed the whole piece onto the side of the door with the rounded part keeping out the draughts. I then repeated the process with the other piece. I can now keep out the Ocean winds and also open the door easily without damaging my draught stopper. :o) It is hardly noticeable and still in use since last Winter. It can also be removed and stored during warmer months.
Contributed by Janice
Add a Tip
3. Share Your Tips
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!
Share Your Tip
4. On The Menu
This is one of those get it on the table fast meals that works for adults and children. You can add extra veggies to the dish if you wish - slivered carrot, beans, broccoli all work if you have them.
It makes great pie filling too - perfect for the pie maker now the weather is cooling down.
Quick and Easy Curried Chicken
Ingredients:
2 chicken fillets, skin off
1 tbsp oil
1 onion, diced
2 tsp curry powder (or to taste)
1 tsp grated ginger
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 tin cream of chicken soup
1 tin coconut cream
Method:
Dice the chicken. Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add the onion, curry powder, grated ginger and garlic and cook for 1 - 2 minutes until fragrant. Stir constantly so it doesn't burn. Add the diced chicken and brown. Stir in the cream of chicken soup and the tin of coconut cream. Bring to a simmer. Cook until chicken is cooked through. Serve over steamed rice. Makes six hearty serves.
Notes:
Extra portions can be frozen.
MOO Cream of Condensed Chicken soup will bring the cost down.
Coconut cream or coconut milk will work.
You can make a low fat coconut milk by mixing 1 tsp coconut essence into 1-1/2 cups low fat evaporated milk (MOO or tinned).
Coconut essence is available in the baking aisle at IGA supermarkets or direct from queen.com.au
Next week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Chicken
Monday: Kransky, potato bake
Tuesday: Spag bol
Wednesday: Curried Chicken, rice
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Pumpkin Soup
Saturday: Sausage Rolls
There are over 1,800 budget and family friendly recipes in the Cheapskates Club Recipe File, all contributed by your fellow Cheapskates, so you know they're good.
Add A Recipe
Recipe File Index
5. The $300 A Month Food Challenge
Ditch Brand Loyalties
I am not a brand snob. Flour is flour, sugar is sugar. Most basic grocery items available in Australia are excellent quality regardless of the price. I try to buy Australian owned, then Australian made when they fit within my grocery budget. There are times I'll have something on my shopping list that isn't on sale. When that happens I buy the best value brand I can find. If the cheapest brand is the store brand, then that's what we buy.
Saying you can't stick to the plan if you're not prepared to compromise is just an excuse.
Sticking to a grocery budget, no matter what it is, means you will need to compromise or risk blowing the budget. Do I like to compromise? No. Do I like going over budget because I'm stubborn? NO!
I compromise. There are only two things I won't compromise on, coffee and tea. We have particular brands that we like. We've tried other brands over the years, from expensive to generic and we don't like them. So I compromise and only buy them when they are on half-price sale and I make sure we don't waste them. That means when I make a coffee or a cup of tea, I take the time to actually enjoy it. I sit and drink it, and savour it, and appreciate it.
Anything else, well I'm prepared to try just about anything once. If we like it, yahoo! I've found something cheaper to help the grocery budget. If we don't like it, I go back to the brand/product we were using.
The point is, as I wrote at the beginning of this, flour is flour, sugar is sugar (and in Australia we don't import sugar so there's no point in paying for the brand names because you might think it a superior product).
I look at generics and store brands like this: they have to be made somewhere. If they're made in Australia, then the options are limited. Often generics and store brands are the end of runs or over-runs for the branded products, or not even that, but simply the branded product rebranded in a plain label (naked wines spring to mind).
Right now The Reject Shop has Australian made, from Australian ingredients, pasta for 50 cents per 500 gram bag. That's a great deal. I bought a packet to try and it is good. So I've been back and stocked up on spaghetti, twists and penne noodles, enough for a year for the grand total of $27; If I were a brand snob, that pasta would have cost at least $135!
Don't be brand snob, it simply costs too much.
The $300 a Month Food Challenge Forum
The Post that Started it All
6. Cheapskates Buzz
From The Article Archive
Organising Your Wardrobe
Budget Ideas for Lazy People
Keep it Clean for Cents
This Week's Hot Forum Topics
How to Put a $2.00 Coin to Work
Bread and Butter pudding for the slow cooker
The Stash
7. The Cheapskates Club Show
Join Cath and Hannah live Tuesdays on You Tube at 7.30pm AET
Join us live on YouTube every Tuesday and see how we are living debt free, cashed up and laughing - and find out how you can too!
Show Schedule
Tuesday: Around the Kitchen Table - join Cath and Hannah for a cuppa and a chat around the kitchen table as they talk about living the Cheapskates way.
Latest Shows
1. Cath's Corner
2. From the Tip Store - MOO Mouse Baits; Change of Season Clothes Swap; Draught Stopper for Sliding Doors
3. Share Your Tips
4. On the Menu - Quick & Easy Chicken Curry
5. The $300 a Month Food Challenge - Ditch Brand Loyalties
6. Cheapskates Buzz - Cheapskaters are talking in the Forum and on Cath's blog
7. The Cheapskates Club Show
8. The Weekly MOO Challenge - MOO Condensed Cream of Chicken Soup
9. 2021 Saving Revolution - To Bulk or Not to Bulk?
10. Ask A Question - Have a question? Ask it here
11. Join the Cheapskates Club
12. Frequently Asked Questions
13. Contact Details
1. Cath's Corner
Hello Cheapskaters,
How are you this week? As I write this, it's freezing cold, but beautifully sunny. One of those deceptive days where you look out the window and think short sleeves and light clothes. Nope. Definitely long sleeves and warm clothes - guess how I know!
It's been a frugal week here. Even with lockdown Hannah and I have managed to send a few things to new homes via marketplace and contactless pick-up. It is nice to think that things we're no longer using will stay in use, just at another home. Now though I need to slow her down, she's on a decluttering roll and I swear if I stand still long enough she'll snap a photo and I'll be gone.
Have a great week everyone.
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 Mouse Baits
If you can't get rat/mouse bait a MOO alternative is rolled oats with plaster of Paris in paper bags as bait stations. Any food that's appealing to rodents will do.
Contributed by Lisa Norris
Change of Seasons Clothes Swap
At the change of seasons I am tempted to purchase something new. This year for the second time as I unpack the winter woollies for the coming chill, we are having a clothes swap. I've found clothes I couldn't send to a goodwill store in the past can be parted with when I know a friend will love them and get a buzz from their new item. A few tips on organising a clothes swap: Invite a group that includes 2 of every size group ask them their shoe sizes if someone doesn't feel they have much to bring, ask them to bring some snacks or a bottle of wine Extend to accessories, books and even kitchenware Last time the room was full of "are you sure you really want to give THIS away?" ,"Can I really have this???" and so on. Plus it's a fun girls night and you can cross pollinate some of your groups of friends! Don't exclude pregnant women - their size may be different for a while after the birth or they may use the clothes of someone larger than them. Have a ball and come home with new free gear! Last time I got a beautiful jumper, dress, jacket & top. Even if bought at a second hand store that would have cost me$100-150, new who knows? Next one will be kids clothes, toys and books!
Contributed by Carmen
Draught Stopper for Sliding Doors
To stop draughts between the fixed window part and the sliding door, I came up with the following solution. Buy a 'Dual Draught Guard' from a 'dollar shop' for $3.50. (This item is designed to stop draughts by sliding under an interior door) It consists of two narrow 78cm pieces of foam covered and connected by a strong robust black material. To utilise this for the sliding door, I cut it down the middle of the material and then placed black stick-on Velcro dots ($2.50 a packet) along one side of the material and pressed the whole piece onto the side of the door with the rounded part keeping out the draughts. I then repeated the process with the other piece. I can now keep out the Ocean winds and also open the door easily without damaging my draught stopper. :o) It is hardly noticeable and still in use since last Winter. It can also be removed and stored during warmer months.
Contributed by Janice
Add a Tip
3. Share Your Tips
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!
Share Your Tip
4. On The Menu
This is one of those get it on the table fast meals that works for adults and children. You can add extra veggies to the dish if you wish - slivered carrot, beans, broccoli all work if you have them.
It makes great pie filling too - perfect for the pie maker now the weather is cooling down.
Quick and Easy Curried Chicken
Ingredients:
2 chicken fillets, skin off
1 tbsp oil
1 onion, diced
2 tsp curry powder (or to taste)
1 tsp grated ginger
1 clove garlic, crushed
1 tin cream of chicken soup
1 tin coconut cream
Method:
Dice the chicken. Heat the oil in a frying pan. Add the onion, curry powder, grated ginger and garlic and cook for 1 - 2 minutes until fragrant. Stir constantly so it doesn't burn. Add the diced chicken and brown. Stir in the cream of chicken soup and the tin of coconut cream. Bring to a simmer. Cook until chicken is cooked through. Serve over steamed rice. Makes six hearty serves.
Notes:
Extra portions can be frozen.
MOO Cream of Condensed Chicken soup will bring the cost down.
Coconut cream or coconut milk will work.
You can make a low fat coconut milk by mixing 1 tsp coconut essence into 1-1/2 cups low fat evaporated milk (MOO or tinned).
Coconut essence is available in the baking aisle at IGA supermarkets or direct from queen.com.au
Next week we will be eating:
Sunday: Roast Chicken
Monday: Kransky, potato bake
Tuesday: Spag bol
Wednesday: Curried Chicken, rice
Thursday: MOO Pizza
Friday: Pumpkin Soup
Saturday: Sausage Rolls
There are over 1,800 budget and family friendly recipes in the Cheapskates Club Recipe File, all contributed by your fellow Cheapskates, so you know they're good.
Add A Recipe
Recipe File Index
5. The $300 A Month Food Challenge
Ditch Brand Loyalties
I am not a brand snob. Flour is flour, sugar is sugar. Most basic grocery items available in Australia are excellent quality regardless of the price. I try to buy Australian owned, then Australian made when they fit within my grocery budget. There are times I'll have something on my shopping list that isn't on sale. When that happens I buy the best value brand I can find. If the cheapest brand is the store brand, then that's what we buy.
Saying you can't stick to the plan if you're not prepared to compromise is just an excuse.
Sticking to a grocery budget, no matter what it is, means you will need to compromise or risk blowing the budget. Do I like to compromise? No. Do I like going over budget because I'm stubborn? NO!
I compromise. There are only two things I won't compromise on, coffee and tea. We have particular brands that we like. We've tried other brands over the years, from expensive to generic and we don't like them. So I compromise and only buy them when they are on half-price sale and I make sure we don't waste them. That means when I make a coffee or a cup of tea, I take the time to actually enjoy it. I sit and drink it, and savour it, and appreciate it.
Anything else, well I'm prepared to try just about anything once. If we like it, yahoo! I've found something cheaper to help the grocery budget. If we don't like it, I go back to the brand/product we were using.
The point is, as I wrote at the beginning of this, flour is flour, sugar is sugar (and in Australia we don't import sugar so there's no point in paying for the brand names because you might think it a superior product).
I look at generics and store brands like this: they have to be made somewhere. If they're made in Australia, then the options are limited. Often generics and store brands are the end of runs or over-runs for the branded products, or not even that, but simply the branded product rebranded in a plain label (naked wines spring to mind).
Right now The Reject Shop has Australian made, from Australian ingredients, pasta for 50 cents per 500 gram bag. That's a great deal. I bought a packet to try and it is good. So I've been back and stocked up on spaghetti, twists and penne noodles, enough for a year for the grand total of $27; If I were a brand snob, that pasta would have cost at least $135!
Don't be brand snob, it simply costs too much.
The $300 a Month Food Challenge Forum
The Post that Started it All
6. Cheapskates Buzz
From The Article Archive
Organising Your Wardrobe
Budget Ideas for Lazy People
Keep it Clean for Cents
This Week's Hot Forum Topics
How to Put a $2.00 Coin to Work
Bread and Butter pudding for the slow cooker
The Stash
7. The Cheapskates Club Show
Join Cath and Hannah live Tuesdays on You Tube at 7.30pm AET
Join us live on YouTube every Tuesday and see how we are living debt free, cashed up and laughing - and find out how you can too!
Show Schedule
Tuesday: Around the Kitchen Table - join Cath and Hannah for a cuppa and a chat around the kitchen table as they talk about living the Cheapskates way.
Latest Shows
8. The Weekly MOO Challenge
A couple of weeks ago on our You Tube show, I was talking about stockpiles and mentioned that I use about 6 tins of cream of chicken or mushroom or celery soup and someone contacted me and asked how that was possible with the meal plans I post.
So folks, here's how it's possible: I MOO condensed cream of chicken soup. This is one of the recipes I demonstrate at MOO workshops, and it is a real eye opener for so many people. Folks, pretty much if you can buy it in a supermarket you can MOO it and tinned soups are definitely MOOable.
MOO Condensed Cream of Chicken SoupThis makes the equivalent of two tins of cream of chicken soup, much cheaper than bought and far healthier too.
Ingredients:
1-1/2 cups chicken stock (if you don't have your own, a bought stock is just fine, but adds to the cost)
1 Vegeta chicken stock cube (you can use another brand if you like, I prefer Vegeta)
1/4 tsp onion powder
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1/8 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp parsley
1/4 tsp paprika
1-1/2 cups milk
3/4 cup plain flour*
Method:
Put chicken stock, 1/2 cup milk and the seasonings in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Boil for one minute. Whisk the remaining milk and flour together until there are no lumps. Add to boiling mixture, whisking continually until mixture boils and thickens.
Yield: approximately the equivalent of two tins of Cream of Chicken soup. Freeze immediately or keep in fridge for up to 5 days. This soup mix freezes and thaws beautifully. Use to make soup or in place of tinned soup in recipes.
*I use plain wholemeal Spelt flour to make this mix. It gives it a nutty flavour. If you don't use white flour plain wholemeal works just as well.
**MOO - Make Our Own
So what is your favourite cream of chicken soup recipe? Mine is Slow Cooker Chicken and Rice Casserole, a favourite from my childhood when Mum made it in her trusty original burnt orange Crockpot
Members can get in on the fun and discussions here.
9. 2021 Saving Revolution
Lesson 21 covered buying in bulk. One of my favourite things to do, and one that can really keep a lot of money in your purse, if you buy in bulk the right way. Yes, there is a right way and a wrong way to buy in bulk!
Lesson 21 went over the four steps to buying bulk successfully, so you don't waste your money, time and energy.
Have you tried (real) bulk shopping before? Make a list of five things you need and compare the prices at your regular supermarket and then at bulk outlet. Just remember to check the unit price. That figure will show you very quickly the item price and you'll see straight away whether or not you'll save money.
Log into the 2021 Saving Revolution forum and join the discussions too. They're fun, keep you accountable, and over the course of the year will be an amazing source of valuable hints and tips for you too.
10. This Week's Question
Let's talk meat! It seems it's all we want to talk about these days - how much it costs, shortages, how to stretch it, how to cook it, how to preserve it.
This week I would really like you to share your best tips for buying meat for less and/or how you stretch it so you can stay on budget and still feed the carnivores in the family.
If you have a great tip or idea let us know. We'll enter your answer into the Tip Store and the Tip of the Week competition, with a one-year membership to the Cheapskates Club as the prize too.
Share your tip here
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
11. Join The Cheapskates Club
For just $25 a year, 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!
12. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name at the top of the page to go straight to your profile page where you can update your details, change your password and find your subscription details.
Not a Cheapskates Club member? Then please use the Changing Details form found here to update your email address.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
Memberships are active for one year from the date of joining. You will be sent a renewal reminder before your subscription is due to renew. You can also find your membership expiry date on your profile page.
When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name to go straight to your profile page where you can will find your join date and your expiry date.
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 I get on this list?
The only way you can get onto our newsletter mailing list is to subscribe yourself. You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member.
13. Contact Cheapskates
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
PO Box 5077 Studfield Vic 3152
Contact Cheapskates
A couple of weeks ago on our You Tube show, I was talking about stockpiles and mentioned that I use about 6 tins of cream of chicken or mushroom or celery soup and someone contacted me and asked how that was possible with the meal plans I post.
So folks, here's how it's possible: I MOO condensed cream of chicken soup. This is one of the recipes I demonstrate at MOO workshops, and it is a real eye opener for so many people. Folks, pretty much if you can buy it in a supermarket you can MOO it and tinned soups are definitely MOOable.
MOO Condensed Cream of Chicken SoupThis makes the equivalent of two tins of cream of chicken soup, much cheaper than bought and far healthier too.
Ingredients:
1-1/2 cups chicken stock (if you don't have your own, a bought stock is just fine, but adds to the cost)
1 Vegeta chicken stock cube (you can use another brand if you like, I prefer Vegeta)
1/4 tsp onion powder
1/4 tsp garlic powder
1/8 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp parsley
1/4 tsp paprika
1-1/2 cups milk
3/4 cup plain flour*
Method:
Put chicken stock, 1/2 cup milk and the seasonings in a medium saucepan and bring to a boil. Boil for one minute. Whisk the remaining milk and flour together until there are no lumps. Add to boiling mixture, whisking continually until mixture boils and thickens.
Yield: approximately the equivalent of two tins of Cream of Chicken soup. Freeze immediately or keep in fridge for up to 5 days. This soup mix freezes and thaws beautifully. Use to make soup or in place of tinned soup in recipes.
*I use plain wholemeal Spelt flour to make this mix. It gives it a nutty flavour. If you don't use white flour plain wholemeal works just as well.
**MOO - Make Our Own
So what is your favourite cream of chicken soup recipe? Mine is Slow Cooker Chicken and Rice Casserole, a favourite from my childhood when Mum made it in her trusty original burnt orange Crockpot
Members can get in on the fun and discussions here.
9. 2021 Saving Revolution
Lesson 21 covered buying in bulk. One of my favourite things to do, and one that can really keep a lot of money in your purse, if you buy in bulk the right way. Yes, there is a right way and a wrong way to buy in bulk!
Lesson 21 went over the four steps to buying bulk successfully, so you don't waste your money, time and energy.
Have you tried (real) bulk shopping before? Make a list of five things you need and compare the prices at your regular supermarket and then at bulk outlet. Just remember to check the unit price. That figure will show you very quickly the item price and you'll see straight away whether or not you'll save money.
Log into the 2021 Saving Revolution forum and join the discussions too. They're fun, keep you accountable, and over the course of the year will be an amazing source of valuable hints and tips for you too.
10. This Week's Question
Let's talk meat! It seems it's all we want to talk about these days - how much it costs, shortages, how to stretch it, how to cook it, how to preserve it.
This week I would really like you to share your best tips for buying meat for less and/or how you stretch it so you can stay on budget and still feed the carnivores in the family.
If you have a great tip or idea let us know. We'll enter your answer into the Tip Store and the Tip of the Week competition, with a one-year membership to the Cheapskates Club as the prize too.
Share your tip here
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
11. Join The Cheapskates Club
For just $25 a year, 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!
12. Frequently Asked Questions
How do I change my email address?
This one is easy. When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name at the top of the page to go straight to your profile page where you can update your details, change your password and find your subscription details.
Not a Cheapskates Club member? Then please use the Changing Details form found here to update your email address.
How do I know when my membership should be renewed?
Memberships are active for one year from the date of joining. You will be sent a renewal reminder before your subscription is due to renew. You can also find your membership expiry date on your profile page.
When you login to the Member's Centre just click on your name to go straight to your profile page where you can will find your join date and your expiry date.
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 I get on this list?
The only way you can get onto our newsletter mailing list is to subscribe yourself. You signed up to receive our Free Newsletter at our Cheapskates Club Web site or are a Platinum Cheapskates Club member.
13. Contact Cheapskates
The Cheapskates Club -
Showing you how to live life
debt free, cashed up and laughing!
PO Box 5077 Studfield Vic 3152
Contact Cheapskates