Friday OT #1 - Rubbing Pennies

This thread has reminded me of a few others. My grandpa would sit in the basement in his underwear to stay cool in the summer instead of turning the air on. My parents are not that bad but scoff at the idea of turning the A/C on below 85 or so in the house. They about died when I got frustrated with it one time and told them I don't know anyone that lets their house get above 75 and know numerous people that keep it below 70.

They also still use plastic bags and twistie ties instead of just buying ziploc bags. IF we had chocolate milk as a kid it was DIY with white milk and chocolate syrup.
 
She also refused to buy a dryer. She would hang up her laundry in the basement

My grandma held out against getting a dryer, kicking-and-screaming, for years ... I think my parents and aunts/uncles finally talked her into it when she was 80-something. She didn't think it was necessary -- considered it an extravagance. She hung it on the line outdoors unless winter weather was too extreme, then she did it in basement.
 
Another Grandma Deep Freeze story. She used to keep a 2 gallon Schwann's vanilla ice cream tub in her deep freeze, but it was full of lard for baking.

I can remember going to get cookies out of there one time with my cousin. We were maybe 8. And he pointed to the Schwann's container and said. "Don't ever try that ice cream. It's turned rotten, but Grandma won't throw it away."

I always laughed picturing how he"discovered" that information.
are we related? Because your last two stories were exactly my grandma as well.
 
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My grandma held out against getting a dryer, kicking-and-screaming, for years ... I think my parents and aunts/uncles finally talked her into it when she was 80-something. She didn't think it was necessary -- considered it an extravagance. She hung it on the line outdoors unless winter weather was too extreme, then she did it in basement.
This was our situation growing up. Nothing like grabbing your jeans after hanging in a dirt-floor basement. Stiff as a board and smells like dirt.
 
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We got "real chocolate milk" occasionally. Like, twice a year. Otherwise, it was Quik (or Hershey syrup) to regular milk .. BUT DON'T GET CARRIED AWAY AND ADD TOO MUCH!
We had the Quik option. Never Hershey's (too pricey).

The other thing was we NEVER had pre-sweetened cereals. Corn Flakes, Cheerios, Kix, Rice Krispies or Shredded Wheat (the big biscuit ones - not even sure it that's a thing now). Once in a blue moon we might get Wheaties or god-forbid, raisin bran. I can still remember my grandmother tisk tisking raisin bran. "It's cheaper to just get raisins and add them to your corn flakes."

Meanwhile our cousins had 13 different pre-sweetened cereals to pick from in their pantry. Count Chockula, Fruity Pebbles, Lucky Charms, Cocoa Krispies etc. Including my favorite Sugar Pops. "Sugar Pops are Tops!"
 
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My father was bad, but not THAT bad. And he actually loosened up as he got into senior citizen status. But I think he could literally not get pleasure from anything that was, in his mind, extravagant: because all the time he was supposed to be enjoying what he was paying for, it was eating him up on the inside because of the cost.

This is my parents, too. Can't enjoy anything if it costs more than $5, because, you know, expense!
 
Powdered milk, never got to eat state fair food always had lunch at the car while my cousins got to eat all the fair food.

I don’t remember ever going to the fair as a kid but we did go to Adventureland several times and ate packed lunches from the car instead of park food.
 
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I don't remember going back to the car to eat at the state fair but I wouldn't put it past them. On vacations we never went to restaurants while driving but instead would stop at rest stops and have lunch meat sandwiches. I believe we would eat them while at our destination as well. Almost never ate out growing up at all.

We ate out on vacations (usually for dinner) , but also did this while on the road. Its not like you're going to be eating gourmet on the road anyway. Stopping at a park or something also lets everyone get some air and stretch their legs a bit.
 
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We had the Quik option. Never Hershey's (too pricey).

The other thing was we NEVER had pre-sweetened cereals. Corn Flakes, Cheerios, Kix, Rice Krispies or Shredded Wheat (the big biscuit ones - not even sure it that's a thing now). Once in a blue moon we might get Wheaties or god-forbid, raisin bran. I can still remember my grandmother tisk tisking raisin bran. "It's cheaper to just get raisins and add them to your corn flakes."

Meanwhile our cousins had 13 different pre-sweetened cereals to pick from in their pantry. Count Chockula, Fruity Pebbles, Lucky Charms, Cocoa Krispies etc. Including my favorite Sugar Pops. "Sugar Pops are Tops!"

Same here with the cereal, but it was because my mom didn't want her kids hopped up on sugar. So Rice Krispies, Raisin Bran, Kix, regular Cheerios. I will no longer eat Honey Nut Cheerios...I've eaten my life's share already. If I want to go "sugary" as an adult, it's Golden Grahams.

And yeah, remember going to Marriott's (BEFORE Six Flags) Great America, and we'd have our lunch out at the car.
 
We had government cheese and peanut butter. Instead of rural water had a well that we had to fill from town with a tank that got pumped into our house. Wood burning furnace in basement for heat in winter and kerosene heaters. If pump didn’t work no water in our house, and at times rural electric company would come out and turn off our power cause my parents didn’t have money for power. Instead of septic my parents and grandparents rigged up pvc to drain into nearby pasture.
 
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My grandma held out against getting a dryer, kicking-and-screaming, for years ... I think my parents and aunts/uncles finally talked her into it when she was 80-something. She didn't think it was necessary -- considered it an extravagance. She hung it on the line outdoors unless winter weather was too extreme, then she did it in basement.
My mom still hangs clothes on the line…..
 
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My grandparents are paranoid about electricity use. So much so, that they always do their laundry late at night, because they are convinced they will be charged less by the electrical company. They will also unplug any electronics they aren't using (even their TVs!) and refuse to turn on their A/C in the summer, even when family is visiting. I have many memories as a kid of sleeping at their house with a box fan blowing directly on me trying to fall asleep on hot and humid summer nights.
 
My grandfather would say when company would show up at lunch time " just add some water to the soup".

He also would take his old belts and make a "new"belt for me by shortening the length and punching new holes into the leather.

We only went to Adventureland on 4-H day. That meant 1/2 price tickets and of course eating sandwiches outside the park.

We never stayed at a hotel, but would sleep at some distant relatives place on vacations. However, we had a family wedding and we actually stayed in a hotel one night for the first time - I was 15 years old.
 

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