Money Matters
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With summer coming to an end, we are getting ready for our oldest to return to school and getting the back to school stuff purchased. This got me thinking about which season is most expensive.
What's your most expensive season (or time of year)?
Re: Most expensive season
I would say probably fall. I have four family birthdays in October and November, as well as getting ready for the holidays. Also, H is majorly into archery hunting so September can be spendy.
Summer is probably a close second with vacation and all of the fun things we like to do.
Tell me about it - it's crazy! We're essentially expected to spend no less than $50 on his grandma for her birthday (and more for Christmas!), who usually sends H a link to whatever top or jewelry piece she's been eyeing at Macy's. It's a huge contrast to my family, who are the total opposite.
We don't have a more expensive season. For gifts we figure out how much we are going to spend for everyone for the year. Then add a little cushion for unexpected things like a wedding or wanting to send a get well gift. Then I just divide that up over 12 months and put the money away until it's needed.
For gifts, I am starting to cut back. Like for my adult nieces & one nephew in law, they just get cards for their birthdays. Also for Christmas, my niece that is married with two kids, I get them family gifts instead of individual gifts. Like last year for christmas I got them a receipe book & molds to make their own popsicle sticks. My niece likes to go natural when possible but to buy things already made like that can be expensive. And her kids are at an age they love to help. Another year I got them a gift card for Redbox and a local grocery store so they could go & get snacks they like and do family movie nights. If it was more in my price range (and they had them closer to them) I would get them a family membership to the zoo or museums.
Ummm...all of them? lol. But seriously, I think they are all pretty evened out, just with money spent slightly differently.
For example, summer is expensive because cooling is more and I also ramp up my e-fund in case of an evacuation for an approaching hurricane. And a year when that does happen? Oh goodness, that is not cheap. Even a short 3-4 day evacuation will run over $1,000 for hotel, gas, and extra food.
In fall, we often get housing projects completed. We also go out more because it is the best time of year, weather-wise.
Winter and spring is when we tend to travel the most. Then there are gifts for Christmas, but we don't go crazy with that and probably only spend a few hundred total...and that includes the amount I spend for good deals during after-Christmas sales.
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I never thought of it either until I moved to NOLA from CA 15 years ago! And it's really random. My very first two years here, there was a mandatory evacuation each of those years. But now it has been 7-8 years since we have had one.
Typically, evacuations last 3-5 days. But then Katrina was a game changer that no one could have prepared for. My H and I had one suitcase between us...thinking we wouldn't be gone for more than a few days. We didn't come back for three months! Crazy times.
@vlagrl29, yep, I live in NOLA. We are under sea level which, unfortunately, does have its challenges. Water has to be pumped out of the city when it rains hard instead of it just flowing naturally out. But, like anywhere else, there are good and bad aspects and you just learn to live/deal with the bad. For example, in the case of hurricanes/flooding...we carry good, albeit expensive, property and flood insurance. But it does have its unique challenges and certainly isn't for everyone.
I've never lived where it snowed and, although I'm sure I'd learn to manage/drive in snow, I would have to have an exceedingly good reason to move to a colder climate because it is just not what I am used to.
Despite the area always being prone to flooding, NOLA is one of the oldest cities on the continent because of our importance as a port city. Even in the present day, we have the second largest port in the country for volume...2nd only to NYC. If your item or raw material came from South America, you can bet dollars for doughnuts it entered the US in NOLA
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"Off the beaten path" tourist tip: Wander into the Marigny area (next to the Quarter) on a weekday early in the morning (6-7AM). The air is alive with the smell of coffee! Most coffee beans come through the Port of NOLA and there are two coffee processing factories in that area.
For my personal goals of being a real estate investor, NOLA is a great place to be. Houses prices vs. rental rates are very advantageous.
Okay, I'll stop bragging on my city now
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