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Guarding filing cabinets? haha
Just went for a trip, nothing amazing but found some cool knick knacks and handmade clay stuff. Also found a cool old liqueur decanter bottle from a local distillery. Only spent $6.50 all up and got 6 different items, so I’m pretty happy.
Also found a cool metal engraved shot glass, not sure what it’s made out of, looks like brass or copper.
04/09/2017 at 11:15 pm in reply to: Scavenger Life Episode 305: The Biggest Transfer of Wealth in Human History #16319Copying my stats over from my intro thread π
Number of items in store: 214
Items Sold: 14
Avg Selling Price: $20.33
Total Sales: $284
Highest Item: $99 ACDC CD. Found it on the shelf from my mumβs old collection. Most were selling on ebay for around $20 but I had the original Australian release with collectorβs edition poster π Very happy with that one.I’ve been meaning to check out auctions, really the only thing holding me back is the fact I’m a huge introvert….. but I definitely intend on going.
Goal for this week is to get at least to 300 items in the store, but im hoping to get to 350.
Ah that’s interesting those fees do sound very similar. Slight differences but nothing noteworthy, we pay slightly higher insertion and get slightly lower final value fees.
We also cook most of our meals. Most of the time we cook in bulk and freeze portions. We have a chest freezer we keep all our cooked meals in. It’s good when we’re too busy working and want to just microwave an easy meal. We also preserve our own fruits and veg. We have a dryer and we dehydrate fruit like apple. We also always have leafy greans growing so we never pay for salad ingredients. For anyone living frugal thats my tip, grow a pot of lettuce or chard and never buy salad leaves again.
We’ve only just begun but our main places to scavenge are thrift stores (op shops) or yard sales (garage sales). We can normally find some really nice clothing if we take the time. I picked up 4 italian suit jackets, 6 nice pairs of womens jeans, a pikachu backpack and a cool Santa Maria glass with this cool effect that makes it look shattered for $12 all up just a couple of days ago π It can be harder to find the deals as the bigger stores will actually price quite high, but the smaller op shops in more rural communities or run by churches or local schools, tend to have high quality donations. Yard sales are always good because most of the time people are just trying to avoid having to pay to get their rubbish removed (it can cost $100 to dump a trailer of rubbish!) so normally you can talk them down to a couple of bucks for a box of stuff.
We don’t have the history here though, our nation isn’t that old so coming across cool historical antiques is more rare here. Still very possible to find lots and lots of good stuff
Haha. No this is good, this is what I need to do and haven’t done yet. The truth is I don’t need $4,000 per month. Was just a nice pipe dream goal π But I should take the time to see what i actually do NEED rather than want….So quick breakdown of approx costs per month
Mortgage: $1,200
Car Registration: $180
Water: $100
Electricity: $30
Gas: $10
Phone: $60
Fuel: $140
Insurances: $200 (includes health, mortgage protect).
Groceries: $300Which brings me to about $2,200, so nowhere near the $4,000 per month mark. That’s also assuming we lived every single week like we’re broke (baked beans for dinner anyone? :P)
Now I’m not sure what the ebay fees are over there, but so far from what we’ve sold, we’re finding that about 20-25% of our gross is going towards ebay fees and that’s without starting to delve into paypal fees, tax costs or stock costs. I figure if we earn $1,000 gross we’re only going to see around $750-800, or $3000-3200 per month.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop.
Oh damn, I feel like a total idiot… this whole time I was saying my mortgage was $2,400 a month I had my maths wrong.. it’s $1,200… quite a DRAMATIC difference hey! haha. You’ll have to forgive me, I can be a scatterbrain sometimes π
I don’t think it’ll happen, but I certainly won’t be mad if my house is worth $2 million in 20 years time π
We also contend with the way tax bracketing works here and what it meant for the previous generation. We’re I guess what you’d call young (both 28). We have a thing here called negative gearing, not sure if it happens in the US. Basically the baby boomer generation was able to buy up a lot of investment properties to put on the rental market. Their taxes then made it so that any losses they made from rent they’d receive as a complete tax writeoff. So we ended up with basically an entire generation hogging all the properties and sitting on them, as there was pretty much zero risk to becoming a property investor back then.
Wouldn’t be fair to blame one thing though really, is kind of one of those perfect storms that all came together to drive prices through the roof over the last 20 years.
Also if you’re curious here’s our floorplan to show you what we get for that money π
http://i.imgur.com/SuaIz6u.png
Of course we do our measurements in metric, if you convert to feet our total floor space is about 1,100 square feet.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop. Reason: typo
Part of it comes down to the way housing investment taxes work, as well as a huge housing investment boom from our neighbouring Asian countries, especially China. Very popular place for people to buy investment properties, which drives up the prices for people just wanting a roof over their heads unfortunately.
Our house isn’t anything fancy, basic 1 story 4 bedroom 2 bath. We did manage to get quite a nice garden though π We get quite a lot of American property television shows here and I’ve seen way bigger houses than ours sell for less than $200,000 over there, but I’ve also seen smaller sell for higher, so you’re right area plays a big part.
Just for funs, here’s my boy Harvey chilling out the back enjoying the sunshine

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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop.
Haha we actually have a mortgage that’s on the lower end here in oz. Our house is worth just north of $400,000 and we were lucky enough to have a pretty hefty deposit which meant we borrowed less than $300,000. For an example, if we wanted to rent a house similar to the one we live in, we’d be looking at over $350 a week and probably closer to 400-450 realistically. We actually have one of the lowest repayments out of anyone we know, either paying their own mortgages or renting.
We live in one of the cheaper states in the country too, over in Sydney 1 bedroom units will sell for millions it’s crazy.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop.
Actually this might make for a fun discussion for the difference between Australia and USA. Basically, our living expenses are WAY higher than you guys. You guys probably can’t imagine having to pay $3.20 for a can of coke π But it’s normally offset by the fact that we have a higher wage, when I was working Security I was a minimum wage worker and was getting $19 an hour, plus penalty rates for after 6pm and weekends. On a Sunday I’d earn close to $40 an hour.
Unfortunately this means I have to sell a whole lot more to cover expenses and from what I’ve found, what people will pay for second hand items isn’t actually that different, despite the difference in currency. A lot of the time, something you’d sell in the USA for $20 on ebay, will also sell at $20 AUD in the Australian ebay. It’s a strange thing. Luckily that same principle seems to apply to us buying stock from thrift stores (we call them op shops here, stands for opportunity store). It’s probably overall a bit more expensive but not by as much as everything else.
We spend $2400 a month just on our mortgage repayments alone π and yes, that’s a rather cheap mortgage repayment here haha. After that there’s car registrations, utilities bills, grocery bills etc. In all honesty, I could survive on less. I set that goal mainly because after taking out ebay, paypal and postage fees, that would leave me with a similar wage to before when I was working, which was just enough to keep us floating originally (we have always been fairly frugal so expenses haven’t changed a lot since then apart from travel costs to work and back)
We don’t have kids π Luckily no medical bills either, I’m not sure how it works in America but here in Australia if you’re injured while on the job, your medical bills are paid by a work cover scheme, which all employers must take part in.
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
davidbloop.
Thanks for the welcome!
Yeh we’ve been spending a lot of time trying to cut our expenses down as much as possible. When we first moved in we had solar panels installed straight away which cut the electricity from $1,500 a quarter to $95 π Big help. We also grow and preserve our own veggies to cut costs on the grocery bill.
We also bought a house out in the country a bit to make it all cheaper for us for mortgage-wise also, luckily we’re running pretty lean at the moment. Netflix get’s cancelled this month coz I setup a media centre so don’t need it anymore, cable tv went a while ago π
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This reply was modified 9 years, 1 month ago by
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