As I sat down to write my re-cap of my 2023 meals and shopping trips post, I suddenly realized that if I keep going, this will be my 15th year of blogging. 15 years! Holy cow man. But more interesting than that, I’ve also been keeping track of what we’ve spent on groceries for the past 16 years!!
Who does that? And more importantly, do I want to keep doing it?
Do I want to continue to snap a picture before I eat? Do I want to continue to upload the photos, write about it and really examine what we are eating? And continue to track our food spending? Do I want to keep doing that too?
Do YOU track what you spend on groceries each month? And if so, have you learned anything from it? Does it make you more conscious of what you’re spending in other areas of your life? Curious minds want to know.
Today is the first day of 2024!! Happy New Year everyone.
~Mavis
What We’ve Spent On Groceries For The Past 16 Years
- 2008 I spent $9,768 on groceries. An average of $814 a month.
- 2009 I spent $7,584 on groceries. An average of $632 a month.
- 2010 I spent $5,004 on groceries. An average of $417 a month.
- 2011 I spent $1,198.64 on groceries. An average of $100 a month.
- 2012 I spent $1,195.67 on groceries. An average of $100 a month.
- 2013 I spent $2192.32 on groceries. An average of $182.69 a month.
- 2014 I spent $1907.34 on groceries. An average of $158.95 a month.
- 2015 I spent $1798.07 on groceries. An average of $149.83 a month.
- 2016 I spent $2059.07 on groceries. An average of $171.59 a month.
- 2017 I spent $2275.76 on groceries. An average of 189.65 a month.
- 2018 I spent $2909.98 on groceries. An average of $242.50 a month.
- 2019 I spent $2994.71 on groceries. an average of $249.56 a month
- 2020 I spent $4785.20 on groceries and bakery treats. An average of $398.76 a month
- 2021 I spent $5500.29 on groceries and bakery treats. An average of $458.36 a month.
- 2022 I spent $1493.04 on groceries. An average of $124.42 a month
- 2023 I spent $1,624.17 on groceries. An average of $136.40 a month.
Melissa says
I enjoy your weekly grocery reports–they’re my favorite, right behind your goal posts every week. I hope you continue your blog, even if you reduce the number of times you post a week. I’ve stopped reading all but two blogs. Yours is by far my favorite!
Tracy says
Happy New Year Mavis! No I don’t track what I am spending, but we grow a lot of our veggies and my husband deer hunts so that makes up a lot of our food. I had to be really frugal when my kids were little and it has just carried over.
Linda M says
Yes, I do record what I spend. Keeps me more aware. And, yes, I very much look forward to your accounts of what you spent and bought! Also what you prepared and ate! I appreciate these accounts very much!! Please don’t stop!!!!
Lisa says
Happy New Year Mavis! I enjoy your weekly grocery posts. My sister and I do something similar. I enjoy comparing notes on grocery prices, as both she (and you) live in other parts of the country than myself. I’m always shocked at price differences. I have an abundance of fresh food near where I live…an orchard, and I have a garden of my own, so both of those help me to “fill the larder” during the growing months…a $ saver for sure!
Paula says
Yes, please keeping blogging! I love your food posts. You have done an incredible job reducing your food budget. Totally Impressed!
andrea d says
I have been keeping track for many years, too. And not just of groceries but all my spending. It really helps keep the budget under control seeing where all the money goes- and with 5 kids, now all teenagers, groceries is my high spending category 🙂 Keeping track has helped me be more thoughtful of what goes in the shopping cart- do I want to spend $3 on a loaf of bread or package of cookies when I (or the kids) can bake my own? Should I spend $3 on a seed packet once a year, or $3 per week for some spinach or lettuce?
Happy new year! Yours is one of only 2 blogs I read, and I’ve been here almost from the beginning, so I’m looking forward to seeing what you decide to share with us in the new year! Thank you!
Jen says
Your weekly grocery spending reports are typically my least favorite of your posts. I enjoy your posts about new recipes you try, but don’t really care what you’re spending on them. But, I’ve been following for most of your 15 years and have really enjoyed your blog!
Holley says
Happy New Year, Mavis!
I do not track my spending in any category. I’m just frugal. I learned the hard way how to save money (by going in debt and then digging myself out of it) and now it’s just second nature. I’m sure that if you stopped tracking your spending today you would still live the same way you have for the last 14 years. It’s totally up to you!
P.S. – I do enjoy your reports though 😉
Rebecca says
Hi, Mavis!
Long-time reader here, and I want you to know that I appreciate how you stretch both your pantry and your cold food storage to make meals. You often inspire me to dig deep and use my creativity (and that last container of whatever tucked at the back of the pantry or freezer!) instead of costly eating out.
While I recognize all of the work that goes into your blog, I also understand that you might want a little less work and a different format. If you are asking for my vote- I’d say keep the meals/grocery shopping trips posts. BUT, if that means you roll up your mat and go away for good, please do whatever makes you happy and still in this little corner of the blogosphere! Thank you!!
Kari says
Yes, I do. As other have stated, it keeps me accountable and at least working toward a goal. I have both adult and teen children living at home, as well as hosting two professional baseball players for five months out of the year. This is definitely a huge chunk of our monthly spending, and it could get out of hand very quickly if I wasn’t watching it weekly.
Your Monday posts have always been my favorite, originally for the coupon deals and thriftiness, now more for the recipes and menu ideas. I do enjoy seeing what you bought, more for inspiration than anything. However, you must do what feels right for you. Life changes, what feels important changes, and we must all adapt.
Wishing you a beautiful, blessed New Year!
Bec in the PNW says
Happy New Year, Mavis! I’m curious if you wouldn’t mind sharing which years that your kids were still at home full time. I have two feral youngsters and our grocery budget feels OOC. I always enjoy the grocery budget posts, so I hope that you’ll continue them!
Connie says
I did track all my spending for decades ( on paper). Several years ago when I decluttered every nook and cranny in our house it was tossed.
No longer track it. We don’t go crazy but in retirement eat what we want.
I don’t know why but it is interesting to me to see what others spend / cook / eat.
I enjoy hearing what foods your mother in law sends and I miss hearing about your parents. I remember posts about your mom’s Christmas gifts.
Happy New Year!
Jamie says
I have been following you for a long time. It’s fascinating to me how disciplined you are. I would say do what you want but you and your husband seem pretty well off so maybe don’t worry about grocery spending and just enjoy! I like your garden content and fun finds. Happy New Year
Rita says
Happy New Year!
I’ve been keeping a record of grocery, gas and miscellaneous expenses since 2015. It’s easy to do and fun for me. I use rewards to pay for some of my food but I do not subtract those amounts from my tally so here is what I paid since 2015..
Monthly average 2015 … $215.
2016 … $179.
2017 … $201.
2018 …$203.
2019 … $234.
2020 … $206.
2021 …$223.
2022 …$277.
2023 … $294.
In 2023, I used $363. in grocery rewards and have a couple hundred unspent. I have a garden; we fish and I only shop once a month. The monthly shopping is a huge savings for grocery, gas and the environment. The environment is my primary consideration these days.
Beverly Cluff says
You have no idea the inspiration you have given to all of us!! I have followed you for at least a decade. Thank you ❣️
Betty says
Mavis the 100 dollar challenge is what got me hooked on your blog! It definitely motivates me . I do keep track of grocery spending and find it a fun challenge. Maybe you could just continue the money spent part and drop the pics of what you cooked or bought to simplify it? Thank you for all the motivation to date !!
Margo says
I don’t keep a strict budget for groceries anymore with just the two of us at home these days. But with both of us on specialized diets and one of us with multiple food intolerances I have found avoiding a lot of processed food and making things like our gluten free breads and baked goods is not only good on the budget, but better for our health. Love your Monday posts. Hope you continue them, they really are inspirational. Happy New Year!
KC says
I don’t tightly track it anymore (time/money tradeoff point has moved for us), but every once in a while I do a look-around to see whether there are cheaper-enough (and not substantially more time consuming) ways of achieving nutritional goals, such as when it was recommended I increase my protein intake due to injury recovery and… huh, what *are* the cheapest protein sources that my GI system allows me to eat [it doesn’t like lentils or beans any more, harrumph]? Unsurprisingly, peanut butter came out on top, followed by eggs, but some of the results past there were surprising to me in cost per gram of protein!
I do find that things do tend to get a little more expensive when I’m not actively monitoring, which makes sense: if you’re not comparing costs weekly, then when the costs change, your habits are no longer optimal from a cost perspective… plus there are things we like that are not the cheapest foods. But continual monitoring and adjustment takes a lot of time/energy! (as do many methods to make things cheaper – everything from scratch, extensive gardening, etc.) So figuring out what makes sense for a particular season of life is good, and maybe it’s a Trader Joe’s season of life for you right now? 🙂
That said, it’d be interesting to see how a preponderance of Trader Joe’s either premade or semi-homemade things would compare, for a year’s worth of food for the two of you, with this year! I’d assume it’d be more expensive, but how much more expensive – 1.5x, or 2x, or 3x, or more? I don’t know! (of course, how much more expensive would partly depend on whether you went all-out on the most expensive things at TJs and ate fancy cheese all the time. But if you were eating a “regular life” sort of thing aside from occasional pickety-bits platters… I don’t know.)
Alli Aplet says
Happy New Year to you and yours Mavis. I, too, have been reading your blog almost since the beginning and you are the only blog I read. I have greatly enjoyed your sharing of all of the interesting things you do in your life and do so hope that you continue. But, you need to do what is best for you. You have been a blessing to us all!
Mary G says
I track our spending on a monthly basis and track food spending and pretty much everything else. It keeps our spending in line and makes it easier for us save up for long-term purchases as well as know what funds are available for investing.
Erin says
I track the monthly cost using a budgeting app, but I don’t track what we actually eat. I’m a very longtime reader & I wouldn’t blame you at all for paring down what you post about. I enjoy what you share, but I can’t imagine trying to remember to photograph, track & write about all of my meals. Makes me tired thinking about it!
Nancy says
I have been following for almost that long! I love your grocery/meals posts. They give me ideas plus I just enjoy reading them. And I’m always impressed with your goals posts and enjoy them too. I appreciate your blogging!! Thank you!
Happy New Year!
Sandy says
Mavis,
I love your blog and it is one of three that I check daily. My favorite posts are your yearly goal updates. If you want to stop taking photos of what you eat, then do so. Your blog is so creative — I’m sure you will find something else to fill that day’s post. I also love seeing where you and The Handsom Husband go on your dates. It’s like a travel blog for someone that may not ever get out to your neck of the woods. I’d love more tips on how to hook rugs…that is on my list of things to do this year. If you started a series on that, from soup to nuts, that would be my request.
Rosemary says
I do keep track of my grocery spending each month. I have been buying groceries for 50 years. In 1973, it cost $25.00/week for 2 people ($100.00/month). Now, I can’t seem to get it below $500.00/month. What a difference 5 decades makes!
I have several blogs and I know that writing a blog can be quite time consuming and you have been doing it for 15 years – in addition to having a garden and an Etsy shop! If you need a break – it is well deserved. If you need to change things up – go for it!
Cindy Brick says
It may get kind of boring for you… but I really enjoy your weekly grocery reports. If it gets to be too much — maybe have this every other week?
I started keeping track of our monthly expenses while we were in Michigan, taking care of my mom — and regretted I hadn’t done it sooner. For one thing, it makes doing taxes much easier. For another, it tells us specifically where the money is going — and what for. It also lets us plan to cut back the next month, if the previous month was too high. (Paying our credit cards off in full each month makes this obvious – another game-changer that we have only missed out on two or three times. I strongly believe that tithing – at least 10% to God, sometimes more, also affects our available money. Give it away — and it comes back.)
I am happy to say that since the Brick retired, some eight-plus years ago, we have kept our expenses within our income, with only a very few exceptions. That let us pay for this recent house purchase with cash — except a small home loan from our daughter (with higher interest), because the Brick didn’t want to strip out our emergency fund. (I understand his feelings on this, but probably would have done it anyways.) Soooo…. don’t underestimate the value of a monthly report for yourselves. This is year #3 1/2 for me…and I plan to keep it up.
Now I will stop bragging, and slink back into the ethernet. Frankly, I don’t care how much you spend. I’m just curious what you’re eating!
Sarah says
I enjoy your weekly updates to yearly goals I want to accomplish more than the food goal. I enjoy the gardening posts, etc. I’ve been following your blog for years. While I enjoy seeing what you eat, I’d rather you spend your time doing something you enjoy, If that’s taking pictures of your food and tracking your food spending then do it. If it’s planning your garden, giving us miscellaneous tidbits, do that. And you may consider hiring out your goal of moving all the recipes to printable format. It’d get done faster and not drag you down. Maybe someone on Fivver, etc. Here’s to a fantastic 2024!
Theresa Brooks says
Mavis, I enjoy all of your blog… and look forward to reading it each day! I live in the Great White North ( aka Canada) and our food prices are much higher than yours. You have encouraged/inspired me to double the size of my garden and try to grow new veggies. I love seeing what you’re eating and get ideas of new dishes to try with my family. Everything has been well received except for that milk cake- I loved it, rest of family not so much, all the more for me at the end of the day you have to have to do what’s right for you! I appreciate whatever you do- Thank -You
Heather says
Happy New Year Mavis and everyone! I have followed this blog for a very long time. I feel your writing and adventures are authentic. I started following for the gardening but have stayed for the recipes, adventures, Monday food diaries, DIY/remodels and keeping up on the comments from the Mavis “tribe”.
You have been sharing on-line for a long time now. While I hope you continue as I do enjoy the blog and comments – the “on-line friend” wishes you all the best with whatever you decide. Hoping for a wonderful 2024 for all of us!
Pamela Sheppard says
Yes I keep track. I started recording what I spend on groceries about 2-3 years ago.
I have a chart in a simple notebook listing totals by store for each receipt. It includes 2 stores I shop often and 2 others that I go to maybe 2 or 3 times per year.
This started out with me trying to start a grocery price book. I soon discovered I am not really the grocery price book type. I still list items in the price book part if I feel like I got a great deal… which these days isn’t very often.
Marlene says
Mavis, I found your blog about 2 years ago. I was struggling with my grocery budget, your advice and recipes have been so helpful.
Without the blog, I would probably wouldn’t have found your Etsy shop.
You are the only blog I follow, because nothing else resonates with me. 15 years is a long time, I know I would have run out of ideas and steam a long time ago.
Whatever you decide, I’m sure all of us support you.
LL HONEYWELL says
Looks like you are going to continue the blog or really disappoint the people who have commented here (me included). Love the blog and do look at it almost daily. It stays in my mailbox if I don’t get to it daily. Jealous of your garden and travels so keep the reports coming.
Linda Bick says
I enjoy each and everyone of your blog posts! Groceries, recipes, travel, crafts, hooking and anything else I missed. I’ve been a long time follower and when I share a recipe or information to a friend I always say this came from my blogger friend Mavis!
Ranae says
I really hope you keep your blog! I look forward to it daily.
Judy says
Happy New Year Mavis! I found your blog 14 yrs ago. I love it so much, it’s the only one I follow and check it daily. My favorites are the recipes you share and your yearly goals. Because of you, I started one too. It has helped me so much. I’ve felt so good about myself and my accomplishments for years now. All because of you Mavis and I thank you. Hubby and myself are fortunate and grateful for having really good pensions so after paying off our mortgage and having a good emergency fund. We decided we’ve traveled enough so now we take in rescue animals, mostly dogs. So we bought a new to us motorhome. We take them with us and just go out into Nature and fish. Now our biggest expense is buying whatever food we want and trying new recipes, mostly ethnic food now. It’s so much fun as we do it together. We also try a new restaurant once a month. We are healthy and active and are grateful that we were able to do so. We also support animal and children’s charities. In 2022 we decided to do a major home reno, by doing it ourselves. Then hubby was bitten by a rattlesnake. He was very ill for almost 3 mths. So in 2023 we started again. Going well but slowly. In August we were involved in a car accident. I’ve been driving since I was 17 and I’m 63 now. It was my first accident. I tried to not hit a deer and slammed into a rock wall driving the Trans Canada Highway. Husband broke his leg and had two surgeries. Unfortunately, I broke my neck, 3 ribs and a wrist. We were both in the same hospital but not together. He was in for 1 month. I was in for almost 3. We both still have terrible pain and I can only move two fingers on my left hand. But we can both walk and are back home, together and with all our animals. So I would miss your blog. But in this life you have to do what makes you happy, whatever it is. It can change and be gone in an instant. Your readers are fantastic, so many people that are all the same in so many ways. Because of you we were all brought together. We will understand and support whatever your decisions are. Just be happy. Take care Mavis.
Judi Y. says
I also keep track of what I spend on groceries and love everything you write about. For me everything seems so stressful lately in the news and so very scary. Your blog is joyful and a breath of fresh air and when I hear the ding around my dinner time that your email has arrived it’s a dose of normalcy and I know it’s the one thing I can read every day that won’t throw me into a panic. Of course above all else we all want you to be happy and will support you with whatever you want to do. ❤️
Deb says
Please continue Mavis, I look forward to your posts and I get incentive from your meal photos. I also am much more conscious about my groceries because of your posts and for the past 2 years have kept track.!
Sher says
The amount of money you spent on groceries this past year is truly impressive. I envy your ability to grow a lot of your food. I’ll be working on a very frugal food budget this year of $200 a month.
CherylV says
I was attracted to your blog as I had a large garden at the time and was looking for canning recipes and this was way before the kids left home.
I like that you are seriously introverted, frugal and wonder at times why your HH does/thinks whatever. I also like when you ask who is with you in how much toothpaste goes on the toothbrush or any of the other things that you consider to be normal and are told are weird. Much of the time I am right there with you. We seem to think a like!
I track my grocery spending, but it’s more because I have to than being frugal. I am cursed with a GI disease, so at times have to be creative to get the protein in.
Funnily enough, I miss reading about Monkey Boy.
You do what you need to do with the blog, I’ll live with it either way.
Julie P says
Happy new year Mavis I’m a little late to the party sorry! I’ve been writing down everything I spend on everything since I got my first job at 17 and I’m 63 now it used to be in a blue cash book but has been in ‘mums little red book’ for the past 25 years or so. I look back occasionally and food by comparison to salary was quite expensive then. We’ve always had a budget but we don’t have to be so strict any more just the two of us. It’s a useful tool and I love reading your updates it has made me try new things foods and managing my freezers canning cupboards with some of your suggestions.
It’s second nature so I can’t see you stopping and it seems from the responses everyone else thinks the same, but, life has to be lived your way at the end of the day and off it crazes you stop!
Best wishes to all
Ashley Bananas says
I love that you do this. I also notice that during the extreme couponing phase you did really really well with keeping the bill down. But had both kids at home at the time. Also prices were lower and coupons were much better in offers at the time. I don’t know that you could replicate the height couponing years before coupons stopped being so generous. You also have a lot of time to couponing and probably had a lot more processed foods.
I guess the deeper question is, did spending less or tracking change your life? Or affect your life? Are you happy with the changes and effects?
I keep a budget spreadsheet. Despite that we spend a lot more than I enjoy lately. I keep thinking I should win the lottery, but forget to buy tickets Happy New Year!
Lynda says
2023 – $774
2022 – $662
2021 – $649
2020 – $592
We are a retired couple and eat groceries on the costlier end of the scale like lobster, tenderloin, fresh fish two times a week and lots of fresh veggies. We waste nothing.
Wendy Steele says
Welp, everyone else is chiming in I better as well!! Mavis yours is the one and ONLY blog I follow, and I think I’ve been on board 12-13 years. I know it comes in the afternoon, but I wait until first thing in the morning to read it. Starts my day off with a theme of positivity and instruction. I talk about you so much–my kids know you as “the chicken lady” even though you haven’t had chickens for years….LOL
I love ALL the bits, but if you feel it’s too much…I hope you would scale back rather than leave us all!!!! waaahh!!! LOLOL
Best Wishes for the New Year!!
Tanya says
Please continue Mavis, I started reading your blog in 2011 while I was overseas with my husband and lonely. I looked forward to seeing pictures of your yard and the PNW (where I grew up in Tacoma) as it reminded me of home. I have followed you since then through all of your moves (and mine), have spoken about your posts to the hubs (now when I say Mavis he knows it’s you from the blog), made MANY of your recipes and I look forward to sitting down with a cup of coffee in front of the computer and reading about you and the HH and Lucy and the girl who thinks she’s a bird and monkey boy and all your colorfully named friends.
I won one of your contests one time and received a beautiful glazed pie dish. Everytime I use it I think about you graciously gifting in the blog contest. My mom lives with me now and has memory issues. Each time I serve food in that dish (dessert pies, dinner meal of shepards pie etc she comments how pretty it is and where ever did I get it. I get to reply “I won it in a contest from my blogger friend Mavis” 🙂 much like a scene in 50 first dates.
You have inspried me to track not only my grocery spending (since 2013) but also my finances on worksheets. It really helped me to see where I could reign it in and save. It has become standard practice to be mindful of the grocery spending and knowing where I can get what I need for a better deal.
Just know I have enjoyed all your hard work you put into sharing your life with us and really appreciate it. You have also contributed to much of my happiness when I was stationed overseas, back home in Indiana, and now home in South Florida, THANK YOU!
Laura L. says
I’ve been reading your blog since the very beginning although I don’t comment very often. I’ve enjoyed all the information you provide whether it’s the recipes, your success with gardening, but most of all, the way to save money at the grocery store, etc. I’ve been impressed with the vacations you take alone which I’d never do, so I applaud your brave spirit. ☺ You are very fortunate to have a supportive husband and one who works hard on all the projects and on top of all that, he cooks!! That a game changer, believe me.
I don’t keep track of our spending at the grocery store and coupons seem to be fading quickly as the grocery stores in my area hardly offer any and the ones that used to come in the mail, do not anymore. I want to begin making better choices at the grocery store and using a list and sticking to it (unless, of course, I forgot to add something). I always go to the store with a list, but don’t always stick strictly to it.
As for taking a break from blogging or even, giving it up, I can fully understand that you might be ready to go either route. Blogging must take up enormous amounts of your time but as others have mentioned, you need to do what’s best for you in your life right now and I wish you every blessing.
Beryl Redfield says
I’ve been following you a long time, back when you used to list good buys on Amazon. In fact I purchased my immersion blender and a canon inkjet printer based on your recommendation. The printer quit working a few months back and I bought a new canon which is a piece of junk and totally unreliable. But I don’t keep track of groceries and I am frugal. I’ve made many of your recipes. Love your blog!
Pat says
I’m a relative newcomer reading your blog. I found it about 2 years ago and have faithfully followed it since. It has been many years since I kept detailed records of family spending, but my husband has retired, effective today, and while we won’t be hurting, it will take a chunk out of our monthly budget. So I’m taking up tracking expenses again, at least until we adjust for our new income level. We’ve always lived within our means and pretty frugally, so I don’t anticipate an extreme adjustment, but it will be interesting to see where the money really goes. We seem to have similar interests, you and I – I love gardening, cooking, and sewing (in my case quilts and doll clothes for the great-nieces), so I’m always finding something in your blog that I can’t wait to try.
Vy says
Oh please do keep these posts, I find them so inspirational! But only if you want to, of course 🙂
Diana near Atlanta says
Happy New Year, Mavis
Yes, I do keep track of my grocery expenditures. And my eating out expenses as well. I like to compare. Being single, my thought was that it would probably be cheaper to just eat out and then eat the leftovers. Didn’t work out that way, lol.
I’ve been growing some food, preserving what I grow and buy, and it seems my expenses haven’t varied too much over the years. Even with the prices going up and me buying bulk to prep.
It seems I’ve found ways to eat cheaper without eating less wholesome, lol
Oh, I have a suggestion for your rice and beans (here in the South, it’s an art form, lol). My neighbor suggested adding some Tony’s Creole seasoning to the bean water. Now, I put that along with garlic, salt, pepper and chopped onions and it’s absolutely fabulous. During the last hour or so of cooking, I add some sort of smoked sausage (my fav is kielbasa). Yum!
I wish you a wonderful New Year with lots of love, fun, happiness and big harvests.
Stacie says
I think what initially drew me to your blog was to save money on groceries and I still enjoy reading your grocery posts. I still have a long way to go to reducing my grocery bill, but I’m constantly pulling inspiration from your posts.
Terry McA says
Mavis, I really appreciate your posts, they help me in ways you can’t understand. Please continue this! I really look forward to each week, seeing what you find on sale, what the trends are, and your ideas for dinner!
Thank you!
LaToya says
Oh, Miss Mavis ….
Your grocery and food reports have always been my favorite. Checking those are a part of my work routine – lol!
Ah – the good ol’ days of $100 a month with Albertsons double coupons …. and making allllll those cupcakes for the kids’ school (chocolate with white frosting and a little piece of Hershey bar on top).
What about your Christmas packages from your mother – does she still send you her hotel extras and other miscellaneous freebies? I suppose times change, and people age, so somethings aren’t the same anymore.
Whatever you post – I’m here for it!
– LaToya
Molly says
Great Post Long time reader, love your Posts about grocery costs, gardening, new stove, canning, hobbies, books, etc…. Love it all. Remember do what You want/need for yourself! Blessings to you & your Family!