WinCo Wins: Lunch for a Dollar!

Ever since WinCo discovered my WinCo Wins and Meal Planning posts, we’ve had a wonderful relationship. They let me share my Food and Savings posts. I get to share their incredibly low prices. It’s a Win-Win situation for everyone!

For the last two months, I’ve strived hard to provide hearty, healthy meals for my family while saving money.

One benefit I’ve discovered is when I eat healthy, I eat less. I can pack in two cheeseburgers, a large fries, and a Shamrock shake in fifteen minutes or less when I’m hungry. My breakfast of choice will always be the McDonald’s Sausage McMuffin with Egg.

My Favorite From McDonald's

My Favorite From McDonald’s

But when I eat healthy, the nutrition fills me up so I don’t blimp out. Being an unofficial spokesperson for WinCo makes me more aware of my food budget. I want to do them proud! After all, WinCo is responsible for these great savings.

For March, I took inventory of my pantry and freezer and realized I needed to buy very little. With plenty of frozen meats and leftovers from the previous Meal Plans, the bulk of my food shopping went to healthy lunch items.

How does lunch for under a dollar sound to you? It sounds like a Win-Win to me!

WinCo Wins!

WinCo Wins!

I bought five dozen eggs for $5.84. That’s less than $0.10 each! The string cheese? $0.12 each. Flour tortilla: $0.20. Celery and carrot: about $0.15 total. And the yogurt? This is the most expensive item, ringing up an entire half dollar. Where else could you get such a healthy, delicious, filling lunch for less than a buck and change?

Oh, the coffee? Not to worry. I use my recyclable Starbucks cup and fill it from home.

Protein. Dairy. Veggies. Grains. And coffee.

As you can see, This Girl is all about the savings without giving anything up.

And Frankly, My Dear… that’s all she wrote!

Sweeten my tea and share:

My Housing Project: 2013

Last year I started My Housing Project: Blog posts directly related to the improvement of my property.

With yesterday being the first nice weekend day in months, Mom came over and the three of us started cleaning up the front yard.

Leaves at the Fence

Leaves at the Fence

Leafy Trail

Leafy Trail

While they raked and bagged piles and piles of leaves, I dug up root balls for two rose shrubs and one Euonymus. The second Euonymus shrub is only partly uprooted, as the roots grow like moss and grab into the soil for nearly a foot. Those are easy enough to break with the shovel but it’s the actual thick root I’m having trouble with. After all the other digging and uprooting, I just couldn’t continue in the hard desert sand to finish it yesterday.

I didn’t photograph my efforts. I wish I had, for the Before and After. From now on, I will.

We celebrated with a Shamrock shake from McDonald’s, and it was so pleasant to see the newly cleaned yard when we drove back home. It’s still dirt, but at least now it’s clean dirt.

There’s still a pile of leaves against the fence corner. With a few more black bags, they’ll be gone.

What really excites me is that the birds are returning. For the first time since September, I cleaned and filled the bird bath as well as set out seed, peanuts, and cracked corn. It took my birds all of one hour to rediscover their buffet.

That means they’re also flocking to the nearby Joshua Tree. Which I happily discovered, is about to bloom.

Joshua Tree Buds

Joshua Tree Buds

Joshua Tree Buds Up Close

Joshua Tree Buds Up Close

Look at those buds!

Another Bud!

Another Bud!

The Whole Picture

The Whole Picture

Soon they’ll flower for a short time, then fall off and leave the beginning of a branch. Joshua Trees only bloom once every two or more years, and this is the first time mine has done so. It’s a quick process, as the bloom has grown and spread since my first seeing it yesterday. I know my Cactus Wrens will be thrilled as their home gets a new level or two!

Once I pull up the five half-dead Lilac bushes along the north fence, I hope to line it with Italian Cypress. Italian Cypress grow quite well in the desert, and they’re a wonderful shelter for birds as well as an attractive property divider. Some yards have them spaced intermittently; others plant them closely together. I love how they grow tall and thin. Some can reach as high as fifty feet! Some local nurseries have them available for less than $5 each, and my planning calls for eight or nine. These are the 3-gallon size. Sure, that’s small to start with, but since they grow so fast, I’m fine with watching them from the beginning!

I also hope to afford a raised bed gardening system for my tomatoes and herbs.

I may not be able to finance it all this summer; but the plan is the start.

And I can’t wait to get started. One plant at a time.

My birds are a little excited about it, too.

Bird Bathing

Bird Bathing

And Frankly, My Dear… that’s all she wrote!

Sweeten my tea and share: