Everybody has a skill or hobby or even just time they can trade. For instance, my friend hates shopping for clothes with company. I hate making potluck dinners but I can't avoid handing a dish in for them when I'm asked. I take her kids on the days she needs me to let her go on a shopping spree midweek and she makes me a potluck dinner when I need one. No money changes hands and it works out evenly. You have a skill up your sleeve you can barter with and you'll find what it is when you think out of the box. What can you do or would you like to have another do for you?
Good find on timebanks! Craigslist also has a barter section. Go to http://craigslist.com/ , then find the nearest city to you, and click on that. Under the "for sale" area is a "barter" link.
Saw things like "Your second car for a tile remodel" and "Trade Exterior Painting for Dental Work", etc. Not quite as flexible as the timebank thought, but if you have a particular skill or item for trade you might get lucky and find a willing person to barter it into something you want.
I have a really nice old fish and ski boat that I need to trade for something. Turns out I'm not a boat person.
Thanks for the links, guys! Craigslist is one place I never go to although I will check it out for that. Bartering is back in style. :)
I need to figure out what I can swop first. Don't suppose they would take a kid as a trade-in? LOL.
Our PTA has an informal version of this. Most use it in exchange for babysitting. It's enlightening what you find out about parents and the skills they have. You'd never know by looking at them. One lady makes the most beautiful jewelry and classes herself as a gift finder.
I can bake and would trade that for ironing. I can't stand that chore.
I have a really nice old fish and ski boat that I need to trade for something. Turns out I'm not a boat person.
You should hold on just a month or two more savingtools until the sun starts shining more and the sailors start fishing again. My dad had a boat and sold it. Every time he saw the tarpaulins coming off the boats at anchor and those sails being raised or lines being thrown over the side, he wanted to buy one again. Seeing others will whet their appetites.
Thanks for the ideas, all. It feels like time's running backwards to the days when bartering was commonplace. We'll see this type of exchanging of skills more over the year ahead the less money there is to spare.
Thanks for the ideas, all. It feels like time's running backwards to the days when bartering was commonplace. We'll see this type of exchanging of skills more over the year ahead the less money there is to spare.
I think you're right, pennywise. It wasn't so many years ago the country went through the Great Depression. Try talking to older people that remember that and the war years. They soon tell you how they lived by trading this and that. I'm just hoping we don't have to go back to ration type supplies like powdered eggs.






I missed this post, purplerain. I'm sorry about that. The Bankrate newsletter has a tip of the month and there's a group that does this same thing on a larger scale. (That's what won last month.) Timebanks is a community wide effort.
I think that's cool! The lady that won the Bankrate competition had got curtains hemmed.
When you have only two pennies left in the world, buy a loaf of bread with one, and a rose with the other.