Thursday, December 30, 2010

The last shopping trip of the year: $200 for under a buck, plus monthly & yearly spending

Today we took our last shopping trip of 2010.

We received word today that a neighbor of ours had a sudden death in the family.  The spouse and children of the deceased are struggling not just with the emotional trauma, but also with being able to afford everyday necessities like food and toiletries.  I had some shopping I wanted to get done before the end of the year anyway, so I changed up my plan some to look specifically for items this particular family may find a little bit helpful during such a difficult time.

Not pictured: five 2 liters Diet Pepsi, bag of sweet potatoes

First, a quick stop at Giant Eagle - shelf price $41.06
12 Dawn dish detergent $2.50ea, $30
1 can chipotle peppers $2.19
3.4lbs sweet potatoes $2.69
Subtotal $34.88, less twelve $.50 off Dawn (doubled to $1)
Total $22.88, received back three $5 OYNOs ($5 for each 4 Dawn)
Out of pocket $7.88

Then, on to Rite Aid - shelf price $159.74
8 cans Progresso soup $1.50ea, $12
4 Gillette deodorants $4 ea, $16
2 computer mouses (mice?), $2.99ea, $5.98
6 assorted Aussie & Herbal Essence hair care $2.50ea, $15
2 bags brown rice $1.69ea, $3.38
1 bag white rice $1.49
2 Sundown vitamins $3.49ea, BOGO free
5 assorted bottles Excedrin $6.99ea, $35.94
2 Pilot EZ Touch pens $2.29ea, $4.58
5 2 liter Diet Pepsi $1.25ea, $5
Subtotal $102.86
Less $5 off $25, less two $1 off 4 Progresso, less one Buy 2 Get 1 Free Gillette, less three $2 off Gillette, less three BOGO Aussie/HE, less three $1 off Aussie/HE, less two $1 off Sundown, less four free Excedrin ($5.99 max value), less one $3.50 off Excedrin
Total $45.90, received back $53 +UPs ($1 ea for Progresso, $3 for each pair of Gillette, $5 ea for computer mouses, $1 ea for rice, $2 for Sundown, $4 for Pilot pens, $20 for Resolution Rewards)
$7.10 profit!!

I really winged it on this trip to RA.  I had a stack of coupons that expire tomorrow and I just brought the whole lot with me to see if I could find any of the items on clearance.  I also had no idea how stock would be on many items - I struck out with the Old Spice, but hit paydirt on the Progresso.  Win some, lose some!  We just strolled the aisles looking for good deals and in the end it worked out great - even greater because I didn't realize I had "spent" $100 towards the Resolution Rewards to get that $20 +UP.  It was a fun trip and, in the end, my receipt was 85" long - just over 7' of savings and profit! 

Today's totals
Shelf price $200.80
Total $68.78
Rewards earned $68
Out of pocket $.78!!

Let's see how I did for the month of December
Merchandise value - $1,325.43
Total cost after sales & coupons - $466.67
Rewards earned - $397.78
Rebates earned - $26
Out of pocket - $42.89, for a savings of $1,282.74, or 97%!!! 

How about for the "year" (October-December since I just started tracking in October)
Merchandise value - $4,640.75
Total cost after sales & coupons - $1,570.92
Rewards earned - $1,044.92
Rebates earned - $106.45
Out of pocket - $419.55 for a savings of $4,221.20, or 91%!!!

Whoa!!  I must say, that's pretty impressive considering I've only been playing the "drugstore game" for less than three months now and I was really bad at it to start.  That's like...a part-time job's worth of savings there!



On a more serious note, tonight I'm going to put together a few bags of necessities for my neighbor's family including some of the items we got today.  I've talked before about donating items to those in need, and that I do my best to keep my donations in my community.  I think this is probably about the best way I can contribute to both of my goals.

On TLC's "Extreme Couponing" show

Last night, TLC aired a show called "Extreme Couponing."  It followed four couponers as they shopped like maniacs, using coupons and sales to bring their checkout totals from four figures down to a few bucks.  As the name of the show suggests, they went to extreme measures to save money - dumpster diving, 300 toothbrushes, 1000 boxes of cereal and all.

But how realistic was it?  Is that how couponing really works?

To a degree it's real, but to a bigger degree things just don't work that way.

1.  Dumpster diving: I don't dive in recycling bins for coupons.  Most couponers don't for the simple reason that it's illegal in many areas.  If you're inspired to try your hand at couponing after watching the show, go for it!  If you're inspired to root through trash and recycling bins to find your coupons, though, check with your city, county, or other local agency to make sure you won't get arrested for it.  The goal is to save money, not to find yourself needing to pony up bail.  Beyond the legality, it's a personal decision if one wants to risk digging through a public bin that may or may not have more than just paper in it.  I choose not to take the risk, but I don't fault those who do and who can do so legally.
2.  300 toothbrushes: You will not find 300 toothbrushes in a bin in one store.  Let me repeat that: you will not find 300 toothbrushes (or 1000 boxes of cereal, or 500 boxes of pasta, or 250 cans of tuna) sitting neatly on the shelf ready to be swept into your cart at your local grocery or drug store.  Real coupon shopping is not Supermarket Sweep.  This show was "set up" in that the products were ordered with the store ahead of time to make for good TV.  In reality, stores do not keep a thousand boxes of cereal on the shelf (or stored in the back).  Some managers at some stores will place a special order for a customer if possible, but the last thing you should do is buy 1000 cereal coupons from Ebay and waltz into your grocery store expecting that you'll be able to use them all in one shot.  You won't.  What you'll have to do is what the vast majority of couponers do: buy 10 at store A, buy 15 at store B, buy 10 more at store C, then come back the next day after a new shipment is in to buy another 15 at store A, 10 at store B, 25 at store C, and so on.  If you're lucky, you'll develop a good relationship with the manager at your store and he or she will be willing to order in 100 cans of tuna just for you, but that isn't going to happen your first trip.  If you ask for a special order and don't show up to buy the items, the store is stuck with them and may not be able to sell them in time - or they may not have the space to store them while they wait to sell them.  Stores won't place large orders for just anyone.  If you want to go to the lengths shown in this show, gas up your car cuz you'll be doing a LOT of driving from store to store to store to store.
3. Hidden costs: Speaking of 300 toothbrushes,  how do you think one gets enough coupons to get 300 free toothbrushes?  As much as I wish it were so, the Coupon Fairy doesn't magically rain them down while we sleep.  You either buy 300 newspapers (at $1-2 each) or you buy the individual coupons from Ebay or a clipping service (at $.02-$.50 or more per coupon).  The free toothbrushes aren't really free at that point.  In addition, there's the tax.  Some states, Ohio included, don't charge sales tax on food.  They do, however, charge sales tax on everything else, and it's charged based on pre-coupon price.  If I were to get 300 "free" toothbrushes that cost $2 each before coupon, I'd be looking at about $15 to buy the coupons and another $42 in tax - $57 for my "free" toothbrushes.  In other states, groceries are taxed.  1000 boxes of free cereal at $2 each before coupon can run you, say, $140 in tax (at 7%) and another $50 to buy the coupons.  Factor all that in before you get too excited about "extreme" couponing.  Buying 10 boxes of this "free" cereal for your family at a cost of about $1.40 in tax and another $.50 in coupon costs is absolutely fantastic; buying 1000 because they seem free is ridiculous.
4. Cheering cashiers: Yes, sometimes cashiers are extremely pleasant.  Sometimes they cheer and applaud you when your total drops from $100 to $3.23.  Sometimes they even open a checkout line just for you if you've got a big cartload of stuff.  In the real world, though, these experiences are very much an exception.  I'm lucky beyond words that my favorite Rite Aid does this sort of stuff for me.  What you'll face most often, however, are skeptical cashiers, cashiers in a rush to get you the hell out of their line, scrutiny, eternal waiting for a manager to approve a coupon, dirty looks, cranky customers in line behind you, and, at another extreme, accusations of fraud, theft, or other crimes.  Look, half the time I don't quite believe I just walked out of a store with $300 worth of product for just the cost of tax; it's not beyond the pale that a cashier could be skeptical too.  Grow a thick skin.  You'll need it.  You'll also need a backbone and a willingness to stand up for yourself all the way up to corporate if it comes to that.  In the interest of being fair, since I'm still discussing the situation with a corporate office, I'll not disclose all the details yet but - recently I had what should have been a simple shopping trip with 4 items with two legitimate coupons turn into a cashier shouting at me and a manager accusing me of coupon fraud.  You will face this if you try to go the "extreme" route.  Store employees will not line up and cheer you out of the store when you visit.  Fortunately the truly bad situations are few and far between, but they do happen and they really suck.
5. Shelf clearing: On the show, we saw one shopper load his cart with every toothbrush on display.  Don't do this.  Don't ever do this.  It's called shelf clearing, or "smash & grabbing", and it starts a chain reaction that leads to a pissed off store and an unhappy you.  For the thrill of television those toothbrushes were pre-ordered and set out for Nathan to scoop up.  In the real world, those toothbrushes are probably all the store has in stock until their next delivery comes in, which, in the case of a drug store, is probably a week or two away.  If you go in with your 300 coupons and take all the toothbrushes, there are none left for other shoppers.  This leads to those other shoppers, who probably wanted just one or two brushes, to complain to the manager.  If ten other customers complain, then another ten the next day, and ten more, and so on until that next truck arrives with more brushes, you've got a manager who's been bitched at for a week because you (the general "you") smashed & grabbed.  Good luck being allowed to buy more than one or two of any item in that store after that, and don't expect to be able to build a good relationship with that store to the degree that they'll do a special order for you in the future.  Yes, stores can limit quantities (except in Iowa, I think? whoops, it's Idaho, the only state where limits are prohibited by law) so they don't have to deal with hordes of pissed off customers who needed a toothbrush but couldn't get it because you got 300 of them.  And, let's face it, put yourself in that "other customer's" shoes.  How pissed would you be if you went to a store with your coupons to get a few bottles of shampoo for $.50 each and found that they were all gone at every store in a 20 mile radius because someone got there before you did and cleared all the shelves?  Be reasonable when you coupon.  If you want 50 of something, spread it out over a few different stores, leave plenty behind, and/or ask for a special order.  Get rainchecks.  The one caveat is if you want to buy, say, two body washes and the store only has three on the shelf - buy your two body washes.  That's not smash & grabbing.  That's normal shopping. 
6. Life outside of couponing:  You do not need to spend 6 hours each week scouting stores pre-sale.  You do not need to spend 70 hours a week planning trips and sorting coupons.  You should never neglect family life, work, or other obligations in your quest to save money.  I spend a couple hours in total planning my trips and sticking the coupons in my "shopping file."  I spend maybe an hour or two each week on the shopping itself, including drive time.  Sure, here and there I'll spend more time on either or both if it's an amazing sale week (Black Friday sales, for example), but even at its most time consuming my hobby consumes like 10 hours a week.  If you're putting 60 hours per week in for $200 in savings, it makes more sense to just get a part time job instead.  That's a little over $3 per hour - like being a waitress without any tips.  Time is money, and couponing should be an enjoyable means to turn your valuable time into extra money in your pocket.
7.  Stockpiling: A big part of effective couponing is the stockpile - the loot stack, as I call it.  If I get paid $.50 each to take home some toothpaste, I'll take it home and put it in our linen closet so we don't have to pay real money for toothpaste later.  10 boxes of cereal for $.75 each means we don't have to pay $4 for a box if we run out.  Stockpiling comes with a lot of responsibility, though.  It's just the two of us; there's no way we could eat 100 boxes of cereal before it expires.  In fact, right now we have so much cereal that the only way I'd get more at this point is if I were paid to take it, and in that case I'd donate the excess to the food pantry.  We simply couldn't eat enough before it expires and we don't have room to store more.  If your stockpile is taking over your living space, you're doing it wrong.  If you're eating cereal frantically three meals a day before it expires, you're doing it wrong.  If you get to that point, the point where your loot stack is taking over your life, you're not an effective couponer; you're a hoarder.  Before you start getting into serious couponing, locate a food pantry, church, or shelter in your area that takes both nonperishable food and non-food items like toothpaste and shampoo.  Know where you can donate your excess before you get excess.
8. Coupon restrictions: One very important aspect wasn't covered in Extreme Couponing - stores and manufacturers have coupon limits and restrictions.  It varies by store and by manufacturer.  Learn what you can and cannot do before you clip a single coupon.  Some stores don't take any printable coupons.  Some stores only allow 10 "like" coupons per day (a "like" coupon is an identical coupon, say for $1 off toothpaste - you may only be able to use 10 of those same coupons per day).  Proctor & Gamble recently added text to their coupons allowing 4 "like" coupons per transaction.  Some stores double.  Some stores don't double.  Some coupons don't double even if your store doubles.  You don't want to get 100 coupons for $.50 off tuna and take them to your store for the $1 tuna sale only to discover that your store will only allow you to use 10 of them and that they're coded to only take $.50 off per can even though your stores doubles coupons.  Some stores allow buy one, get one free coupons to be used on a buy one, get one free sale; some don't.  Some stores will not accept coupons over a certain dollar amount.  Know your stores' coupon policies front and back, and know the restrictions manufacturers put in place on their coupons. 

Extreme couponing is possible.  Trips like those shown on TLC's show, however, are an exception.  You won't be able to shop like that every week and, frankly, you shouldn't shop like that every week unless you have 18 kids or a really empty local food bank and a whole lot of time on your hands.

What you should take away from shows like this is that with some knowledge and some planning, it is possible to save a ton of money by using coupons effectively and correctly.  You can see that every week on my blog, and on tons of other blogs and websites as well.  But moderation is key here, and you have to keep one foot firmly in reality come shopping time.  The time and the periodic hassle is worth it to me - you have to decide if it will be worth it to you.

Monday, December 27, 2010

Drugstore Trifecta: $353 for a profit of $24

Two and a half hours.  We shopped for two and a half hours today.
Let's just get to the good stuff.

Not pictured: five 2 liters Diet Coke

Walgreens - shelf price $31.16
4 Nyquil Sinex $5
Subtotal $20
Less four $4 off 1 coupons
Total $4, received back $10 RR
$6 profit!!

CVS - shelf price $54.92
1 Tone bodywash $3.88
5 Diet Coke $.88ea, $4.40
2 8x10 Kodak photo books $19.99ea, $39.98
Subtotal $48.26
Less $1 off Tone, less BOGO Kodak sale, less BOGO Kodak manufacturer's coupon
Total $7.28, received back $3 ECB (Tone)
Out of pocket $4.28

Rite Aid - shelf price $266.84
Transaction 1

Wednesday, December 22, 2010

Fabulous gifts without breaking the bank

I'm a huge fan of Christmas.  The indulgent food, the festive atmosphere, the family gatherings - those are all awesome, but my favorite part of the season has to be the presents.

It's the giving gifts part I like, actually.  Sure, I like getting presents, but gifting to others is where I have the most fun.

Once the summer begins winding down, I begin the hunt for the perfect gift for everyone on my list.  I'm not much of a gift-card-giver; I really enjoy searching high and low for a gift that my recipient will use and enjoy.  A big part of the hunt is finding those gifts while staying firmly within my budget and, being a cheapskate, my budget is tighter than Robert Plant's jeans (look it up, people).  This is not to say that I give shitty dollar store presents; I do my best to balance thoughtful gifts with a budget I can afford.

This Christmas I decided to put together a gift basket for each of my immediate family members.  Of course, being that I come from a large, close-knit family, "immediate" really means like 10 people.  There are also a handful of close-but-not-immediate family members that I wanted to include on my list as well, so staying in budget was even more important.

What goes in a gift basket?  Well, most anything, really.  They're easy to personalize and easy to scale.
Let's start with Andy's mom.  His family is more low-key about the holidays and they only exchange small gifts.  I put together this modest basket:
A scented candle, some lotion, some body wash, a bag of Ricola drops for the winter season, and a big handful of Hershey kisses scattered about.  There's also a holiday card (from TinyPrints.com - shameless plug!).  A basket like this is great for a woman who likes to pamper herself and lends itself well to recipients from co-workers to a future mother in law.

On the opposite end of the spectrum, baskets are good for kids too.

My 9 year old niece is at that odd age where she's just getting into the nearly-teen type stuff but not quite ready for grown-up beauty items.  I filled her basket with some smaller bottles of body wash, lotion, and body spray along with a couple nail polishes, a fleece blanket in her favorite color, some hair bands, some candy, and the Despicable Me DVD.  I tried to balance fun kid stuff (candy, Silly Bandz, hair bands in bright colors) with slightly more "grown up" items.
Behind my niece's basket you can see a veritable army of others all ready for the rest of my loved ones - each basket filled with various gifts from fancy lotions to scissors to mixed nuts depending on the recipient.

How to keep costs down?
  • I found the baskets at the dollar store.  They're small, sturdy plastic tubs (for lack of a better term) with handles that can be re-used in a million different ways.  They cost, believe or not, one dollar each.  Cuz I got them at the dollar store.
  • The tissue paper and wrapping paper were free after sale & coupon, and I made sure to get enough that I can still use them next year.
  • By combining coupons with great sales, I was able to get at least 90% of the items in the baskets for no cost to me but tax.  When a quality body wash is free to me or better, like the Olay, I'll get as many as I can.  If I can get six pair of scissors for free, I'll get all six pair because between couponing family members and crafty family members, I know they'll be welcome gifts.
  • By utilizing coupons combined with sales as effectively as possible, this freed up a ton of room in my budget for gifts that I can't find for free.  I've never seen a coupon for savings bonds, but because I saved so much elsewhere I was able to get my baby nephew a little something his parents can put aside for him to enjoy later. 
  • Small touches make a world of difference.  A basket with random crap thrown in it isn't a great gift.  A basket that's neatly arranged is a good gift.  A basket that's neatly arranged and "filled out" with a handful of candy, an inexpensive & useful gadget (a wooden spoon or two for an avid cook, a small container of holiday sprinkles for a baker, a lip balm for winter gifts), and/or a heartfelt card is a great gift.  You don't have to go all Martha Stewart, but a bit of personalization and a little presentation goes a long way without busting your budget.
I had a lot of fun searching out things to fill the baskets with and in putting them together.  This is one trick I'm definitely keeping up my sleeve for upcoming birthdays and holidays!

My old friend, the grocery store

I've said a couple of times that once you get into a rhythm with stocking up on various food, you can skip a week at the grocery store if the sales suck.

We skipped three weeks.  We hadn't been to the grocery store since November 30th.  Apparently I've stocked us up so well that I didn't really notice it had been so long until I used the last of our meat Monday night. 
Whoops!
So we needed to get some meat, and I needed a few things to make my Christmas Eve and Christmas dishes for the family get-togethers, so off we went tonight - absolutely positive that, being 4 days before Christmas, we'd have to contend with a madhouse.

Instead of a madhouse it looked much like a normal Tuesday night at Giant Eagle, which is to say there were people there but not too many.  We got our sale items, the ingredients for the holiday foods, and a few junk-food treats just for the hell of it.

Not pictured: 2 gallons milk, 5 bottles Diet Pepsi, 2 multipacks of Angel Soft TP

The only real super-deals were on the Birdseye Steamfresh ($1ea, I had a bunch of coupons for $.50/1 which doubled - free), the TP (came to $3.50 per pack after sale & coupon), the Country Crock ($.74 after coupon), and the Coffee-Mate ($.50 for three bottles after sale & coupon).  I was also pretty pleased to get some tortillas for $1 per pack - not a great price, but we use them quite a bit.  And, sadly, this is the last of my free Diet PepsiMax - those coupons expire on 12/31 so I used my last three to get 3 more free bottles.  I drank one which is why you only see two in the photo.  I'll play taps for the loss of that fun little freebie.
The Helluvagood dips were $.50 each after sale & coupon, and we got a bag of quasi-gourmet chips to go with them.  The dip price is great, the chip price...not so much!

Sweet potatoes, rotisserie chicken, pecans, crescent rolls, wooden skewers - all for the holiday creations.

Deli meat is so very expensive.  Oh dear, is it expensive.  That's why we rarely buy it, but sometimes I cave because I love sandwiches.  I caved tonight.  We got smoked turkey and two kinds of ham all on sale.  It was still $8 for all of it but.... *shrug*

Today's totals
Shelf price $119.08
Total $55.69
Rewards earned $2
Out of pocket $53.69 for a savings of $65.39, or 55%

Not one of my best trips, but it's still half off with meat, deli, TP, and some splurges included.  For not having shopped in 3 weeks, I think it's quite acceptable!

We've both gotten so spoiled at the drugstores, using various rewards to pay for everything but tax, that it's getting to be a shock when we have to spend real money!

Sunday, December 19, 2010

Dual Drugstore Deals: $148 for a $17 profit, and sleeping soundly for two years

What a day, what a day!  Shopping should always be this fun.

CVS
1 Thermacare neck, back & shoulder 1ct $2.79
Less $1 off any Thermacare
Total $1.79, received back $2.79 ECB (limit 1)
$1 profit!!

This wasn't very exciting.  The only item that drew my attention at CVS this week was the free after ECB Thermacare.  I had coupons for $1 off, but with the limit being just one I couldn't do much.  If CVS wasn't directly on the way to Rite Aid I wouldn't have even bothered stopping, but what can ya do?  Some weeks aren't great at some stores and this was one of them for CVS.  At least I got a Thermacare (which I use like crazy) and a Green Bag Tag scan.

Rite Aid
Transaction 1
6 bonus packs 3mg Natrol melatonin $8.49ea (2 60ct bottles banded together for a total of 12 bottles)
Subtotal $50.94
Less BOGO sale - $25.47
Less $5 off $25 purchase, less six $3 off any Natrol
Total $2.47, received back $6 in +UP ($2 for each two bonus packs)
$3.53 profit!!

By my count, this is 720 days' (nights?) worth of melatonin.  I should be sleeping soundly for two years, and they paid me $3.53 to do it.


Transaction 2
4 candy bars $.50ea, $2
3 Clearasil daily wash $5.49ea, $16.74
3 Clearasil Overnight Serum $5.24ea, $15.72 (clearanced 50% off from $10.49ea)
3 Rite Aid coffee 11oz $1.99ea, $5.97
3 Motrin PM 20ct $5.99ea, $17.97
2 fishing game toy thingies $2.24ea, $4.48
1 package Rite Aid beef jerky for Andy, $3.59 with my discount
Subtotal $66.47
Less $5 off $25 coupon, less BOGO candy, less $.50 off 2 candy, less three $2 off Clearasil in-ad coupons, less three $2 off Clearasil manufacturer's coupons, less three $5 off Clearasil Overnight in-ad coupons, less three $2 off Rite Aid coffee, less three $2 off Motrin in-ad coupons, less three $2 off Motrin mfg coupons
Total $15.47
Received back $28 in +UPs: $1 for buying 4 candy bars, $2 for each Clearasil product, $3 for each Motrin, $2 for each game, and a bonus $1 for each game
$12.53 profit!!

The last transaction was a bit of a doozy.  I could have broken it up into two, but I hadn't brought enough $5 off $25 coupons with me.  *shrug*

Friday, December 17, 2010

Dual Drugstore Deals: $130 for $44 and we will never, ever get scurvy

Yes, my spending was VERY high today.  I'd like to say it was painfully high, but I'm actually very excited about the deals we got.  It's really not painful at all; that $44 includes a new-release movie and a gift card, both Christmas gifts for my niece & nephew.  They're worth it!

Not pictured: 2 gallons milk, 5 packages Goody Ouchless hair bands

CVS
3 Diet Pepsi $2.97
1 box Russell Stover chocolates $4.99
1 Kraft Easy Mac $1.19
2 trial-size Advil PM $1.98
1 pack of gum $.99
1 iTunes gift card $15
1 Despicable Me DVD $19.99
Shelf price $54.31, subtotal $47.11, less $1 off Russell Stover, less $1 off Kraft, less $2 off Advil, less $10 off Despicable Me
Total $33.11, received back $1 ECB (bag tag)
Out of pocket $32.11

When you buy $15 in iTunes gift cards at CVS (through 12/18), you get $10 off the movie Despicable Me.  I'd been asking my older nephew what sort of gift card he would like for Christmas and he finally told me the other day he'd decided on iTunes.  Perfect timing on his part!  He'll get the iTunes, and my niece will receive Despicable Me.  The $10 comes off instantly when you buy both items together, and you also get another $10 off coupon for a second DVD purchase on your receipt.  It's a great deal as it is, but with the bonus coupon it's even better if you'd like two inexpensive new release DVDs for the holiday season. 
The Russell Stover.  I make no apologies.  Andy wanted it, and the Magic Coupon Machine spit out a coupon for $1 off.  He's currently studying the box of chocolates intently and handing me the coconut ones.
The Magic Coupon Machine also spit out coupons for $1 off Kraft and $2 off Advil.  The little cup of mac & cheese was $1.19 and it'll be great for Andy to take to work for a $.19 lunch.  The Advil was $.99 per 4-pack so those gave me $.02 overage on the pair with the $2 Advil coupon.  You can't ever have too much painkiller product 'round these parts!
The soda should be self-explanatory by now.  The gum is my Grandpa's favorite kind so I got it to throw in his Christmas gift basket.

Then, on to Walgreens!
I had six $5 Register Rewards I wanted to spend tonight, two of which expire tomorrow.  We walked in with sort of a half-assed plan; it's late in the week, I had no idea what stock would be like, and after my last experience in this store I wasn't sure what I'd be facing at the register.

I noted that an excellent cashier was working at the front register, and, with relief, saw my favorite gal over at the Cosmetics register.  Crappy service wouldn't be an issue.
Next, we beelined for the Walgreens Energy Booster.  This is the store brand version of Emergen-C, the vitamin C supplement powder that you mix in with water.  Andy loves this stuff; he makes up a cup of it at the first sign of a sniffle in either of us.  It's normally $8.99 per box (!!!) but is on sale for $3 with a $3 RR back.  We grabbed five of those.
Various Goody hair products are on sale for $2 each with a $2 RR back.  We grabbed five packages of hair bands as well.
After that we picked up a few other items and headed for the line-free Cosmetics counter.  The cashier was in another aisle and called out that she'd be right over, so I took that opportunity to lay out one box of the Energy Boost, one package of Goody, and a $5 RR.  She came over after a moment and was quite amused to see my neat little line of products and RRs ready to go.  It was like an advancing army of rubber bands and vitamin C.

Transactions 1, 2, 3, 4 & 5
1 Walgreens Energy Boost, 36ct box $3
1 Goody Ouchless hair bands $2
Shelf price $11.98, total $5, no coupons, paid with expiring $5 RR, received back $3 RR (Energy Boost) & $2 RR (Goody)
Out of pocket: ZERO!!  A big fat nothin' but tax!  I paid in loose change!

Transaction 6
2 gallons milk $4.58
2 bottles Coffee Mate Peppermint Mocha creamer $3
2 packages Silly Bandz $.99 BOGO
1 package steel wool scrubbies $2.49
2 candy bars $1
Shelf price $19.21, total $12.06, no coupons, paid in RRs, no rewards back
Out of pocket $12.06

The sixth transaction was just to get rid of some of these RRs (I'm still refusing to call them Jingle Cash!) and turn them into stuff we wanted/needed.  I don't know about you, but I certainly need that peppermint mocha coffee creamer.  YUM!  We spent under $2 in cash for everything at Walgreens - just the cost of tax. 
Silly Bandz: for the kids' Christmas baskets
Candy bars: the cashiers get a small bonus if they "upsell" certain items through the month.  The candy bars are one of those items this month and I'll periodically buy the push products for a good cashier.  We have so much candy it's obscene, so those will go in the kids' baskets as well.

Totals for the day
Shelf price $130.42
Total $70.17
Rewards earned $26
Out of pocket $44.17

I have $19 in Walgreens rewards left over from today that are good through the end of this month.  No rush to burn through them and next week's sales are pretty grim looking right now.  I'll hold on to those 'til after Christmas. 

Speaking of Christmas:

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

"Are these good?"

Twice, at two different stores, I've heard the exact same phrase:  "Are these good?"

No, someone wasn't asking my opinion on a product.

The first time it happened at Wendy's.  Wendy's has these newfangled natural fries with sea salt or some shit like that, and to promote their new product they posted a coupon for a free small order of fries on their website.  Two things I love are free things and Wendy's fries.  This was a match made in heaven.
Andy and I headed over to Wendy's to get us some dinner one evening.  We ordered our burgers and fries and I presented the coupons which I had left full-sheet with the Wendy's logo all over it.  Since one doesn't normally coupon shop at a fast food restaurant, I figured it was best to leave the page whole.
The cashier stared at the coupons as if I were trying to hand her a live duck.  She took them after a moment, looked at the coupons, looked at me, and called out very loudly to her manager "Hey (manager's name), are these good?" while waving the coupons above her head in his direction.
The manager's eyes went wide.  "I printed them from the Wendy's website," I told the cashier firmly but politely and she stammered what seemed like an apology.  The manager quickly came over and muttered something to her I couldn't hear, and she fumbled with the register to apply the coupons.

I was aggrivated.  Worse yet, the new fries were not very good.

Then, last week at Wags, I was purchasing some scissors.  I've gotten into the habit of checking out in cosmetics because there's almost never a line and the gal who normally works that register is knowledgeable, friendly, and efficient. 
I was faced with a conundrum the night of the scissors.  There was a steady line at the front register and absolutely no one in cosmetics, but the normal cosmetics cashier wasn't working that night.  I vaguely recognized the cashier who was working there and something told me to just go wait in line up front, but I wanted to be in & out quickly.  I went with the cosmetics register.
The cashier ignored us for a few minutes, busying herself shuffling some papers around next to the register.  I set my first transaction on the counter and had my coupons in hand and I waited for her to finish.  Hell if I know what she was doing with the papers, but it could have been important.  When she finally said hello, I did my usual "Hi there, I've got two transactions today!" spiel and silently urged her to get moving because someone had gotten in line behind me and the front register was backing up even more.
She rang the tissue paper, she rang the scissors, and I handed over the coupons for the scissors.
She looked at them and sighed.  "Hang on," she mumbled and at that moment I realized why my gut had told me to check out elsewhere.  She had rang me out once before at a front register; it was a small order and I had one printable coupon with me.  She examined that coupon like it might hold the secrets of the universe and then called a manager over to ask if she could take it.  I had been a bit surprised and asked if they had a new policy or something.  I'd familiarized myself with Walgreens' coupon policy before I started shopping there and I knew that they accept legitimate printable coupons.  She told me "Well, no, but people make fake coupons all the time and I'm not gonna get in trouble over it so I have the manager check them so it's not on me."  It was odd, but the manager told her to go ahead after a quick glance at the coupon.
So, the scissors coupons - she paged a manager over.  Said manager came to the register after a few minutes and, in an eerie repeat of the Wendy's experience, the cashier waved the coupons and called out loudly "Are these good?"
The manager gave her a funny look.  "Yes, just scan them!" she told the cashier.  I finished both my transactions, took my receipts and my RRs (I refuse to call them Jingle Cash - what a ridiculous marketing term), and stormed out to the car.

I was pissed.
I was still pissed the next day, and a satisfaction survey had printed on my second receipt.  I filled out the questionnaire expressing my lack of satisfaction with the cashier's insinuation in front of customers and other employees that my coupons could be fraudulent - twice now.

And that's what it comes down to.  Both cashiers, with a paying customer standing in front of them, insinuated that my coupons were somehow fake by loudly asking, "Are these good?" in an unpleasant tone of voice.  The Wendy's incident I can forgive - I'm sure they don't get many printable coupons, but I've been in that Walgreens pretty much every week (some weeks multiple times) for months now.  I buy lots of products.  Every other cashier I've dealt with seems able to determine that I'm not handing over forgeries or photocopies without embarrassing anyone.  I don't expect to be treated like a queen when I shop, but I do expect decency at the very least.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Dual Drugstore Deals: $185 for a $13 profit

We hit CVS & Rite Aid this morning before the snow started and wound up with a great haul.  It wasn't as good as I'd been hoping for in an ideal situation, but it was great.  :)  Afterward I hightailed it (with my loot!) over to my grandparents' to make Christmas cookies all day.  Gram was impressed with the haul and, as I set up for the loot stack photo, was laughing that I had my own little store.  It seems like it sometimes!

CVS
2 Excedrin PM 100ct $21.98
1 Complete contact solution $9.99
1 Christmas tree $29.99
Subtotal $61.96
Less $5 off $30 purchase, less two $2.50 off Excedrin PM, less 25% off tree, less $10 off Christmas tree
Total $34.46, paid in ECBs, received back $10 ECB Excedrin, $9.99 ECB Complete
Total $14.47

The Magic Coupon Machine spit out a coupon for $10 off any Christmas tree.  We don't have one yet, and since it's just the two of us I'd only wanted a very small 3' or 4' tree.  We found a really cute little 4' prelit tree with a base, so you just need to take it out and plug it in.  It was normally $29.99 but was marked down 25% to $22.49.  With the $10 off coupon, it came to $12.49 and that's a fantastic price in my book!

Here it is straight out of the box.  I was messing with it later and it's a fluffy, nice-looking tree - especially for $12.49!  I'll get a better photo later once it's decorated.

Originally I got the Complete contact solution just so I could use my $5 off $30 coupon.  It's $9.99 with a $9.99 ECB back; when combined with $20 of Excedrin that coupon would have brought my out of pocket down to like $2.  Since we added the tree I technically didn't need to get the stuff (I don't wear contacts!), but I had already put it in my bag and didn't quite realize until we were paying that it wasn't necessary.  Oh well, it was free!

Next, on to Rite Aid!

Saturday, December 11, 2010

Sunday Gameplan for 12/12

At first I thought this would be another slow week.  Rite Aid came screaming out of nowhere, though, and my short shopping list turned into a spreadsheet-figuring mess.

I'm not sure if I'll bother with CVS this week.  There's a really good deal on batteries, but we use rechargeables so I'm not particularly inclined to get regular ones that probably won't get used.  This may change later in the week as I have a couple free Excedrin coupons on the way; if they get here in time, I'll use those as part of an Excedrin deal going on.

Wags is another uncertainty.  I have to go this week to use up at least $10 of my rewards that expire on the 18th, but something apparently went completely awry with their registers early this morning.  My carefully crafted transaction is probably useless at this point; I'll go to use what I have to and get some super cheap plastic cutlery and Sharpie markers at the very least.

Rite Aid, though.  Oh Rite Aid, how I love you. 
My plan is sort of nebulous right now because I have no idea what stock is going to be like on three screaming deals tomorrow.  I'm going to buy what I can based on what they've got and work with one or two (or more?) transactions on the fly based on that.

Deal 1: Select Airwick products are buy one get one free.  The candles are $5.99ea and I have coupons for $3 off each candle (11/14 Smart Source circular).  Since you can use one coupon on each item, that means each pair of candles is free after coupon.  Even better than that, you get a $3 +UP for every $10 spent.  I'm working off the assumption that it's calculated after the BOGO sale, so 4 candles = $11.98, minus $3 coupons = free, and receive back a $3 +UP for spending $10 pre-coupon: $3 profit.  If the pre-sale price is counted, I'd get two $3 +UPs back; I'm not planning on that, but if it happens it'll be a nice bonus.  I have 8 coupons so I'll buy 4 or 8 candles depending on stock.
Deal 2: this is one of my screaming deals that I'll buy based on stock because no coupons are involved.  Rite Aid brand envelopes and tape are BOGO, and you get a $2 +UP for each two you buy.  Each pair of tape is $1.49 after BOGO, each pair of envelopes are $2.29 after BOGO.  After +UPs, the tape is a $.51 profit per pair and the envelopes cost just $.29 per pair.  I'll buy as many as possible of these two items and it should just about come to free in the end.
Deal 3: another screaming deal.  Revlon beauty tools are 40% off and you get a $2 +UP for each two items purchased.  This includes smaller items like nail clippers and emery boards, some of which will ring up as under $1 after the 40% sale.  I also have a store coupon for $3 off Revlon nail care, which will bring my total even lower.  As with the previous deal, I'll buy what I can based on what they've got - my price point is regular price of $1.69 or less.  There's also a $1 Rite Aid Single Check Rebate (limit 1) I'll get whether I buy 2 items or 200.  Hey, a buck's a buck!
Deal 4:  the third screaming deal.  Ecotools products are buy one get one 50% off with a $5 +UP on each two items.  Here's the math: I'll buy as many items as possible priced at $2.99 or less.  Two items at $2.99 come to $4.49 after sale, and I'll get $5 back for each pair: a $.51 profit.  Yeah, I'll buy as much as I can at that price point. 
Deal 5: Colgate Sensitive toothpaste is on sale for $3.50 with a $3.50 +UP back.  I don't need any more free toothpaste, but I have $.75 off coupons for this stuff.  I'll take what I can based on my coupons and store stock levels for a $.75 profit on each tube.  The food pantry will love more toothpaste since they don't get much donated!

I'll look at what I can get of the above deals and break them down into multiple transactions as needed to use the $5 off $25 purchase coupons to maximize my savings.  The goal is to get my pre-coupon total as close to $25.01 as possible to take that extra $5 off.  For this week, the Colgate Sensitive toothpaste may come in quite handy to use as a "filler" since I get the full purchase price back in +UPs. 
Let's say I buy 8 Airwick candles for a total of $23.96.  I can add two Colgate toothpastes to that transaction to bring my total to $30.96.  I'd use a $5 coupon, two $.75 Colgate coupons, and eight $3 Airwick coupons for a total coupon deduction of $30.50.  I would owe $.46 in cash, and I'd receive back $6 in Airwick +UPs and $7 in Colgate +UPs; I'd get paid $12.54 to take all that stuff out of the store!
Since these $5 off $25 coupons are likely done for good at the end of this month, I'll use them as effectively as possible for the 20 days left.

I've got to get all my dealing done tomorrow morning.  We're making Christmas cookies with my Grandma Sunday afternoon, and Sunday evening we're forecast for a big nasty snowstorm to start rolling through.  They're calling for a foot or more by Wednesday.  *sigh*  I love to save money, but even I have my limits.

Another Walgreens run: $16 for a $4 profit - FREE Xmas wrapping paper!

LATE EDIT: wrapping & tissue paper is no longer producing Register Rewards as of late Saturday morning - proceed with caution


I spent the day with my mom and we made a stop at Walgreens because she wanted some free tissue paper.  I discovered late last night that certain Hallmark wrapping paper was also included in the insane Register Rewards deal, so I did two quick transactions while we were out & about.

Sorry for the lack of photo - Mom has the tissue paper and  I chucked the wrapping paper in what used to be our living room but is now serving as my Christmas staging area.  It's not fit for pictures right now.

4 Hallmark white tissue paper, 20ct - $3.96
2 rolls Hallmark Colour Studio (holiday) wrapping paper, 50 sq ft $3.98
Subtotal $7.94
Less BOGO paper (sale, no coupon needed), less in-ad coupon for tissue, less $.50 coupon for paper
note: the $.50 coupon will not automatically scan at the register because their registers suck.  I printed the whole page and brought it in so they could see I printed it from the Walgreens site and they entered it manually.  This is still a great deal even if you don't want to use the coupon!
Total $2.81, received back $5 Hallmark RR
$2.19 profit!!

Repeated the above two times:
Shelf price $15.88
Total $5.62
Earned rewards $10
$4.38 profit!!

This deal is only good through Saturday, 12/11 so if you want free wrapping paper, tissue paper, and/or scissors it'd be a good idea to get your stuff early in the day.
Remember: no more than 6 Hallmark items per transaction, and don't use the RRs you earn from one Hallmark transaction to pay for subsequent transaction!

Great, now I have $30 in register rewards, $10 of which MUST be spent next week.  I had been hoping to wind those down some but that didn't work too well.  Guess I'll be getting more free stuff!  My life is so difficult...

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Walgreens run: $62 for a $4 profit

LATE EDIT:  tissue paper deal is no longer producing Register Rewards as of late Saturday morning, proceed with caution

My crankiness at missing out on the grocery deals has evaporated. 

6 packages Hallmark tissue paper $5.97
3 Scotch Precision scissors $24.87 (prices vary by store from $7.99-8.99, mine were $8.29)
Subtotal $30.84
Less three $1 Scotch coupons, less $3.94 tissue paper in-ad coupon, less $15.90 scissors in-ad coupon
Total $7.97, received back $5 Super Jingle Cash (for spending $25+ before coupon), $5 RR for buying six Hallmark products
$2.03 profit!!!

I did the above transaction two times.

Shelf price $61.62
Total $15.94 (paid in gift card & cash)
Rewards earned $20
$4.06 profit

On page 15 of this week's Walgreens ad circular are two coupons: one for tissue paper at three for $1, the other for the scissors at $2.99ea.
The tissue paper is likely in the aisle with all the rest of the Christmas wrapping paper and gift bags.  The scissors are likely in the school supplies aisle.  Buy the above items, hand over your $1 scissors coupons first, then have the cashier scan the in-ad coupons.  Repeat as often as you'd like and as often as your store allows.

Yes, I got six pair of scissors.  With several family members now couponing with me, this is a good time of year to grab a few extras.  At this (lack of!) price, even if you don't want to gift them it makes sense to grab a few pair to keep on hand.  Who doesn't use scissors??

And if you don't want tissue paper, you can just buy 3 pair of scissors for $2.99ea, less the $1 coupons for a total of $5.97 and get $5 in Super Jingle Cash back - $.97 for three pair!
Be sure to check the price of these at your store; if they're less than $8.49ea, you'll need to grab a couple candy bars or other fillers to get your pre-coupon total up to $25.

As always, if doing more than one transaction at Wags, don't use the rewards/"Jingle Cash" from the previous transaction to pay for the next one.

The early bird gets the worm...but, really, who wants a worm?

With all the running around going on, and with Andy working overtime this week, I didn't rush out to take advantage of the few grocery deals I wanted to get.  Lately we've gotten into a shopping rhythm: drugstores on Sunday morning, Giant Eagle on Monday or Tuesday evening.  I like this schedule for normal weeks because I have access to any useful food coupons that might come out in Sunday's paper.  It works well.  We wind up with three days to catch the tail end of Giant Eagle's sale week.

Well, that plan kind of failed this week thanks to the creature to the left.  I wasn't too concerned about the weather forecasts calling for lots of snow Monday & Tuesday.  We don't live in the area that tends to get the worst lake effect snow, so when a lake effect storm comes through it's not as bad as it is just 30 miles to the east of us.

Monday was a crazy busy evening.  We were gonna go shopping on Tuesday but it was a bit snowy and just too darn cold.  The snow was supposed to end late Tuesday, so we still had Wednesday - the last day of the sale week - to get our butts to the store.

Yeah, Wednesday around 3 or 4 in the afternoon the snow really picked up.  Andy's normal 10 minute commute home took 40 minutes and it just kept snowing and snowing and snowing.  The roads were a mess.  Cheap frozen veggies and free milk wasn't worth trying to drive in the winter wonderland outside.

I gambled by putting the shopping trip off, and I lost that bet.  Fortunately we've got plenty of food and I didn't miss anything completely awesome.  There are cheaper frozen veggies this week and the milk is only two bucks at Rite Aid. 

But the sun is out today.  Even though it's cold, I'm pretty sure the weather is taunting me.

Monday, December 6, 2010

Drugstore Trifecta: $112 for $21

Apologies for being a day late on this.  With the holiday season upon us now, things get a little hectic 'round these parts.  Sunday kicked it off with an annual family Christmas tradition - but more on that later.

Sunday was also drugstore deals day.  We got going a little earlier than normal and things just weren't going my way once we got where we were going.  The trip went from frustration to success to disappointment, but in the end I did okay.  To complicate matters, I forgot to bring my camera with me yesterday so I wasn't able to get photos of everything before it was either distributed, used, or put away.  My sad, empty little loot stack photo is only part of an otherwise decent haul.

Not pictured: four 2 liters Diet Coke, 2 more picture frames, 5 newspapers, 2 bags cat litter, 8 bottles Pantene shampoo & conditioner.

Wags
5 newspapers $10
2 gift card holder cards $1.98
2 bags cat litter $6
1 box trash bags $9.49
2 Hershey bars $1
Total: $28.47 - shelf price $39.61, no coupons, paid with expiring RRs
Received back $5 RR, $2 RR
Out of pocket $21.47

This was an adventure.
First and foremost, I had $27.75 in Register Rewards from the big Black Friday profit machine which were expiring this week.  Letting those expire is like throwing cash in the garbage can, but I wasn't interested in any RR deals this week save for one.  I had already figured I'd use these babies to buy something like trash bags so that's all good.  The circular for this week advertises "buy two greeting cards, get $2 RR" - I'd heard there were $.99 cards in many stores so I figured I'd add two of those in my transaction and roll at least $2 of my expiring stash.  In addition, this week and next Wags has a ridiculously-named program called Super Jingle Cash - for every $25 you spend in a transaction before coupons, you receive a bonus $5 RR good for the next week.  Even better!  I was spending over $25 regardless, so that's just an extra treat.
I found all the items I'd wanted without issue and checked out in cosmetics with the super-friendly gal who works that department.  She's always very nice and she's extremely knowledgeable about Wags' coupon policies.  Well, my items were bagged and I paid with my RRs and we both watched the Catalina machine expectantly for my $7 in rewards that were due.  Nothin'.  Crap.  She sighed, I said "Umm," and before I could get the rest of my thought out she said the same thing had happened already this morning and she'd get the manager to fix it.
Long story short, the manager gave me a $7 gift card to make up for the non-printing RRs.  At first he tried to say I didn't get the rewards because I'd used coupons (managers ALWAYS say this at Wags, and besides I didn't use coupons); then he said it was because I'd paid in RRs (they always say this as well, and I informed him the last 20 times I'd paid with RRs at his store I'd had no issues getting what was advertised).  So I got the $7 back which is just fine because gift cards don't expire.  I later did some investigation and discovered the problems:
1. The greeting card promotion is supposedly a misprint; it's get $2 when you buy THREE cards.
2. The "Super Jingle Cash" (I cringe typing it...) has some printed exclusions including tobacco, alcohol, dairy.  It apparently has an UNPRINTED exclusion of newspapers as well.  That's perfectly fine; if I'd known newspapers were excluded I would have just bought $10 more in trash bags or something.  If they don't print their marketing materials correctly, though, I can't help that.  I follow the rules exactly as written.  Fortunately the store made everything right and it wasn't too much of a hassle.

CVS
8 bottles Pantene shampoo & conditioner $29.92
1 bottle Gain $.99
1 bag Planters Flavor Grove almonds $2.50
Subtotal $33.41, shelf $43.41
Less $5 off $30 purchase, less $2.50 Planters, less $.50 Gain, less four buy one get one free Pantene, less $1 off 2 Pantene, less $2 off 2 Pantene
Total $7.45, paid in ECBs, received back $10 ECB
$2.55 profit!!

This was the only store Sunday where everything went right.  There's a deal where if you spend $30 on selected P&G products, you get a $10 ECB back.  The Pantene is on sale for $3.74 and I had a slew of BOGO coupons.  When I got a $5 off $30 coupon in my email last week, I knew this would turn out to be a great deal.  I have another family member doing the $20 P&G rebate who needed about $25 more in spending to hit the $50 threshold, so I grabbed all this Pantene at a profit to me and traded it and the receipt for 4 boxes of the cereal Rite Aid had for $.99 on Black Friday.  Now she'll be able to get her $20 rebate as well!
The Gain was solely to make sure my P&G purchase was over $30.  Sometimes the ECB triggers a few cents short of the advertised price point, but after the hassle at Wags I didn't feel like messing around.  As a bonus, I discovered that the Gain dish detergent (others as well, I'm sure, but I have about 38 million bottles of Gain) can also be used as laundry detergent!  I did a test run on a comforter that had been stored away for the summer and it came out clean and fresh.  This is gonna be a great money saver!! 
The magic coupon machine at CVS spit out a coupon for $2.50 off Planters Flavor Grove products; they're on sale for $2.50 this week.  More free nuts!  We got a bag of the Chili Lime flavor to try which I really like; unfortunately Andy thinks it's just okay.

Next, on to Rite Aid:

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Updated loot stack

I took photos of my non-food loot stack a month ago.  I'd only been trying my hand seriously at the drugstore deals for a few weeks at that point and it showed.

Let's see where things stand a month later, after some practice and the screaming Black Friday deals, shall we?

It's already time to take out a bunch of that toothpaste and bag it up to be donated.
Lotions on the left; soaps, body wash, deodorant upper left/top; razors & cough drops (underneath) upper right; toothpaste, brushes & floss on the right; cold & sinus plus painkillers front center.

Remember when I said I needed shampoo?  I think I'm good now.
Laundry care, plastic bags & Thermacares on the left; dish soap back center (in the process of moving those to the kitchen); everything else is hair dye, shampoo, and conditioner.

Overflow.  Fortunately we have a massive linen closet that would otherwise be 90% empty.

 Paper towels, TP & feminine care.

Mind you, this is all the stuff that ISN'T being used for Christmas gifts.  No, I'm not gifting toilet paper, but a lot of the lotion, body wash, and other nice beauty products are going in various gift baskets.  And everyone's getting a tube of toothpaste!

Review: Tom's of Maine Wicked Fresh

So Tom's of Maine recently put out a new line of dental care called Wicked Fresh.  Like other Tom's products, it's all natural, sustainable, and cruelty-free.  I had the opportunity to try the Wicked Fresh Cool Peppermint toothpaste and overall I really like it.


When you open the tube, be prepared for two things.  First, it's super minty smelling; not the fake, sickly sweet peppermint smell, but a very natural, real peppermint scent.  It made me anticipate springtime when I'll be able to get a mint plant or two growing.  Second, the appearance of the toothpaste might throw you off a little.  It made me look twice.  I'm so used to pure white, perfectly smooth toothpaste that the slightly grainy-looking, off-white appearance took me by surprise.  It makes sense, though, since there aren't weird emulsifiers and strange chemicals in Tom's.  Of course it's not going to look like standard toothpaste.

The graininess may be more pronounced once you've got the brush in your mouth for some people.  On my first brushing, I was kind of unhappy with what felt like a very fine grit between my teeth that persisted for several minutes after brushing.  If you've ever seen a cat eat some peanut butter, I was doing pretty much that when I came out of the bathroom.  Andy had to try it when I was making all sorts of funny faces and he didn't find it grainy or gritty in the least, so maybe it's just me.

Once I got over the weird graininess, I was surprised at the difference in how clean my mouth felt.  As mentioned before, the scent isn't sickly sweet minty; the taste isn't either.  It has a clean, nice peppermint taste that really lingers and it doesn't leave behind the sweet aftertaste that other toothpastes tend to have.  I liked the taste so much and was so convinced it had wiped out the evidence of my garlicky pasta for dinner that I repeatedly and enthusiastically breathed in Andy's face, encouraging him to smell my breath.  He agreed that I was quite minty and, since he's used to the weird things I do, didn't have me committed to the nearest asylum.

By my second brushing with Tom's, I didn't notice the graininess that I'd not liked before.  It's not the perfectly smooth paste I'm used to, but I didn't find it gritty anymore.  The taste remained pleasant and though I didn't keep up with exhaling every five minutes at Andy, I did feel that my mouth was clean and my breath non-stinky.

I've been using the Wicked Fresh for a couple weeks now and I have to say I really like it.  It's definitely different from the standard and the differences are all positive.  My mouth feels clean, my breath fresh, and it really does a number on strong-smelling foods that can leave unpleasant reminders for you and those you're in close contact with.  Toothpaste isn't something I'd given much thought to in the past, but I appreciate Tom's corporate values and their dedication to producing natural products that aren't tested on animals.

Good stuff and worth a try.  The Wicked Fresh runs about $4 per tube at most major retailers and you can often find coupons if you want to give it a shot!


note: I was provided with several tubes of Tom's of Maine Wicked Fresh toothpaste to facilitate this review.  I received no other compensation.  My opinions are my own.