I was gone all day, and came home to find this really useful, interesting thread!
Ok, here are some things I do to be frugal.
I figured out how much I spent in the grocery store I usually shop at. I knocked of 20%, and challenged myself to keep to that. It worked out to $100/week, so that is my budget for that store. That's everything I buy there, which is not just groceries, but socks, car wiper blades, cleaning products, whatever. (It does not include pet food, chicken food, or prescriptions.)
$100/week = $5200/year. We have been under that for the last 3 years. 2022 was $4800.
We have a great recycle place about 10 miles away. Once a month, paper, glass, metal, old electronics, plastic, Styrofoam. The store where I buy groceries takes plastic bags. And not just bags; all types of plastic film. Chip bags, the wrapper around a head of lettuce, the wrapper around a bundle of TP, etc.
We throw out very little trash. 1 large garbage bag every 2-4 weeks is par for the course. If it's plant based, it goes to the chickens or to the compost bin. If it's recyclable, it goes to the basement to await its trip to the recycle center.
We have a woodstove, and it's supplying about 80% of our heat. We have about 10 acres of woods, so we have a lifetime supply. We invested in a couple of chainsaws and a 40 ton splitter. That beast can handle whatever DH can give it. It'll outlast us and be passed on to someone after we're gone.
Every year I try to grow more of our food. I'll be putting in some grape vines next spring. The chickens are part of our food chain, but just their eggs. Someday, we may harvest for the table, but so far not yet. The second use for the chickens is their manure. It makes THE BEST compost!
Our well water isn't that tasty, but we put in an RO filter. I'm a water snob now. I drink a lot more water, which is a good thing. Pennies a bottle? How about tenths of pennies? Essentially free.
One way to save a lot of money? Be healthy! DH and I have been blessed with good health all of our lives. We have friends that spend nearly a thousand dollars every month on prescriptions. (Insurance covers some of that, thank goodness.) So if you have good health, TAKE CARE OF IT! If you can improve your health, do it!
For electricity, I try to make things that make heat do more than one thing. Like baking stuff in the oven on chilly days. The dryer is out in the mudroom, so it warms that room up a lot. Speaking of the dryer, I don't use it during the summer. A clothes line will pay for itself very quickly!
I'm sure I'll think of other things. Loving this thread!