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Thread: Cost of living
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1st March 2023, 09:34 PM #16GOLD MEMBER
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1st March 2023, 09:47 PM #17SENIOR MEMBER
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2nd March 2023, 07:36 AM #18GOLD MEMBER
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2nd March 2023, 07:40 AM #19SENIOR MEMBER
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2nd March 2023, 09:30 AM #20GOLD MEMBER
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PM sent.
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2nd March 2023, 10:32 AM #21SENIOR MEMBER
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Also popped in to Bunnings a few weeks back for a browse at the gardening section
Very few plants under $20 each
Wheelbarrows used to be around $100...now over $140
Decided to go to a local nursery as I was specifically looking for banana plants
Finally found some for sale
They were only small specimens but were $50 each
Didn't buy any but purchased a passionfruit vine for $17 instead.
I think it was the cheapest plant in the nursery.
Wasn't game to price the fertilisers
Log Dog
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2nd March 2023, 11:59 AM #22
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2nd March 2023, 01:42 PM #23
That's one of the main reasons why I have set up a "worm farm" in the back yard. We grow a lot of our own vegetables and the soil around here needs a bit of a boost on a regular basis - even the lawn. We renovated one of the bathrooms a while back and the old cast iron bath tub was replaced with a newer more modern one, so I knocked up a steel support frame and put the old tub up the back and made a cover for it out of wire fencing mesh and shade cloth. All of our vegie scraps go in there and the worms turn them into fertilizer. About twice a year, I get a huge tub of worm "castings" which the wife uses in potting mix and for seedlings etc - and about once a fortnight I get a 20 litre bucket of worm "tea" out of the bottom of the tub through a filtered drain. This is diluted down and mostly used as fertilizer in the vegie gardens - we don't need to add anything else other than home made compost and mulch as a general rule. Any that is left over goes on the lawn - I have made up a venturi arrangement so that the liquid can be sucked out of a bucket and into the sprinkler feed so is diluted down as it is spread on the lawn.
I used to buy the occasional bag or two of blood & bone for the lawns from Bunnings - but the prices these days have put me off even going into the garden section there.
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2nd March 2023, 05:16 PM #24Senior Member
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2nd March 2023, 08:58 PM #25SENIOR MEMBER
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5th March 2023, 09:26 PM #26GOLD MEMBER
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i honestly think alot has a bit to do with energy prices.
if fuel and electricity are going up, and we have to use it to make and transport the goods. well its the consumer that pays
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17th March 2023, 06:24 PM #27Intermediate Member
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You are absolutely correct, the most prosperous countries in the world are those with the lowest energy costs. Australia had one of the highest standard of living in the world a few decades ago and now we are mixing it with 3rd world countries. Very sad to see.
The other side of it is that governments around the world have created the problem with all the debt filed spending and contrary to what they say publicly they actually want higher inflation because it erodes all that debt away. 10% inflation over 3 or 4 years halves their debt.
Sadly I don't see things getting better any time soon. I hope I'm wrong.
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18th March 2023, 09:05 PM #28
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20th March 2023, 12:59 PM #29
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20th March 2023, 04:19 PM #30
The cost of living has always risen. It is fanciful to think that it won't. The real question revolves around how much it has risen and whether it is out of wack with general trends. The last year has seen a huge rise in CPI:
CPI.png
It is the highest rise for more than thirty years.
More information here:
Consumer Price Index, Australia, December Quarter 2022 | Australian Bureau of Statistics (abs.gov.au)
Regards
PaulBushmiller;
"Power tends to corrupt. Absolute power corrupts, absolutely!"
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