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How to Celebrate the Holidays on a Budget

Here are ten ways to have fun and spread holiday cheer in or around Wilton without breaking the bank.

 

This year’s holiday season can be special for you and your family regardless of your budget. Here are some fun tips for creating new holiday traditions while saving money.

1)    Make your cards from recycled materials. Cards can be made from paper grocery bags, cereal boxes, used file folders and even last year’s holiday cards. Feature your family’s artwork and use recycled wrapping paper or paper from catalogs and magazines for backgrounds. A great resource for making cards from recycled materials is "Creative Correspondence" by Michael and Judy Jacobs, available at on Amazon.com. 

2)    Have fun together and create a festive decoration by making a gingerbread house. You can bake the gingerbread yourself and use royal icing to construct the house and attach the candy. Another option is to use graham crackers and hot glue to make the house and frosting from a can to attach the decor. Great royal icing recipes and other gingerbread house tips are available on Cooks.com.

3)    Save on your holiday treats. Kathryn Manchip, a Sammamish, WA mom and hobby baker shares these tips. “If you are going to be doing a lot of baking, buy your ingredients in bulk from places like Costco." Manchip also recommends participating in a cookie exchange so you can sample different treats without having to bake them yourself. "And if you want to be adventurous and thrifty, try making a fondant as an icing – it works on both cakes and cookies. You can make your own at home for a fraction of the cost of the store-bought fondant. It tastes better, too, since it's mostly made out of melted marshmallows.” Manchip recommends this recipe for fondant.

4)    Cut your own Christmas tree from Audubon Society H. Smith Richardson Tree Farm in Westport. Thornton, CO’s Jennifer Miller, author of Where the Best Books Are!, a blog with reviews and recommendations of books for kids, says cutting your own tree saves money and creates a great holiday memory for your kids. “Here in Colorado, USFS [U.S. Forest Service] permits are just $10 per tree. We meet up with friends, share cookies and cocoa, and our boys have adventures in the forest. Plus, you can get more than one permit and cut down a fresh tree for a needy family or elderly friend.” 

5)    Make your own decorations and ornaments. Seattle artist, author and instructor Carla Sonheim says, “My favorite Christmas decoration is a drawing of Santa Claus done by my son Christer when he was 9 years old. I also have made 'holiday card/ornaments' with my own drawings or my kids' drawings. I'll scan the image into the computer and then print it out on sturdy card stock or other heavy paper. Then I'll cut around the image and punch a hole in the top and thread with yarn. On the back I write my holiday greeting and then send it out as a holiday card, which doubles as a paper ornament. I also have made ornaments from photographs of my kids at various ages.” 

6)    Give gifts of your time and skills. Make a gift certificate up for an afternoon of tech support for your friend who's about to toss his new computer out of the window, an evening of babysitting so friends with little kids can have a date night, or a day of housework or yard work for an elderly relative. 

7)     Check out the free and low-cost holiday activities in your area. Local productions of holiday favorites including "The Nutcracker" or "A Christmas Carol" can be just as magical as a big city production for a fraction of the ticket price. School and community bands and orchestras often offer free holiday music concerts. Toss your kids in the car with some hot chocolate and holiday treats and tour your town’s neighborhoods for the best holiday light shows.

8)    Classic toys such as wagons, riding toys, puzzles, board games and wooden blocks make great holiday gifts and are often available at your local consignment and thrift stores , such as The Turnover Shop and Wayside Exchange, what you would pay at a big-box store. 

9)    Skip the expensive Santa breakfast or holiday dinner out and spend time at your favorite service organization. Give back with your family by sorting donations or serving a meal.

10)  Check out your favorite movies, holiday books and music from your local library and schedule some evenings to share childhood favorites such as "It’s a Wonderful Life" or "Miracle on 34th Street" with your kids. 

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Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
Sandra May 25, 2013 at 10:38 am
Mortimer- please ask your friend Bill not to post disgusting photos and descriptions of his bodilyRead More functions. I am OFFENDED!!!
Steve Street May 24, 2013 at 05:52 pm
Why would you post someone else's story on the patch? This isn't 'Nam, Walter. There are rules.
Sandra May 25, 2013 at 09:17 am
This animal might look like a harmless, big-eyed baby ewok, but the slow loris is one of the onlyRead More poisonous mammals in the world. Its subtle nature makes it popular in the illegal pet trade, but unknowing humans should stay clear of its toxin, which is released from the sides of its elbows. When threatened, the loris takes the toxin into its mouth and mixes it with saliva. The animal will also lick its hair to deter predators from attack. The toxin can cause death by anaphylactic shock.
Steve Street May 24, 2013 at 06:03 pm
Bill I have some possible good news for you. After reading this, I stopped by the Village Market onRead More my way home from a slow, rainy day in the Center in hopes of picking up some kumquats for Filbert. They are out. So it sounds like some of our fellow Wiltonians are laying kumquats around town. I just hope the rain has not scared Filbert. Best to you and your family. I shall pray for you in Church this weekend.
Glen K Dunbar May 25, 2013 at 11:35 am
At least you can go Bill. I just had a 2 in one operation and I am so constipated I fear when I doRead More go I will blow up like a balloon. Sorry to be blunt like that folks. Bill, how do you know it was their soup I LOVE to go to VM. They are truly awesome over there. I always sample the soups when I go Actually, I try several if I like them. The best they have is their French Onion Soup OMG like paradise. I love their seafood section and their meat section w/all the prepared and marinated meats. I LOVE the little containers of Choc Mousse too.
Bill May 24, 2013 at 04:12 pm
UPDATE: My gas has dissipated slightly, but it's been replaced with stomach cramps. And I've hadRead More four wicked bowel movements since.
Walter Sobchak May 23, 2013 at 01:15 pm
You miss the DAZE of George W?, failing banks, auto industry going under, record high homeRead More forclosures and unemployment, etc etc. Obama is getting it right! BOSTON (Reuters) - The average 401(k) retirement balance for U.S. workers hit a record high of $80,900 in the first quarter, a growth spurt of 75 percent since the stock market's nadir in March 2009, Fidelity Investments said on Thursday based on a survey of its accounts. Most of the recovery is linked to a stock market rally that has lifted the broad S&P 500 Index 145 percent since the close of trading on March 9, 2009. The 401(k) recovery looks even better for workers 55 and older, according to Boston-based Fidelity, the largest U.S. administrator of 401(k) retirement plans. Those pre-retirement workers have seen their average balance nearly double to $255,000 since the first quarter of 2009 when the average balance was $130,700. The analysis covers people who have been with their current employer 10 or more years, Fidelity said.
Gordon Shumway May 25, 2013 at 11:05 am
How fresh is the cat? You know what I always say, "The only good cat is a stir-fried cat."
Bill May 23, 2013 at 04:39 pm
I did find the remains of a small cat, if anyone wants that. Free.
Mortimer Godfrey May 23, 2013 at 04:38 pm
Fantastic stuff here, Billy boy! Mort Godfrey
Sandra May 22, 2013 at 03:46 pm
British soldier was hacked to death with a machete. The soldier is not allowed to have a gun but theRead More terrorists had a firearm but chose to behead the soldier. The suspects spoke to camera after attack. “We swear by Almighty Allah, we will never stop fighting you until you leave us alone. The only reasons we killed this man is because Muslims are dying daily. This British soldier is an eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth. We apologize that woman had to see this today, but in our lands our women have to see the same. You people will never be safe. Remove your government. They don’t care about you.”
Sandra May 22, 2013 at 03:39 pm
Israel knows who their enemy is and are not afraid to call them out. After 4 Americans were killedRead More by terrorists in Benghazi, when violence in the Middle East was raging, President Obama in partnership with Hillary Clinton spent $70,000 in taxpayer money on a commercial that aired on Pakistani television apologizing for the "video." We are sorry. We are going to get the man who made the video who exercised freedom of speech and arrest him. Any terrorist suspects questioned yet?