WellThen? wrote: » Like I would never spend that much on a bag, but would have no problem paying 1.75 for ketchup.... people are weird.
eternal wrote: » Had the experience of seeing someone whose friends were a little bit suspect to say the least. They were basically serious drinkers and drug users but I didn't know at this stage. Went to the toilet in their apartment and there was no toilet roll. They were using the Yellow Pages instead.
Dan Jaman wrote: » That's frugality!
eternal wrote: » It's rough, in more ways than one
RonanP77 wrote: » Seeing light bulbs mentioned earlier reminded me, I know a girl who took all the light bulbs with her when she was moving out of rented accommodation.
Mehaffey1 wrote: » Girl I know took all the batteries out of the remotes when she moved out (employer owned furnished house)
dxhound2005 wrote: » A spendthrift is actually the opposite of a stingy person. In fact it normally means wasteful and irresponsible spending. I've never thought about it before but I can see now how it might be interpreted otherwise.
_Whimsical_ wrote: » Thanks for that. I have always used that incorrectly so, I actually asked a couple of people today how they use the word and they thought like me that it meant "thrifty". So you've enlightened several people.
RainyDay wrote: » Remind me to stick on shorts if I'm ever at a session in your place.
Mr. Guappa wrote: » I was on a stag a few years back - group of houses rented at €60 per house, with typically 3/4 lads per house, so €15-20 per head for the night. One house contained 3 brothers and a 4th lad who cancelled at late notice, so it ended up being just the 3 of them in the house. It was a pay at main reception on the Sunday morning type thing. What ensued was an unseemly row with the reception lady as each brother only wanted to pay the €15, refusing to make up the difference for the 4th lad (a fiver each). In the end the stag himself had to step in and fork over the €15.
skittles8710 wrote: » My current housemate usually gets up about 10-15 mins before me during the week to have her breakfast. She has a cup of tea and porridge. Each morning I go down after to make my a cup of coffee and microwave my porridge she has the kettle and microwave unplugged at the mains. I doubt this saves major bucks on the electricity bill..
coolhull wrote: » I always wash the toilet tissue when I've finished with it. Bloody awkward things to hang out on the clothesline though.
rawn wrote: » If I had just bought them and they were expensive power saving ones damn right I would too! If they were Dealz or Euroshop ones then it's definitely stingey.
fizzypish wrote: » True that but plug out anything with an adapter/transformer. If they **** up badly enough, they can light up. Worse case scenario.....
skittles8710 wrote: » A big explosion in the 10-15 interval between when she turns off the kettle and I turn it on? They're bog standard plugs in any case.
Field east wrote: » From a technical perspective/ financial perspective, this is not a very smart move because the landlord would be entitled to deduce bulb replacement cost from deposit. Ditto for blown bulbs if bulb was working from the outset.
check_six wrote: » (By the way, they are absolutely not entitled to do this but they got away with it in this instance because I am a sucker, and also Ireland, etc.!)
Michael D Not Higgins wrote: » I wouldn't say 'also Ireland'. Landlords can be bad and attempt all sorts of things in any country. But here at least the PRTB is a recourse for the tenant for unfair retention of the deposit.
check_six wrote: » There is a significant tax allowance to cover wear and tear for landlords.