Year: 2016

Budget & Living – Part 2

Hello all, I hope you had a wonderful Christmas. I certainly did, I received most of the gifts I asked for and a majority of them are gifts that make my life better and not clutter it up. I asked for a ceramic coffee mill and some tools, both of which I received from my family.  These gifts are useful to me because I enjoy fresh delicious coffee in the morning and I like to do my own car repairs, so the tools are really handy. I also for the first time did not receive any clothes! I am a big proponent of keeping wardrobes simple and efficient by getting rid of clothes I never use after a year. But enough of that! There will be more on decluttering and efficient living down the road. Today, we talk for the second time about budgets and living.

I would like to bring my thoughts back to living simply through a budget and also trying to minimize the “cost of running our business” – aka the family. I talked before about having a budget and breaking it down between items that are necessary and items that can be reduced. Necessary things in a budget would be a rent/mortgage payment, health insurance, car insurance, home insurance, savings, future payments for cars or other big ticket items, utilities, etc. These items are things I like to set in stone right away, and then build the remaining budget with discretionary items, which are items I like to try to reduce.

To start, first take a look at your income. I am going to do all of my budget calculations with a $50,000 sample income. This is a good example income for a below average American two earner household or an above average individual American income. Other income amounts can be used too, but I want to keep this budget as realistic as possible. Substitute in your own income and adjust accordingly. As you will see, the total income does not matter, since we are going to exercise our budget in terms of percentage spent on each category.

Take that sample $50k income and look at your take home income, or “after tax” income. This is the money you earn each week, bi-weekly or monthly. Regardless of your payment schedule, take that after tax income and equate it out to what you would make in one month. In my example, the person making $50k would take home $3000/month, or make $36,000 a year take home after tax. Note: depending on your household and filing status, most people will receive a partial tax refund for “overpaying” each month. We can talk about taxes another day. For now, just remember that our example is making $3000/month to budget for. Any tax refund is then extra money to be used for other purposed come June the following year.

Our example income earner makes $3000 per month to budget for. Let’s look at this person’s mandatory expenses they must budget for each month. Say for our person, they have one car with a car payment, a small rental apartment, insurance for the apartment and car, utilities to pay for at the home and their employer has an 401k retirement matching program. Their employer also has a health care sharing program through the company. Also, don’t forgot those student loans!

These mandatory expenses work out to be:

  • Health insurance at work = $100
  • 401k Retirement plan at work: 3% of yearly salary = $125
  • Rent = $1200
  • Car payment = $200
  • Rental/car insurance bundle = $145
  • Utilities (electric, water, heating) = $200
  • Student Loans = $400

Total: $2370/mo in mandatory expenses

Remaining budget: $630! Wow look how fast basic American living can destroy a budget and how mandatory spending can account for about 80% of a person’s income.

As you take a look at the above breakdown, can you find any ways to reduce the budget? I can. The person can reduce or eliminate their car payment by saving for and driving a car older than 6 years old. Even if they had to take out a car loan for the car, it would be significantly cheaper to have a lower payment on a less expensive car. Plus, the cheaper, used car would also have less of an insurance burden, which would lower the car insurance cost.

A big stickler with my own household is utilities. Note the $200 per month utility bill. Note how I also did not include cable TV and internet connection as a utility. I do not believe these are utilities, as they are still a luxury in my book (that is notwithstanding I still purchase both of these in my own home). In my own house, I try my hardest to lower the utility burden. This can be as simple as buying LED light bulbs and replacing every incandescent (old fashioned) or florescent (spiral type) bulbs. The incandescent bulbs use 90% of their energy as waste heat and the florescent bulbs use 30% of their energy as waste heat (plus they have mercury inside them which is toxic if the bulb breaks). LED bulbs only use 10% of the former in energy usage which will drastically cut the electricity bill. Utilities can further be reduced by turning off lights and appliances, and even turning down the heat in the winter (up for AC in the summer). My utilities range from $145 in the winter (oil heat cost) to $75 in the summer, all by me and my wife trying the most to follow these simple steps.

By driving an older car and lowering the car payment, in addition to being smart with home utilities, you can save up to $167 per month. That extra $167 can easily pay for an average cable TV/internet bundle and a $40/month smart phone plan. Conversely, you can add even a $100 from your new savings to your company 401k plan each month and save 5.4% of your income instead of 3%. Together with the 3% 401k company match, you will be saving 8.4% a year-which is an excellent way to manage your money (and probably a better rate of savings than most people).

I hope you enjoyed the simple breakdown of “mandatory spending” in budget planning. Soon, I will tackle the more fluid “discretionary spending” part of the budget – where we will discuss the usage of the remaining $630 left per month. We will also run a scenario with the more cost conscious mandatory spending I proposed earlier and add that savings to our discretionary spending.

How to Propagate: Italian Cypress and Atlantic White Cedar

Today I’d like to show you how to propagate plants. I plan to propagate Mediterranean (Italian) Cypress and Atlantic White Cedar. These are two of my favorite plants and its never a bad idea to try to have more of them.

Propagation is the process of creating new plants from existing plants. If you like to garden, or are a plant nut like me, propagating your existing plants to have more of them or even trade them is a fun pastime. It really does not take too long, just 15 minutes of work and some patience.

Like I said before, the Mediterranean Cypress and Atlantic White Cedar are two of my favorite plants. The Cypress, cupressus sempervirens (also known as Italian Cypress), and White Cedar, chamaecyparis thyoides, (aka Whitecedar), are in the same genus, or group, of plants. Italian Cypress is a famous tall, slender evergreen tree with scaly needles. The Whitecedar is also a tall, somewhat more full tree with scaly needles. Cypress grows in Mediterranean climates, or in places with artificial irrigation, similar to Arizona or California. The Whitecedar grows along the Eastern Seaboard, from Maine to Florida, in swamps and bottomlands. The Whitecedar is also evergreen. Both trees are used as ornamentals in the garden, with Cypress being used extensively in climates that it can survive. The Cypress is reportably hardy to 0 deg F, while the Whitecedar is considerably hardier, to below -20 deg F.

To propagate these trees, first gather cuttings. Cuttings should be taken in the winter on younger trees. If a young tree is not available, take a cutting from a low branch. The theory is that a low branch will have more natural rooting tendencies. When taking cuttings from the Whitecedar, be sure to take only a few. Atlantic White Cedars were once common in large tracts in their original range, however logging has reduced their range to 30% of its extent. The wood is waterproof and was highly sought after in the colonial days. Being that the tree usually grew in pure stands, with most being perfectly straight, it was a logger’s easy picking to cut many of them down. So, take only a few cuttings and let the native tree be.

First, gather the supplies. You will need scissors (or a knife), plant material, water, rooting hormone, potting mix, a pot, and a plastic zip-lock bag. Snip the cuttings down to 4″-6″ high individuals. Find individuals with stems that are 1″ to 2″ long, so they can adequately stand upright in the soil. If there are leaves near the bottom 2″ of the stem, remove them so the stem is bare. Set your desired cuttings aside.

Prepare the potting mix. The mix should be a well draining but decent water retentive mix. This seems like an oxymoron, such as “what soil drains water quickly but still holds water?” Crazy talk, or not. Perlite and peat moss are a good solution to what we are looking for. Taking 50% perlite and 50% peat moss, combine both into a pot and mix thoroughly. The perlite is a volume filler, allowing large pours that have air. These pores allow water to drain quickly, not saturating the roots and potentially causing rot. The peat moss on the other hand is like a sponge, it holds water well. Together, the two soils form a great medium for root development, which is exactly what we are trying to do with plant propagation. There is no worry for over watering, but some water is always retained helping roots grow.

Take the potting mix and run it under the faucet to thoroughly saturate the mix. Stop filling water when water begins to drip from the bottom of the pot. Set the potting mix inside the plastic zip-lock bag. Next, pour some rooting hormone onto the table, or paper towel in my example. Dip each cutting in water, then into the rooting hormone powder. Tap each cutting to remove excess powder from caking the cutting, as excess powder will only hurt the roots from growing rather than help. Take another cutting, or use a pointy object (pen or pencil) and poke the soil to form a cavity. Place the cutting in the cavity, then gently tamp down the soil around the cutting to ensure there is no voids under the soil.

Finish up with the same procedure for the remaining cuttings. In my example, I used a 6″ diameter pot, which I felt comfortable filling with 2 large cuttings and 2 small cuttings.

The finished product should look like above. Close the zip-lock bag and set in a bright but indirect light window. Direct sunlight will burn the cuttings. The bag temperature should be between 60-75 degs, the warmer the better. Once a week, feel the soil with your finger. If it is bone dry, add a little more water. Try to avoid adding too much water, as this will cause mold or rot.

Over the years, I have been successful on a number of occasions with this method. Other times, I get mold and brown twigs. As with most plant endeavors, it seems like a 30-40% chance of success is normal. Don’t worry though, as over time you will refine your method. There is a great feeling gently tugging on your cuttings after 5-6 weeks and feeling a small resistance-this means that the rooting was successful! I wish you the best of luck with propagating these evergreens.

Look forward in the future for more plant propagation tips. There are many other methods of plant propagation that I would be happy to write about and demonstrate. I will also create a follow-up post in a few weeks to notify you of any of my new baby plants.

Budget & Living, Part 1

I would like to start a series in the blog, entitled “Budget & Living”. This series will be a few parts long, breaking down how my household has a budget and how we tackle debts and living expenses. I call it Budget & Living because I’ve noticed that a few different “budget busting” sites and blogs tend to have their followers go “all out” when defeating debt. This approach is okay, but there has to be a better way to feel good about ridding yourself of debts while still living life. My plan is a little radical, but after reading what I am thinking maybe you may not consider it as radical as it sounds.

Fall_2016

Don’t go “all out”.

Why don’t you have to go all out? Too often I see my college friends and acquaintances are buying houses, getting new cars and the latest and greatest stuff. My inner minimalist says “ahh-no can do!”, they must have a ton of debt! The realist in me sees that they are making more money, are successful in their careers, hence they want to celebrate by living life. Their debt is something they live with, accepting it and “forgetting about it.” Both approaches have pros and cons, but my approach of “don’t go all out” seems to have a balance, at least I think (aka feel) it does.

A radical proposal.

I propose something radical; why not live off of 1/2 of your income? My grandparents thought this was normal. It was even normal to think like that while only having one breadwinner. What if you have two incomes, as most families do now a days, aka husband and wife working? Live off of one of their incomes! It still satisfies the living off of 1/2 an income since a husband and wife should be considering their net income as one income.

…why not live off of 1/2 of your income?

If America had a literal voice, she would cuss and swear and tell me that “their ain’t no darn gosh tooting way” she can live off of half her income. If America had a negative Nancy generation (some who even hasten to label them as a “nasty Nancy” generation) who would echo this clarion call, it would be the Millennials. Apparently, news media says I am a Millennial (25 years old to be exact). Millennials say how they are burdened with mountains of student loan debt and they would say how they aren’t ready to get married and also how they cannot afford a house…among other things. I say boo-who! I, with the help of my wife, lead our family by living off of half of our net income. You might think we do this by living under a rock, having no fun and be social outcasts. That is incorrect. My wife and I rent a nice (but old, drafty and dingy) single family home with a decent running yard for our dog. We could be getting a nicer rental property for our money but we like the area and the yard for the dog. We don’t move because most rentals at our rate are condos or townhouses with little or no grass. My wife and I have a ton of student loan debt, but I was able to live at my parents house for almost a year and pay off a tremendous amount of my own debt. The wife, on the other hand lived with her sister in the real world and did not have the ability to pay off as much debt. Now that we are married, she and I assumed each others debt. But its okay, no worries! Did I mention we are also saving about $1800 each month in a down payment fund? Yes, a rental payment, utility payments, a down payment, plus we are paying over $800 in student loan minimum payments each month. How in tarnation do we do it? Sometimes I don’t even know.

First things first: count your blessings.

I say count your blessings first because if you are reading this blog, you are a lucky person. I am not trying to boast about my blog, haha, I am merely mentioning that if you have access to a computer and internet, you are a minority. If you are healthy, if you have any job; you are lucky! Consider yourself blessed, either by God as we like to think or to whomever you believe is doing the blessing (Allah, Budda, Fate etc.) Remember to always be thankful for the life you have. Don’t envy those friends who go into debt to acquire the latest and greatest stuff. Be thankful for your own life and your own things. After counting those blessings, its time to start your budget.

Be thankful for your own life and your own things.

Business 101 = Budget 101

To run a business, the total amount of sales must be greater than your salary, your employee’s salaries, the cost of doing the business, and Uncle Sam’s heavy hand of taxation. After that is said and done, anything left over is pure profit! The same holds true for your life, or in this case; your household. Your sales is how much money you make, your own salary is how much you need to live each year (home and food). Your employee’s salaries are those if you have a spouse, or children or other people who depend on you. Uncle Sam’s hand is similar, but at a lower rate. Finally, the “cost of doing the business” is what is extra in your life: debts, fun, purchases, gambling etc etc etc. Most of the time, the cost of the first three things are solid and cannot be changed (yourself, your dependents and taxes), however the last part is what can be changed.

Stay tuned for the next part where I will set up a sample budget based on my own budget, and how I will share with you ways my wife and I fiddle with the “cost of doing business” in our own lives to save more money.  I really like talking about efficiency and finances, so I am very excited to continue the series with great updates on my own learning on how to achieve my dreams.

Welcome to the site

Hello, and welcome to Vineyard Roots!

My name is Victor, and this site/blog/thought area is a place for me to discuss and describe mine and my wife’s journey to fulfilling our dream-to have a vineyard. It has always been a personal goal of mine, to own and run a vineyard. I love growing things and I love grapes, therefore a vineyard was a logical dream to have. Luckily my wife who hates to work also is on board! You gotta love her for that.

I have been meaning to start this site in July 2016, but we were in full blown power mode planning our September wedding back then. Now, as its October, the wedding is finally over (it was a blast) and our lives have returned to normal. We are no longer feeling like we are back in college with the constant nag of wedding “homework” to do after real work. Now we are free!- to a point that is. Our new short term task (or my wife’s newest anxiety) is the purchase of a house. Between fall TV watching that she loves and house hunting online her free time is very little. We have some time before house hunting though, since we need to save for a down payment first.

About this site: I plan to update the site on a regular basis. There is no point in having anyone read our saga if there are no regular scheduled updates! I will post our week to week jobs and tasks related to realizing our dream. There will be other posts on topics that interest me, and possibly a few too many topics on plants. Some posts will be “how-tos” aka tutorial posts. Some posts will be informative, or just me questioning things. I will try not to rant and I am not a fan of politics, so there will not be any of that to taint the site. I look forward to hopefully have the chance to look back on this written record as a testament to a couple who achieved their dreams.

About myself: I like to keep things simple. I like to garden and grow things. I enjoy being outside in nature, be it in the woods or at home in the backyard. I love spending time outside with my dog. I love my wife very much. None of these things are in any order of importance of course!

I believe that in life, anything can be achieved. I see other individuals go out and start businesses, so that makes me want to do the same. I want to struggle with a challenge. I want to grow grapes and bring wine to the world. I want to be my own boss. I believe that me and my wife together can do just that.

So, follow me on our journey. I look forward to taking you along for the ride. Enjoy life and take it slow.