One Hundred Pounds

Entries from March 2008

What Next?

March 31, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Spent the last of the money there, more or less. £4.07, on a pastrami sandwich, a couple of big bars of chocolate for my housemates, a baguette and a yoghurt for Anya. Challenge over.

So, after two months, what have I learned? Basically I’ve learned that being skint isn’t all that bad if your rent’s paid. That and that it would be practically impossible to starve to death in this country. I think if I kept it going, it would get harder. I wouldn’t have anything left worth selling, and I wouldn’t have the stock of cigars and whisky that I’ve enjoyed.

Next month I will not be doing a £100 challenge. I’m going to buy things! Clothes and stuff. Should I still blog these purchases? If anyone’s interested enough, I guess I will. If no-one asks for it though, I’ll not bother.

I’m not ready to give up on the whole “one hundred pounds” idea though, so here’s the plan:

On the 23rd of May, Dave and I will arrive in Budapest. On the 10th of June we will leave from Gdansk in Poland. Inbetween these two dates, we aim to be in Serbia for the final of the Eurovision Song Contest on the 24th of May. We would also like to visit Kaliningrad Oblast, an exclave of Russia. From leaving Budapest airport to entering Gdansk airport, each of us has a personal budget of 100 pounds.

Categories: spending · the rules

Month 2, Day 31: Some Last-Minute Mystery Luck

March 31, 2008 · Leave a Comment

I managed to spend all but 90p of my remaining cash over the weekend. This was leaving me with just 90p for today, with a possibility of a trip to the cinema. It would be a bit crap to fail the challenge at the last hurdle, and no fun to miss an outing to the cinema. This is where the mystery comes in. This morning, I found two £2 coins wedged into a clip on my little backpack:

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Where did they come from? I’ve no memory of doing this, plus I’ve watched every penny like a hawk since the beginning of February. There’s no way I could have put them there and forgot since the challenge began. Plus, I’ve worn this bag pretty much every day over the same period. Is it possible that I didn’t notice they were there and that they’ve been there for months and months? Or has someone else put them there. It’s a real mystery. Anyway, I’m adding £4 to the budget.

Saturday night it was raining and the bar was far, so I dug deep and we took a taxi. The taxi we hailed stopped a little bit up the road from us. While we were walking towards it in the rain, another taxi stopped right next to us. I decided we should continue on to the taxi we’d hailed. I thought this made me a good person, principled like. The fare was £5.  We visited a couple of drinking establishments. Rounds were cheap, as we were buying coke and surreptitiously pouring in some leftover Cuban rum. £6.30.

On Sunday, my housemate Andrew and I ventured out into Bristol to see what fun we could have for the remaining £8.10. First we visited a pub called “The Old England” in the Stokes Croft region of Bristol. It was recommended to us by two people standing outside it who beckoned us from afar. There was a woman lying on the ground drinking out of a bottle of whisky who seemed to approve of the pub. We ventured in, and were treated kindly throughout our stay. We enjoyed a pint of lager each, and some patties, for £4.20. There was a sign on the wall saying that no-one was allowed to sell drugs in the premises. I think that some of the people there must not have seen the sign. There was loud music to enjoy. I didn’t get a picture of the patties, but here’s Andrew in post-prandial bliss:

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After the old england, we walked on. We decided to head to the Old Duke. You remember, the pub that is somehow named after both the Duke of Wellington and Duke Ellington. On the way we saw a dog that was in love with a traffic cone:

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That dog really loved that traffic cone. I mean really loved it, in the most literal of senses. I suggested to the owner that they should get it a female friend.

£1.40 in the Old Duke for a coke. We chatted to a couple of girls outside the pub. They liked to talk about drugs, mostly about where you could buy them. Somewhat unsurpisingly, they were familiar with the Old England.

We finished up in Watershed, £1.60 for a latte. I sat facing what looks like a cupboard door in the wall, over at the far end windows. The last time I sat facing this cupboard door, Paul Merton walked out of it wearing a mis-shapen white cotton T-shirt and looking grumpy. I stared at the cupboard for some time, hoping that it would happen again, but I left disappointed.

Balance = £4.90 (-75.9%)

Categories: lucky · spending

Month 2, Day 29: Almost There!

March 29, 2008 · 1 Comment

I’m letting go too much too soon. The end is in sight, so I’m going through the money too fast. It’s been:

  • A smoked mackerel treat: £1.79
  • Some corn-fed, free-range chicken, to make the spiciest chicken you ever did taste: £3.90
  • A guitar lesson (my grade 1 exam is on Wednesday): £12.50
  • A bumper book of Trinity Guildhall scales and exercsises: £5.95

Got to be careful now, it’s too easy to get this wrong, and run out too soon…

Balance = £20.40 (-54.2%)

Categories: Uncategorized

Month 2, Day 27: A Game for All to Play

March 27, 2008 · 12 Comments

Here’s a game to keep you amused. Click this link and it’ll take you to a random wikipedia page. See how many pages you have to go to before you find something you’ve already heard of. It was four for me. I passed through Silas Betton, Jonas Dupont, the thematic equative. Things and people I’ve never heard of. Then I got to Doug Naylor, creator of Red Dwarf. I’ve definitely heard of him.

How many did it take you? Post your chain here.

P.S. Disambiguation pages do not count.

P.P.S. Pointing out that you knew one in the middle of someone’s chain is not allowed

Categories: Uncategorized

Month 2, Day 27: A Weekend Away

March 27, 2008 · Leave a Comment

A lot of ground to cover now, I’ve not blogged since Friday! On Friday, after sorting out my Cuban propaganda photos I took a walk round town, with misanthropy in mind. I started to feel a bit better about humanity when I saw the paperback bestsellers in Borders. In my memory, this is probably the least offensive set of books that have occupied the top 20 at Borders. No Coleen McLaughlin autobiographies, no “How to get rich and popular” or anything like that. Maybe we’re getting better.

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An increase in affection for life and humanity then set in, which stayed with me all weekend. Friday’s spends were:

  • £4.40 for coffees and teas with Jenny
  • £4.24 for a range of exceptional bargains in Sainsburys, the bounty shared with Omar
  • £5.20 for a couple of pints in the ever charming Deco Lounge

On Saturday, I hopped on the bike and took a ride round past Gloucester and into Wales, through the Brecon Beacons and into Snowdonia. Absolutely amazing. I’m still scared of doing long runs on the bike. When I’m sleeping the night before going out on a long run, I think about the hundreds of hazards I’m going to have to negotiate, and my untimely death seems a certainty. Once I get out though, I get on top of the fear (well, mostly) and it’s an amazing experience.

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More fear conquering in Wales, as we walked into the mountains up to about 1000m in the ice, wind and snow. At night it was lots of guitar and singing and drinking on both nights, and then the run back to Bristol. Spends:

  • Various petrol stops at £25.62
  • Whisky and tobacco at £19.99
  • Food at £8.00

The weekend was such an amazing experience, I was expecting it to be all change with the thesis progress, but unfortunately not. Still in procrastinor’s grip.

Since then it’s been:

  • £5.50 that I was owed for some shopping
  • £1 that my housemate Anya owed me that she used to buy me a dessert
    • These last two items happened a while back, but a change in skinto accountancy procedures means I’m setting them against the budget
  • £12.92 in Lidl for supplies for a meal for Phil, Gemma and Laura who were round for dinner
  • £2.20 for Latte Wednesday

Balance = £44.58 (-63.4%), about enough for a half decent weekend!

Some conflicting movements in the EAPCCI

  1. Houses for sale on my street = 4 (up 1, was 2 at the start)
  2. Price of petrol at the Tesco down the street = 106.9p/l (down 1p, was 103.9p at the start)
  3. Price of 1kg of spaghetti in Lidl = 79p (no change, was 69p at the start)

Categories: economic apocalypse paranoia corner · on the road · procrastinor · spending