Queen Michael said:
The way I see it, the companies don't expect you to use the very last part of the toothpaste, ketchup etc. They just put it in there because otherwise they'd get accused of being stingy. To me, using the very last drop of toothpaste so I'll get my money's worth is like reading the copyright page in a novel just not to be wasteful. It's nobody's intention that you should make use of
everything, they just haven't found a way to make oackages and tubes that don't let anything go to waste.
Embz said:
Im a student Im not 'cheap' I just cant afford to buy a new bottle of ketchup or toothpaste every week. Try paying £290 a month in rent and then put utilities and food on top of that, when you have a yearly loan of £4000 and see how much you use out of a ketchup bottle before you throw it out.
I would probably skip an unnecessary luxury item like ketchup.
When you're buying your food on a student budget, ketchup becomes a necessity, you just hope some days you can make your dinner taste enough like ketchup to pass.
I'm not gonna cut open toothpaste tubes to get the last out, but I'll roll em up pretty tight from the end.
It's not a 'cheap' thing, but I try to recycle all I can too, I have a bag in the kitchen for plastic bottles, one for cans, then a small bin for glass, one for paper, and a small bag for plastic bottle caps and another for batteries, as I figure why just pile anyone on the landfill if it can be reused somehow.
However I AM guilty of chucking out stale soda, there's something about a half empty bottle of pepsi, even tightly closed, that after a two day gap, just doesn't taste the same even tho it's still fizzy. I tend to pour it down the toilet however as I hear it's good for eating away at limescale (acid vs alkali and all that).