• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Free From Broke

A Personal Finance Blog for Regular Folks

  • Home
  • Personal Finance
  • Debt
  • Saving
  • Investing
    • Best Online Brokerages
  • Taxes
  • Credit Scores
You Are Here: Home » Frugal » Real Life Bartering with Mavis of One Hundred Dollars a Month

Real Life Bartering with Mavis of One Hundred Dollars a Month

Published or updated February 25, 2013 by Melissa

Bartering used to be a common occurrence when people had more of an item or skill than they did money. 

Maybe you would see the doctor and pay him with some of your harvest.  Maybe you would help a neighbor build a fence, and the neighbor would then share a portion of his meat with you.

As we came to have more money than time, bartering fell out of use.  However, bartering has recently experienced a resurgence thanks to the economy.

I have bartered for a few things since I quit my full-time job and became a freelance writer.  I bartered with my son’s dance teacher–my son got free tap dance lessons, and in return, we cleaned the studio for 2 hours once a month.  Considering his lessons were $50 a month, we “made” $25 an hour.  Not a bad exchange.

While I like to barter, I don’t do it often enough.  My guess is that you probably don’t either.  We can all learn from Mavis Butterfield, a blogger at One Hundred Dollars a Month.

Who Is Mavis?


Mavis is a woman who lives in suburbia and loves to garden.  This year alone she grew almost 2,000 pounds of food in her back yard.  She also challenges herself to spend no more than $100 a month to feed her family of 4 consisting of herself, her husband, and her two teenage children.

Sure, gardening helps offset the grocery budget, but her secret weapon is bartering.

Bartering with Mavis

As you can imagine, Mavis doesn’t have a lot of money in her $100 a month grocery budget to buy meat, but that isn’t a problem for Mavis.  She just barters with her neighbors, including Francisco and Miss Hillbilly.  Francisco even agreed to have the bartering session videotaped.  I loved his expression when Mavis tried to barter “reclaimed” food, and he asks, “Is it safe?”.  (Reclaimed food is discarded produce from the grocery store that the grocer sets aside and she picks up to feed to her chickens.  If it is in good condition, she keeps it for her own family or to barter with neighbors.)

The video with Francisco landed both Mavis and Francisco on Headline News’ Making It in America series where they offered the skeptical host some tips on how to barter.

How would you like to get free chicken breasts?  Recently her friend, Ramona, had to pick up 80 pounds of chicken breasts she had ordered.

The problem?  She was due to go out of town the day the order was due.  Instead, she asked Mavis to pick it up and trim the fat and put it in individual packages.  Mavis did, and as their barter agreement, she got 30 pounds of the chicken for free!

Other Tactics

Fruits_VegetablesGrowing a garden and bartering are only two of the strategies Mavis uses to lower her grocery bill.

She also keeps the good “reclaimed” food meant for the chickens.  This may disgust some, but the produce is cleared from the store shelves just hours before she picks up the boxes.  Some of her readers have also taken to getting reclaimed produce and share pictures of the bounty they find.  What isn’t good enough to eat Mavis does give to the chickens.

The chickens provide Mavis with free eggs, and she has to spend very little to feed them because she often gets up to 4 boxes of reclaimed produce a week.  The chickens also feast on the abundance of kale that she grows.

Finally, she coupons strategically.  While many extreme couponers load up their carts with junk food, Mavis controls her shopping and couponing so that the majority of what she brings into her home is healthy.  She often barters the groceries she gets for free after coupons like pasta.

How Does She Use the Money She Saves?

If you haven’t yet figured out that Mavis is extremely resourceful, how she spends the money will convince you.

Mavis uses the money she saves to travel to Europe.  She has made at least two trips there with her savings, but on her most recent trip, she took advantage of the summer deals that European auto makers were offering–buy a car in a European country, and the car company would send you two tickets to that European country AND ship the car to the U.S. for free.  Mavis bought a car, which she was already planning to do, and she and her daughter went to Europe for free and used the money she saved on groceries to pay their expenses.

Finally

Bartering is a lost art, but Mavis is doing her best to revive it.  Clearly, bartering, along with a few other strategies, is allowing her to spend her money the way she would like, rather than paying hundreds of dollars a month to feed her family.

Have you bartered before?  Are you interested in doing so after learning of Mavis’ story?

Filed Under: Frugal

About Melissa

Melissa blogs at Mom's Plans about learning to live a fulfilling life on less. She works as a freelance writer and virtual assistant.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bucksprout says

    February 26, 2013 at 4:00 pm

    Bartering is indeed a lost art. I backpacked in South America for 8 months and was forced to learn to barter. I would strike a deal with everyone on every purchase from hostels, food, clothes, bus tickets and tours. My bartering skills while in South America allowed me to travel more. Mavis is a great barter and resourceful. I met a traveler who trekked Machu Pichu for free in exchange for carrying some equipment for the entire group. He saved roughly $500 US dollars! Farmers Market is the best place to barter in the US. You get the best deals when farmers market is about to end. When bartering it’s important to use cash. Cash is king.

  2. Rob @FinancialSprout says

    February 26, 2013 at 10:42 pm

    Wow, what a success story! I may have to try bartering more. One of the best parts of living in the country is definitely that you can grow your own crops. Huge gardens are commonplace around where I live, but people tend to give away fresh produce out of the kindness of their hearts. I think we should barter more, and maybe it will help us get rid of the stuff we don’t need!

Primary Sidebar

A Little About Me

Glen CraigI'm Glen Craig - I used to live paycheck-to-paycheck, drowning in credit card debt. I turned that all around and now I build wealth rather than debt.

My goal is to make personal finance easy for you.

More ABOUT me.

Join our email list (FREE) and never miss an article!


Free From Broke as seen on

Follow Us

FacebookGoogleTwitterRSS



Follow @freefrombroke

Top Articles

  • Use Google Calendar To Pay Your Bills On Time
  • 9 Things to Do When You Retire
  • Side Hustle-Make Extra Money Cleaning Homes
  • Four Ways You Can Pay Off Your Home Mortgage Faster
  • Don’t Forget Your 401(k) When You Leave Your Job! Here’s What You Can Do With It
  • Your 4 Step Guide on How to Stop Living Paycheck to Paycheck
  • What Is A Mortgage Escrow Account?
  • This is Why Your House Isn’t Selling – Here’s How to Finally Get Your House Sold
  • 7 Ways to Get Rich Quick
  • What is Renter’s Insurance and Why You Need It
  • What Is a Probate Lawyer and When Would You Use One?

Recent Articles

  • Money Market Account VS Savings Account – What’s the Difference?
  • Five Ways Fantasy Baseball is Like Personal Finance
  • Tools to Help Organize Your Taxes
  • Don't Let Your Goals Fizzle Out! - 5 Reasons Goals Fail, and What You Can Do To Make Yours Succeed
  • What Do You Think of New Year's Resolutions?

Tools to Improve Your Finances

  • Online High Yield Savings
  • All About Online Checking Accounts – Why Pay More Fees Than You Have To
  • Personal Capital Review - A One Stop Financial Center
  • Online Brokerages That Won't Break Your Bank
  • Credit Karma Review - Get Your Credit Score and More
  • CD Rates
  • Savings Rates
  • Mortgage and Refinance Rates
TurboTax Review HR Block Review Shoeboxed Review

Follow Us On Pinterest!

Follow Free From Broke's board Most RePinned and Popular {Free From Broke} on Pinterest.

Footer

More

  • About
  • Archives
  • Contact Us
  • Get Our Newsletter

More Recent Articles

  • Think Long Term When Shopping Black Friday and Cyber Monday
  • 10 Essential Tips For Shopping Black Friday And Cyber Monday That Will Save You Money
  • How to Improve Your Credit Score Fast
  • What is a Refund Anticipation Loan (RAL) and is it Worth It?
  • Paying Taxes with a Credit Card: Pros and Cons

Disclaimer

Free From Broke is for general information or entertainment purposes only and does not constitute professional financial advice. Be smart and do your own research or contact an independent financial professional for advice regarding your specific situation.

In accordance with FTC guidelines, we state that we have a financial relationship with companies mentioned in this website. This may include receiving access to free products and services for product and service reviews and giveaways.

© 2007–2025 Free From Broke A Personal Finance Blog For Regular Folks – All rights reserved.

No content on this site may be reused in any fashion without written permission from FreeFromBroke.com | Privacy Policy | Sitemap

Copyright © 2025 · Metro Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

We are using cookies to give you the best experience on our website.

You can find out more about which cookies we are using or switch them off in settings.

Go to mobile version
Powered by  GDPR Cookie Compliance
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.