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Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Martha Medunic

Barnegat, NJ
13 Followers
  • Overview
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  • Clips86
  • Following16
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My Recent Boards

  • Garden Inspiration
  • Backyard Escapes
  • Decor Ideas
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Recent Activity


  • Yard Makeovers

  • Spring Wreath Ideas

  • Martha Medunic
    Followed 2 boards Today
  • How many times have you thrown food away because it spoiled before you ate it?
  • We changed our approach to food and have stretched our savings and food stores by using these few tricks.
  • Buying nuts in bulk is cheaper, but you don't want them to go back.  Separate them into air tight containers until you're ready to use them.
  • We freeze our own beans!  We soak them and divide them into meal size servings and lay them flat to freeze.
  • We portion our meats and freeze them.
  • Just make sure to label the freezer bag with the date and remove as much air as possible.
  • We do this for all our meats - chicken, ground beef, ground turkey, pork loin steaks. 3
  • TIP! Save all your chicken scraps, skin and bones, as well as any vegetable scraps.  I store them in a freezer bag and once the bag is full, I slow cook the scraps into a broth.  I let the broth cool and skim the fat, then store it!
  • For portion control, freeze your cookie dough. We fly through a batch of cookies in a few days.  Roll the dough into small balls and freeze them.
  • Transfer them to a freezer bag with the baking instructions on the outside.  Only take out the number of cookies you want to eat.
  • We make our own granola.  It's so easy, just find your favorite recipe and make. Much cheaper than store bought without all the preservatives. 1
  • One of our biggest money savers is making our own pizza.  We buy frozen dough in bulk.  We've made our own pizza sauce, too.  Each pizza comes to about $2.75! 1
  • Making your own bread may be daunting, but it's really quite easy.  One recipe we use makes two loaves.
  • See 10 more photos

Stretching Your Grocery Budget

I share tips and tricks to stop wasting the food you buy.
Noting Grace
Noting Grace Henderson, NV
48 Comments | Post Comment | 18685 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped 2 days ago to kitchen
  • Share 1.9K
  • Like 155
  • Clip 110
Clipped to:
  • Organization
  • DIY to Try
  • Good landscaping turns your home into a show-stopper.
  • Recycled fence and spindles for potting bench
  • #1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood, pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it!  I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!
  • #2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras. 1
  • #3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them.  Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.
  • #4 - Watch for end-of-season sales.  You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers.  That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!
  • #5 - Grow your own plants from seed.  Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well.  Hardy geraniums, sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed.  Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden.  Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden! 1
  • #6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily.  Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm.  I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden.  I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.
  • See 5 more photos

6 Ways to Landscape Without Breaking the Budget

I'm back to my first love these days - gardening! I love being in the garden, digging, planting, sowing and enjoying. This house will be the 6th that I've landscaped and because I always ...»
seem to buy houses that have no landscaping, I have learned how to do it on the cheap.

Here are some of my best tips: .

#1 - Use as many free materials in your landscape as you can. Every part of the world has at least one thing in abundance that you can use for free, be it gravel, rocks or stones; wood,pallets or pine needles; dumpsters, landfill sites or Craig's List and Freecycling networks as cheap sources for repurposed items. Find out what's in your own neighbourhood or town and use it! I've used my local freecycling network to find plants and shrubs for free. I got a whole lilac hedge that way, it really works!!

#2 - Beg for plant divisions or cuttings from family, friends and neighbours. Anyone who has perennials , bulbs or tubers will have to be dividing them up every so often and will be happy to let you have the extras.

#3 - Look for local gardening clubs, they usually have plant sales once or twice a year to raise money for the club and you can get beautiful plants for much less than gardening centers sell them. Plus you know they will survive in your climate because the local gardeners have grown them.

#4 - Watch for end-of-season sales. You can pick up loads of plants at a discount from department stores that have seasonal garden centers. That's where you can pick up your trees and shrubs for less and save big!

#5 - Grow your own plants from seed. Some plants are super simple to grow, you can even just toss the seeds out in your garden at the right time and they'll grow well. Hardy geraniums,sunflowers and pansies are easy to start from seed. Poppies and cosmos are good examples of seeds you can just sow directly in the garden. Opium poppies can even be sown while there is still snow on the garden

#6 - Grow plants that self-seed or spread easily. Examples are creeping thyme, culinary thyme, Johnny Jump-ups, Ladies' Mantle, campanula, euphorbia, lamium, bugleweed, poppies and bee balm. I don't quite understand the desire for growing borderline plants in the garden. I personally don't want to drag some plant kicking and screaming into my garden, I'd much rather have ones that are happily growing and flowering and self-seeding all over.

The best part about rampant growers and self-seeders is that every year, you can dig up the extras and sell them at a yard sale to make some extra cash for the landscaping items that you can't get for free.

Hope I've been able to give you at least one tip you can use. Happy gardening!

#landscaping #gardening #Maygarden

Anne @ DesignDreams by Anne
Anne @ DesignDreams by An... Canada
36 Comments | Post Comment | 18974 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped 3 days ago to Garden Inspiration
  • Share 1.7K
  • Like 145
  • Clip 156
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  • Garden inspiration
  • Gardening/cu...
  • Baskets help keep your pantry items in the right place.

Keep Your Pantry Organized

I used baskets to divide and conquer the clutter in my pantry. The baskets help keep the pantry looking neat for a lot longer. #OrganizedHome
Diy Design Fanatic
diy Design Fanatic Charlotte, NC
10 Comments | Post Comment | 17877 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped 3 days ago to storage and organize
  • Share 3.8K
  • Like 51
  • Clip 66
Clipped to:
  • Organizing/St...
  • Home Decor
  • My quiet place. 2

The swing.

Janie B
Janie B Imler, PA
19 Comments | Post Comment | 4013 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped 5 days ago to Backyard Escapes
  • Share 593
  • Like 50
  • Clip 43
Clipped to:
  • Outdoor Spaces
  • Garden Inspiration
  • Mother's Day Fairy Garden 2
  • Tulip Fairy amidst the wooly thyme, lemon thyme, sedums "Coral Carpet" and "Larinem Park" and Armeria "Morning Star White"
  • Tulip Fairy in her birdbath garden.
  • Here's another! Clearance concrete pot for $1, two little houses from a yard sale for $1 and plants from the yard!
  • See 1 more photo

DIY Project ~ Mother's Day Fairy Garden

Just in time for a Mother's Day project, I found a cracked birdbath sitting in a neighbor's curbside trash. I have been saving little bits of things to make some fairy gardens and this ...»
just plopped into my lap (actually the front passenger seat of my car).

Although it looks more extensive, this project took just forty-five minutes to put together, not including the heaving and hauling of the very heavy concrete birdbath to and from the car!

See the complete directions at http://ourfairfieldhomeandgarden.com/diy-pro...

#MayProjects

#Gardening

#Repurposing

#BeforeandAfter

45 Minutes 20 Easy
Barb Rosen
Barb Rosen Wilmington, DE
18 Comments | Post Comment | 4075 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped on May 16, 2013 to Decor Ideas
  • Share 1.1K
  • Like 69
  • Clip 74
Clipped to:
  • Fairy Gardens
  • Tutorials
  • A barn styled birdhouse plus found objects created this little garden theme.

http://www.funkyjunkinteriors.net/2012/06/outdoor-fairy-garden-farm-style.html 2
  • An upside down garbage can lid filled with water, rocks and freshly picked blooms create a pond. And a place for the cat to drink. :)

Full reveal at: http://www.funkyjunkinteriors.net/2012/06/outdoor-fairy-garden-farm-style.html
  • Details come from elements of nature such as a stick fence and stone pathway. Cute and free. :)

Full reveal at: http://www.funkyjunkinteriors.net/2012/06/outdoor-fairy-garden-farm-style.html

Farm styled fairy garden... with a birdhouse

I had a darling barn styled birdhouse in my stash, so I designed a fairy garden around it situated in a flower bed. There's lots of cool hidden things in this garden to check out! ...»

#itchingforspring#OutdoorProjects

FunkyJunk Interiors - Donna
FunkyJunk Interiors - Don... Canada
3 Comments | Post Comment | 2419 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped on May 16, 2013 to Decor Ideas
  • Share 32
  • Like 32
  • Clip 33
Clipped to:
  • DIY
  • Home Tweet Home ~ for t...
  • See 3 more photos

Making fairy gardens as I await the coming of spring.

Carla De Bauche
Carla De Bauche Sturgeon Bay, WI
Post Comment | 933 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped on May 16, 2013 to Decor Ideas
  • Share 13
  • Like 10
  • Clip 14
Clipped to:
  • Decor Ideas
  • Garden Inspiration
  • 2
  • The first gnome home I made. 2
  • See 3 more photos

Natural Birdhouses

I make this using naturally weathered wood usually found in flood areas. They are fully functional with removable bottoms for cleanout and size perfect for the smaller songbirds of ...»
Pennsylvania. They look like the gnomes have created them for their feathered friends.

Cheryls T
Cheryls T Jersey Shore, PA
49 Comments | Post Comment | 5985 Views
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped on May 16, 2013 to Decor Ideas
  • Share 1.1K
  • Like 57
  • Clip 36
Clipped to:
  • YARD IDEAS
  • Home Tweet Home ~ for t...
  • Fairy Doors
Clipped a photo from:

The Magical Use of Creative Craft and Imagination

William Heistand
William Heistand Cambria, CA
Comment on this photo
  • Martha Medunic
    Clipped on May 16, 2013 to Decor Ideas
  • Share 26
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  • Clip 13
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  • Outdoor Living
  • Fairy Gardens
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