livingon600amonth
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I should also say that I get food stamps and grow vegetables to sell from my front yard.
livingon600amonth said:I don't know about Canada, but here in the United States it's possible, and here are the numbers.
If one Initially has an inheritance of $8000 this is how to be set for life:
Buy a house where you can run a woodstove, don't pay property taxes, and where it rains enough to not have to pay a water bill.
akrvbob said:In the U.S. you can live in a van on public land for $600 a month pretty easily because you will have no housing costs of any kind. But i have no idea if that is true in Canada and of course you will have to deal with the cold. Here you can drive 300 miles from the mountain to the desert and avoid extremes of temperatures. You can't do that in Canada.<br><br>Wish I could be more helpful but I just know very little about Canada's land laws.<br>Bob
akrvbob said:Jesse, can you tell me where it is warm and pleasant all winter in Canada? It's news to me that such a place exists.
Bob
ZoNiE said:To a Canadian, "warm and pleasant" is anything above freezing... :dodgy:
Almost There said:Lower mainland in the greater Vancouver area seldom sees snow
akrvbob said:Jesse, can you tell me where it is warm and pleasant all winter in Canada? It's news to me that such a place exists. Is BC much different than WA state? I'd never in a million years consider living there in the winter. The west is rainy, cold and dreary and the east is just cold. I've driven through northern BC and Alberta in the winter and both had unacceptable weather for me.
Also, this thread is about living very cheaply and what I hear from all the Canadian members of this forum is that it is much more expensive to live in Canada than in the US. My limited experience in CA verifies that totally. I go into Canada completely stocked up so I don't have to pay your much higher prices.
Bob
could you stay so long before cause of work or something? i wonder if you could get 'hired' again [emoji14]Almost There said:Not this Canadian....
But then that's why I spent 14 years loving every minute of living stateside. Unfortunately it's no longer possible for me to do so, hence I'm becoming a snowbird. I'll relish my time stateside and grump and whine about coming back to Canada for my mandatory 6 month 'present and accounted for' time!
VanLifeCrisis said:could you stay so long before cause of work or something? i wonder if you could get 'hired' again
Almost There said:Nope, anything more than 6 months absence means that my health care and about 50% of my government pension money would be cancelled. For those reasons alone I have to be present and accounted for.
Also, I just handed in my retirement notice because I don't want to work anymore...I want to be retired...time for this gal to go play!!
How I stayed so long before is not possible any more anyways.
Optimistic Paranoid said:It's not clear to me from your posts - do you need to be in Canada for 6 months, or in your home province for 6 months? Unless it's the latter, I would think you could spend your six months visiting parts of Canada you've never seen before.
Regards
John
Almost There said:Technically, you're supposed to be in your home province because health care is regulated by them. Different provinces have different regulations regarding length of presence, BC allows you to be out of province for up to 7 months without jeopardizing your health insurance.
Optimistic Paranoid said:How do Canadians move from Province to Province? After spending six months in the US could you not establish a new "residence" in, say, Nova Scotia instead of - Ontario, is it? - and then spend six months there before coming back to the US?
Regards
John
minimotos95 said:Old thread but like the subject, My budget recently is as follows
$260 lot rent - 15A, wifi, bathroom and shower included included.
$60 into savings for annual insurance, full coverage on van, liability on motorcycle
$75 food/coffee/booze
$60 prepaid smartphone plan(starting soon, was on a $80)
$25 dog food
--- $480 in solid expenses
My van has been taking all of my extra money and will for a few more months until it's perfect.. driving my average monthly spending to around $600-650
note- on some months I will spend a lot extra on crap I "need", this month I had to drop almost $600 on a new phone and tools, next month I should be spending $2-300 on van parts...
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