02:01 1. Rhinestone head pieces
02:27 3. Black fitness watch
02:34 4. Purple rhinestone stretchy bracelet
03:04 5. Double chain gold tone necklace with flat pendants
04:13 6. Magnetic beads (NOT FOR SALE : NFS)
04:31 7. Rhinestone necklace
04:54 8. Stretchy pastel bead necklace
05:22 9. Gold tone chain for craft
07:11 10. Turquoise and orange dainty necklace
07:51 11. Sajen S925 ring (NFS)
08:20 12. Long gold-tone dangle earrings
10:43 13. Silver tone chain
11:52 14. Pearl and glass bead Mother Mary necklace/bracelet
12:21 15. Silver tone chain with seashell pendant
12:45 16. Polar watch
13:27 17. Casio watch (SOLD for $18 on Mercari, we made $15)
13:40 18. Gold tone chain with donut-shaped stone pendant
14:01 19. Double dangly earrings with little pipes
16:11 20. Gold leaf necklace
16:54 21. Gold tone chain
17:43 22. Double dangly earrings with rhinestones and a heart
17:48 25. Leather Bracelet
18:00 26. Charm for craft pile
18:10 27. Silver tone bracelet with attached ring (SOLD)
18:27 28. Native American style turquoise pendant necklace (Gifted, NFS)
19:23 29. Kids Bangles
19:57 30. Pearl bangle
20:45 31. Rhine stone earrings
21:54 32. Blue rhinestone and black chain tassel earrings (NOT FOR SALE)
23:06 33. Gold tone Monet chain
23:35 33. Chunky silver and turquoise necklace (SOLD)
24:11 34. Multistrand beaded necklace
24:24 35. Red stretchy bracelet
24:45 36. Gold-tone shawl-style/wrap-around necklace
25:51 37. Black dog chain
26:23 38. Chunky ring with orange beads
26:37 39. Black analog watch
27:00 40. Silver necklace with black teardrop beads
27:23 41. Gold tone necklace with purple beads (NFS)
28:00 42. Seashell chip bracelet for craft pile
28:58 43. Natural stone stretchy bracelet (NFS)
29:17 44. Multicolor seed bead ZAD necklace
29:51 45. Fitbit with orange strap
29:45 46. Glass bangles (NFS because of the risk of breakage)
30:52 47. Wooden bead necklace
31:29 48. Black shiny chunky bead double strand necklace
32:01 49. Black and white faux pearl chacha necklace (NFS)
32:22 50. Wood and bone bead bracelet
32:41 51. Large greenish-yellow enamel hoops
33:30 52. Silver cuff bracelet
33:55 53. Gold tone chain and pearl bracelet
34:19 54. Gold tone cuff necklace
34:42 55. Broken chain for craft
34:54 56. Teal faceted bead necklace
35:11 57. Broken green and silver necklace for craft
35:29 58. Teal multistrand bracelet
36:21 59. Pink bow and rice pearl earrings
36:32 60.Gold tone oblong hoops
36:51 61. Blue rose and pearl hair clip
37:01 62. Mother-of-pearl/abalone shell disc earrings
37:05 63. Vintage enamel flower screw back earrings
37:41 64. Rhinestone clip for craft
37:45 65. Strechy teal bracelet
37:53 66. Talbots Teal faceted bead statement necklace
38:23 67. Reebok watch (SOLD)
38:42 68. Black bead earrings that match 48 necklace
38:47 69. Black faceted bead stretchy bracelet
38:52 70. Stone bead stretchy bracelet (NFS)
39:03 71. Express rhinestone pendant chain necklace
39:37 72. Gold-tone statement earrings
40:20 73. Meru brand green bead bracelet
40:32 74. Fish earrings
41:03 75. Stretchy pearl bracelet
41:22 76. Chunky tribal earrings
41:44 77. Unisex black bracelet
42:12 78. Shell clip-on earrings
43:28 79. Rhinestone brooch
43:39 80. Gold woven choker
43:55 81. Six stretchy pearl strands
44:06 82 Turquoise bead necklace
44:31 83. Pink pearl earrings
44:39 84. Ring for the craft pile
45:13 85. Shiny bead earrings 1
45:31 86. Shiny bead earrings 2
46:02 87. Kid's watch
46:16 88. Christmas tree charm
46:36 89. Shiny bead earrings 3
46:44 90. Peace earrings
47:06 91. Vintage rhinestone earrings
47:16 92. Timex Kids watch
47:34 93. Rhinestone heart hoops
47:50 94. Glitter heart earrings
47:57 95. Lizas brand red bead bracelet
48:55 96. Foreign coins
49:50 97. Shiny bead earrings 4
50:24 98. Vintage white lucite flowers Screw Back Earrings
50:35 99. Broken sweater brooch
50:55 101. Moana-style Hawaiian necklace
51:10 102 - 105. Silver chains (NFS)
52:05 106. Minnie Mouse earrings
52:19 109. Heart and ball sterling earrings (NSF)
Saturday, June 28, 2025
Goodwill mystery Jewelry bag #1
The mystery jewelry bags have been super hard to find now a days with people snatching them up the moment they get put on the shop floor. I have been trying to get one for D for over a month when I finally got my hands on not 1, but 4.
Three in my regular store, and one before those three at a store 20 minutes drive from us. Here are more details of how I landed these 4, and what I found in the very first bag.
Spoiler: (STOP READING RIGHT NOW IF YOU DON'T WANT TO KNOW)
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So, if you want to know the final count, I found $465 worth costume jewelry, and some silver pieces. It was so much fun opening this bag, that if you are having a hard time finding one if these mystery bags, I can create one foryou. Check out the details in the video description on youtube.
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Water wasting lawn to waterwise garden
Whatch the video here
We recently converted our dead ugly lawn to this beautiful waterwise, money saving, native garden and our city paid US to do this. Happy New Year everyone and in this video I'm going to share with you the steps that you need to take to convert your lawn that consumes tons of water and needs a lot of work, but does nothing for your environment. You can't really use it because it's on the front side of the house. To this beautiful native garden that you don't even have to water that often, so saves you money. You don't have to mow it or take care of it, so saves you time, And you can take a walk through it, it serves ton of native species of birds and bugs in providing them food and shelter. And you don't have to spend a dime on it. And on the contrary, with just a little bit of patience, you can get your city to pay you for it.
So this was our lawn and when we moved in. And as you can see it did not look that bad. It actually looked pretty plush. But very soon we learned that it did so because the sprinklers were set to water it for almost 15 minutes every single night. There were 5 sprinkler heads and each residential sprinkler head is designed to spray between 1 to 6 gallons of water per minute. So if you do the math we were pouring atleast 75 gallons of water into that lawn each day, or a minimum of 2250 gains of water each month.. and then we had to mow it atleast once a month.
It was expensive and time consuming, and then the drought in California led to a city issued a mandate that we should not waste water on land, and our front yard became and eyesore. I had heard about native plants that do not require as much water, and while researching them, I came across a program by our city called Landscape rebate program, that pays residents up to $3000 for converting their lawn to a garden with water wise native plants. Our county has an online portal that you can submit your application through. So I created a profile. It is important that you still have your lawn when you submit your application and until they come and do their inspection. They won't pay for any work you have started before the inspection and approval. So if you want your garden to be paid for, you will need to be a little patient. Take ton of pictures of your lawn, dead or alive. they don't care. And measure the area you are playing to convert. They also want you to give them a list of native plants you are planning to plant that will eventually cover half of the area you are planning to convert. The portal also provides you a list of plants and shrubs they prefer and the area of coverage for each. This is just a tentative list. So don't stress over it. Just make a list. here is a list I submitted initially. Don't worry, you don't have to stick to this list. Once they receive your application, and they send someone to your house to inspect, and measure the area for you. After that they approve the application, and give you a Motion to Proceed. This is what you have been waiting for, and now you can start the actual work. The approval initially gives you 90 days to complete the project, but later you are allowed two 45 day extensions on the deadline. So all in all, you have about 6 months to complete your conversion.
Now the first step of conversion is to kind of plan out where you want your garden beds to be and which parts are going to be your paths to walk through. You want to remove any sprinkler heads and pipes from areas you might not want them in. You can buy some garden edging, I bought mine from Amazon, and put it around the pathways and garden beds. At this stage, if your lawn is still alive, you can just cover the garden beds with cardboard. I, however, had to find some wet material to add to those areas because my lawn was very very dead and almost completely dry. The idea is that the cardboard is going to prevent any lawn from growing back, and the decomposition of the wet material is eventually going to lead to decomposition of the old lawn roots, killing the lawn and fertilizing the soil in the process. So, I went to the local Starbucks, and asked them for used coffee grounds. Unfortunately, Starbucks has stopped their used coffee grounds program, and now they kind of give you their used grounds in these large plastic bags, if you request. I had to make several trips to my local store to get enough "grounds" to cover the ground I wanted to convert. We spread the coffee grounds around, and splashed the area with water. The soil in my front lawn was so compacted and dry, that the water was not selling in at all. So, I drilled some holes in it with my largest drill bit in hopes that the water can actually get to the soil. I then covered the garden beds with cardboard from boxes I had been saving for this project. If I was sure of location of where I wanted a particular plant to be, I dug a hole there before laying the cardboard down and put the plant with the pot in it as a marker. But then, I did dig other holes afterwards as well. So either ways is okay. Then we added some horse manure compost we got from a local horse farm on top of the cardboard, and then added some mulch on top of that. The Boganvillas you see here were just a place marker for two crape myrtle pants I had ordered. And then the rain started and I could not work on this project for a couple of months. So I applied for the extension, and waited for some clear days. Once the rain subsided, we covered the pathways with some garden cloth I had ordered from Amazon. I know I know, garden cloths are not exactly great for the environment, but I wanted to add mulch here, and wanted some material underneath that would not just compete disintegrate within a few seasons. The plan is to change the mulch and the garden cloth out for some stone tiles after a few years. But here it is now. All finished. We bought these paver stones and black mulch from Home depot. We already had these gray tiles in our backyard, and I love the contrast between the black and brown mulch, and the red and gray tiles. My kids love walking through it. Oh, and for the rebate, all I had to do, was create a list of the approved plants I finally planted and submit that on the portal along with pictures of the finished conversion. We had also applied for and received rebate for converting the back yard lawn, converting the sprinkler system to inline drip, and for changing out our old sprinkler controllers to these nice new weather controlled Rachio controllers. The rebate amount covered all the plants and material we purchased, and would have covered for over 50% of the labor if we had hired someone to do the work. But I personally love gardening and totally enjoyed the process. And in a way got paid to do so, you can say ;).
Ayways, if you are thinking about doing a similar conversion, check if your city offers any such rebates before you start any work. And even if it does not, I would still recommend the conversion. The money and time you save is totally worth it. I don't know what to do with my lawn mower any more, and our water bill has reduced substantially.
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