Friday Find: The Backyard Food Company

I'm a little embarrassed to say that I've been meaning to share The Backyard Food Company as a Friday Find since December! Well, better late than never, right? Founded last year by two friends in Rhode Island who share a passion for gardening and local sourcing, The Backyard Food Company offers a line of condiments that offer subtle, surprising, and super tasty twists on traditional flavors.

I bought an assortment of a dozen large jars for the holidays (below is a photo of my impressive haul!); these condiments were my go-to clutter-free man gift! (And yes, strategically, Jon was one of the recipients so I got to enjoy a variety of product immediately!) All of the flavors are delicious, but my favorite is the sweet tomato jam, which works beautifully as a dip on one of my snack platters as well as on a sandwich.

You can order The Backyard Food Company's products online, or they're also in stores at Whole Foods. Enjoy, and yay for shopping local and independent!

Image credits: 1) The Backyard Food Company; 2) Christine Koh

Weekend Roundup

Happy Friday, everyone, I hope you're having a great week! I have been sidelined somewhat by some kind of nasty head cold or flu, but I'm grateful to be coming out of the fog just in time for the weekend. On that, here are 14 weekend events, lovingly curated for your consideration! Also, if you're on Instagram, I'm co-hosting an awesome giveaway with some wonderful fellow IGers if you want to enter to win $500 for you + $500 for a friend. You should totally enter to win!

1. A musical celebration of the heroes and victims of the 2013 marathon bombing. (Arlington)

2. Make an Alfombra to celebrate Semana Santa. (Boston)

3. Solve the clues and find the eggs. (Boston)

4. Breakfast with the Easter bunny! (Braintree)

5. Spend the morning with Willy Wonka. (Brookline)

6. The tales of Peter Rabbit. (Brookline)

7. Easter egg hunt. (Cambridge)

8. Hunt for eggs on the Cape. (Chatham)

9. Embark on a sound safari. (East Boston)

10. Celebrate spring, new farm life and of course, eggs! (Ipswich)

11. An Easter eggstravaganza. (Leominster)

12. 6,000 eggs and one Mr. Bunny. (Roslindale)

13. Hop on down the bunny trail to Stone Zoo. (Stoneham)

14. Hunt for eggs out in the wild. (West Tisbury)

Image credit: Zoo New England

Happy Children's Book Day!

Today is Children's Book Day and seasoned readers know how obsessed Team Boston Mamas is with books (both for kids and grownups)! So, I thought it would be fun and handy to cull back editorial of our favorite roundups and individual titles. Bookmark this post for your next library trip or Amazon bender! And also, if you're not already a newsletter subscriber, subscribe now because I have a great book giveaway launching Monday through the list! Enjoy!

Book Roundups

Individual Titles

 Image credit: Lindsey Mead

Financial Literacy: How To Start Saving For College

When I went to college, private tuition was in the $20,000/year range and I remember people saying that it was impossible that families would be willing to spend more than $100,000 total on college. Well, tuition rates are well beyond that and it's a daunting matter. Today, contributor (and financial professional) Sandra Gilpatrick shares 4 key tips for how to start saving for college (also be sure to check out Sandra's article on how to teach kids to budget!):

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From Sandra:

If you are planning on paying for your child's college education, it will likely be one of your most expensive goals. How do you tackle this financial monster? Here are 4 tips to help you get on your way.

1. Get compound interest on your side! If you can put smaller amounts toward investment earlier, you can make compound interest work for you. Click on my quick video explaining compound interest to learn how it can help you reach a future goal, like college tuition. The longer you wait to invest for college, the more you’ll miss out on compound interest, and will need to make larger deposits later in order to make up for lost time. But remember, if you owe money (e.g., credit card), this same concept can work against you. If your credit card has an interest rate of 20% (compounding monthly) on a $20,000 debt you would pay over $4,000 per year to the credit card company.

2. Flip small moments into opportunity. When my son lost his first tooth, I didn't research the tooth fairy’s going rate. I expected that inflation had increased the amount from a quarter when I was a child, so I asked him to choose between one dollar now or $100 invested in his college investment account, a 529 plan. Without hesitation he chose to have $100 for his lost tooth invested toward college. I asked him why and he said, “Saving now will put me ahead.” That’s a simple summary of compound interest. Twenty teeth will discipline me to invest an extra $2,000 in his 529 plan, and assuming a 7.5% rate of return on $2000 for 10 years, you would just about double college funds available to $4000 (you can use the Rule of 72 for quick estimates). My son astutely asked if he would get more for his larger molar teeth. I may use that occasion to increase my funding!

3. Start as soon as you can. As with most financial goals, the earlier you start investing, the more time you have to take advantage of compound interest. Today a typical private New England college costs around $63,000 per year. That is only tuition, room, and board, not all the extras. According to collegesavings.org, if you have a 7-year-old, the current annual increases will translate into about $102,288 yearly tuition beginning ten years from now (i.e., his or her freshman year in college). If you start saving when your child is a baby, investing about $10,380 per year or $858 monthly will get you toward your goal. If you wait until age 9, however, you'll need to almost double your annual investments to $18,391, or $1,532 per month.

4. Make investing a family affair. When I was pregnant, I started a 529 plan with myself as beneficiary, and changed my son to the beneficiary once he was born. In retrospect, a 529 plan contribution would have been a wiser baby shower request than most of the gifts I didn’t use for more than five months. I’ve been encouraging my son’s grandparents to contribute toward his college, instead of buying him toys for his birthday and holidays. Admittedly, it's not the easiest battle to win, but I've made some progress! 

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Are there specific financial topics you’d love to see Sandra address? Drop me a line at christine@bostonmamas.com to let me know!

To learn more about Sandra, visit SandraGilpatrick.com. Third party posts on this profile do not reflect the views of LPL Financial and have not been reviewed by LPL Financial as to accuracy or completeness. Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC.

Image credit: piggy bank via FreeDigitalPhotos.net; large graphic by Christine Koh

Best of March 2015

I suspect it's pretty safe to say that we're all more than ready to leave behind the snowy depths of the first quarter of this year. Tomorrow is the first day of April, it's supposed to hit 60 degrees this week (YAY!), and be sure to pop over to my Instagram feed tomorrow to see how I'm going to kick off April with a bang (hint: an epic prize is involved)! And meanwhile, if you'd like to catch up on back reading, here's the Best of March 2015:

Beauty & Fashion

Home

Kid Stuff

Parenting

Miscellaneous

Image credit: little lemon lava cakes via Pinterest

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6 Financial Things to Do to Make Being a Small Business Owner Less Painful

Pretty much everyone I know has hang ups about money, and despite having built a very respectable business for myself over the last 9 years, I have repeatedly wrestled with (hang up related) procrastination that leads to epic suffering at tax time. This year I'm changing that, starting with Q1! Today, as part of my work via the Office Champions program, I'm sharing 6 financial things to do to make being a small business owner less painful.

1. Embrace being more knowledgable. Let's start big picture. Over the last couple of years I have learned from Jon that it is more powerful to embrace financial knowledge (good or bad) that fear it. Knowing what works and what doesn't will help you grow. The next 5 steps will all help you become more knowledgable about your finances.

2. Implement an accounting system you’ll actually use. Obviously, you need a way to keep track of income and expenses. I know many people who prefer accounting software, but I knew there would be more barrier to getting organized if I bought a program that I would need to sit down and spend time figuring out. Plus, I already knew how I wanted to track things and it was fast and easy for me to set up a system using Excel so I was ready to jump in and get organized more quickly. 

3. Declutter your paper process. In the past, paper office clutter has totally overwhelmed me. Go paperless with bank and credit card receipts and keep receipts at bay via digital tracking. For example, I’ve recently started exploring OneNote, which is super handy for cataloging expenses. Just snap a picture, annotate the receipt (e.g., with client name) by typing or inking, and then you can search text within an image when you need to call it up.

4. Form a system for incoming/reconciled paperwork. For remaining paperwork, form a simple system. I’ve been working on revamping my office (more on that to come) and realized that one thing that made me resent financial processing was having an inbox on my desk (taunting me!). Now I simply keep a folder in my top drawer for paperwork I need to reconcile and once reconciled, that paperwork moves to my filing system in my closet.

5. Reconcile your finances weekly. This step is CRUCIAL. Prevent the overwhelm factor at tax time by reconciling your income and expenses (e.g., receipts, credit card, business banking, pay stubs, etc.) weekly. I set this as a recurring to-do item and it just takes a few minutes a week to keep on top of it!

6. Do a quarterly financial check in. Assuming you are doing #5, this step will be a piece of cake. Tally up your income and expenses. The income piece is especially important if you pay estimated taxes and tend to have variability in your flow. In the past, I have just paid a fixed amount each quarter without accounting for growth (because I didn't make true quarterly estimates) and have owed a painful amount at tax time. Also, embracing the knowledge (#1 above) of how your business is doing will help you evaluate whether you need to ramp up your efforts, adjust spending, or simply celebrate a great quarter.

I’m thrilled to say that thanks to this process I've developed I’m totally on top of my quarterly finances for the first time in 9 years of freelancing and I plan on celebrating a great Q1, likely with burrito and cookies. Yay, burrito and cookies! And yay (in advance) for not suffering at tax time next year!

Disclosure: This post was inspired by my role as a compensated Office Champions ambassador; ideas and opinions are, of course, my own! For more in this series, check out my 9 tips for digital decluttering!

Image credit: vector by FreeDigitalPhotos.net (text added by Christine Koh)

So Now I Get to Be This Kind of Mother

Two years ago, I sold all my gold jewelry to buy my daughter an iPod Touch for her birthday.

It was nicer than my first iPhone, but she wanted to say she had a phone, anyway, even though she admitted the Touch is shinier and faster and yes, better. It didn't matter: Semantics are what they are.

Six months ago, my husband told me even phones not connected to a plan can call 911. That night, I cleared out my old phone and handed it to her.

*crickets*

I have worked in online publishing in one format or another since 1999. I've read danah boyd. I've talked to friends with older kids. I always knew a day would come when my girl realized she could use those iThings to talk to her friends whether we gave her phone service or not via the glory that is wifi.

I'm sitting here on the couch with her phone and iTouch charging next to me while her father reads with her in bed. She's not in trouble; I'm just enforcing the rule I made in my head three years ago: Once she starts emailing and texting, from 8:40 pm to 6:40 am those devices stay with me.

I've just never had to do this before. I'm flummoxed.

My girl will be eleven next weekend. She asked tonight if I had trouble resisting the siren song of my first smartphone, and I was all, "Well, I was 34 and had better impulse control, so not so much."

I remember, though, the giddiness of having Liz Gumbinner show me Twitter for the first time at a conference and realizing we could totally pass notes in class without booting a laptop and OMG THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING.

It wasn't so much the tech I was excited about. It was the friends on the other end of the tech.

So here I sit with my girl's devices, smiling, because no, I don't trust her impulse control to resist texting all night, not this child who inspired me to call a book "Sleep Is for the Weak." But I'm excited for her that she has friends who want to talk to her, that she has something to be excited about. That's part of the human condition, wanting to connect.

It's why I'm writing to you, after all.

Parenting Comments
Weekly Blueprint

Happy Monday everyone, I hope you had a great weekend! Our Saturday was unusually full to the brim (including the joys of seeing Laurel ease into swim lessons and also discovering that Violet is a total natural on ice skates...of course, just in time for the skating season to wind down!), and then Sunday was delightfully lazy. And now, Monday! And OMG more snow! Let's kick the week off with the Weekly Blueprint:

April 1: FREE admission to explore the sculpture park. (Lincoln)

April 1: Gretchen Rubin speaks about her book, Better Than Before. (Wellesley)

April 2: Light it up blue for World Autism Awareness Day. (Acton)

April 2: Hey budding scientists, it’s mud season! (Worcester)

April 2 - 4: Peter Rabbit puppet show just in time for Easter. (Brookline)

April 3: FREE admission to The Discovery Museums. (Acton)

April 3: It’s the great banana hunt. (Cambridge)

April 3: Think with your hands and make some music. (Easton)

Image credit: The Children’s Museum in Easton

Hey Internet, Keep Being Awesome

Happy Saturday everyone, I hope you're having a good weekend so far, despite this wacky weather. If you haven't yet checked out the Weekend Roundup, be sure to do so since there are 25 event options to consider. And meanwhile, if you're looking to cozy up with some interesting reading, here's what caught my eye this week for Hey Internet, Keep Being Awesome. Have a great rest of the weekend and see you back here on Monday!

- The world’s best teacher lives in rural Maine and doesn’t care about test scores.

- How Tim Gunn spends his Sunday.

- 8 powerful questions we should ask ourselves immediately.

- How Ethiopia managed to supply water to 48 million people.

- Tom Hanks reenacts all of his films in 6.5 minutes.

- Corporate volunteers can be a burden for nonprofits.

- “Yoga pants are ruining women” and other style advice from Fran Lebowitz.

- I don’t care if my son goes to college.

- How to design an edible landscape.

- 17 modern myths that are making motherhood miserable.

Image credit: ultimate stain removal guide via Pinterest