
Given the sky-high supermarket prices, Piper Terrrett has found that growing your own produce can help save a little extra cash.
Soaring supermarket prices
The cost-of-living crisis continues to be a major headache for most families.
Supermarket prices have seen some of the biggest increasesย in recent years.
So could you offset some of those dramatic rises by producing some of your own food?
My husband has grown his own fruit and vegetables for nearly 20 years and we have kept chickens on and off for 18 years.
But does the โGood Lifeโ really save or actually cost you money?
How much does it cost to keep chickens?
In a bid to save on eggs, I dusted off our chicken housing from the garage and got four hens from a farmer in Norwich.
The hens cost me ยฃ40.
I purchased them at what they call point-of-lay age โ around 20 weeks โ and it took a little while for them to get going.
The original chicken housing โ a classic Eglu house and small run โ cost about ยฃ350 when purchased.
Itโs now much more expensive, but there are cheaper alternatives.
I also ended up buying a new run to give them more space, which cost ยฃ200.

Eggstaticโฆ
However, within a week or two, we were getting four eggs a day โ so 28 eggs a week.
Now and again, one hen might have a rest, but that is a lot of eggs.
We canโt keep up with production, so I have ended up giving boxes away and am going to install an honesty box outside our house to sell them.
Locally, the going rate is only about ยฃ1.40 for half a dozen, although in the supermarket they would fetch about ยฃ2.20.
The girls are producing about four and a half boxes a week.
They are hybrids and will produce roughly 300 eggs a year for the first year and then slow down in years two and three.
Sadly, hybrids donโt tend to live very long, so in a couple of years Iโll have to introduce some new birds.
The feed costs about ยฃ20 for a 20KG bag and they go through roughly a bag a month.
They also get some leftover food treats โ pasta and couscous are popular.
Even if we had the hen housing for free and sold all the eggs instead of eating them, at ยฃ1.40 a box and 120 eggs a month, we would make just ยฃ8 profit a month after the cost of the feed.
Gross profit on 300 eggs a year is ยฃ276.80 at a price of ยฃ1.40 a box.
The cost of the feed for a year is ยฃ240, so weโd only make a ยฃ36.80 profit a year and thatโs if we donโt actually eat any of our own eggs or take any other costs into account.
Producing your own eggs at home wonโt really save you money.
You also need the space to have hens.
But viewed as a pet with benefits, hens are a lot of fun and very useful creatures who certainly wonโt let you go hungry.
Growing your own potatoes, tomatoes & more: costs and savings
My husband Doug has been growing his own vegetables for about 18 years.
He actually holds the UK record for the heaviest tomato, two Guinness World Records for most tomatoes on a truss (stem) and one for most on a plant.
He has grown all kinds of fruits and vegetables but tends to focus on giant ones for his hobby-related projects and tomatoes, courgettes, French beans, squashes, lettuces and cucumbers for the kitchen.
Again, we have so many courgettes and cucumbers at the moment that I am planning to sell them via the honesty box.
But is growing your own โ assuming you have space to do so โ worth it financially?
That depends on what you grow.

Things like potatoes, courgettes, lettuces, French beans and runner beans can be grown for the cost of a few packets of seed, normally around ยฃ2.50 a pop.
But many gardeners grow more than they need and may give you plants or seeds for free.
Then you just need to get a few canes for the beans to grow up and the time to take care of them.
Tomatoes, peppers, chillies and aubergines, however, do best in a greenhouse, which obviously comes at a cost.
They need the heat and tomatoes grown outside tend to get blight sooner.
However, even greenhouses can be picked up for second-hand for a couple of hundred pounds.
Homegrown vegetables and fruits are convenient, greener and often, especially in the case of tomatoes, taste much better than supermarket equivalents.
Considering the many kilos of cucumbers, courgettes and tomatoes we are already enjoying, doing so is definitely value for money.
Our courgette plants will produce at least ยฃ26 of product over the summer โ thatโs six courgettes a week.
Last year Doug managed to grow 5,891 cherry tomatoes on a single plant, which, at a price of ยฃ1.20 per punnet of 16, would have cost about ยฃ442 in the supermarket.
Admittedly, not all gardeners can do that!
Making your own bread: costs and savings
For years we owned a breadmaker until it blew up recently.
Of course, you can also make your own bread in the oven.
A breadmaker makes it easier as you just throw all the ingredients in, put it on overnight and, in the morning, there is a lovely loaf ready for you โ no kneading required.
The breadmaker cost us around ยฃ70.
To make a medium loaf we used yeast, butter, strong white bread flour, sugar, milk powder, water and, of course, electricity.
The ingredients cost roughly the following:
- 400g flour โ 34p;
- Yeast โ 10p;
- Sugar โ 10p;
- Milk powder โ 9p;
- Butter โ 12p;
- Energy to cook โ 6p.
So a loaf costs roughly 81p to make. We made a couple a week and owned the breadmaker for 17 years before it died.
Thatโs potentially 1,768 loaves over that period, which cost ยฃ1,432.08 to make in the breadmaker, aside from its purchase cost.
If weโd bought similar loaves from the supermarket priced at around ยฃ1.50, we would have spent ยฃ2,652 on bread โ ยฃ1,219.92 more.
Obviously, you can get a basic loaf for much less โ around 45p โ but the quality is a lot lower than that of a homemade loaf too.
Can you save by growing your own produce?
Living the ‘Good Life’ will give you some fun productive hobbies, good quality produce and hopefully a healthy diet.
Whatโs more, as long as you stick to growing cheaper vegetables outside that donโt need a greenhouse, or you can get a greenhouse for free or second-hand, you will definitely save some money.
And, while keeping hens wonโt necessarily save you cash, using a breadmaker instead of buying bread could.
So why not take the plunge and follow Tom and Barbaraโs lead?


