Ok, I see everybody is jumped up on my food expenses
We eat local farmers (and organic food shops) organic/free range produce (eggs+vegies) and organic grass-fed meat.
Aside from that we don't eat anything else, so we buy lots of it.
And the meat is expensive. But it's very good.
But that doesn't stop me - I'd rather pay for the quality food.The choices stemmed from a
particular health situations and our beliefs about what we should eat.
Btw, I do realise that our food choices are not mainstream and if that bothers anyone, am happy to remove it
from the forum's edition spreadsheet

Or replace it with whatever the crowd here believes the average food monthly basket..
Slam:
Regarding the inflation - that's an interesting one. I must admit I didn't think about it.
I actually do keep track of my food expenses, but not by item - by class.
So, indirectly, I will probably be able to see the inflation component at play..
But, considering the purpose of the spreadsheet to understand where the gold/silver has topped -
I don't think the food will be the major indicator here. Most probably it will be the share markets and houses prices.
What's your opinion?
malachii & JulieW:
The acreage - I don't have that much understanding of the agricultural areas comparing to residential housing locations.
So all I've done is went to realestate.com.au and ran a search for farms land, with a house on it, making sure that the
description states some sort of either "crop-good land" or cattle activity. Then I take 8-10 cheapest of those and average a price for an acre.
Sometimes they publish $ per acre, and sometimes they just give a price per whole property - I decided that price per acre is better indicator.
Happy to adopt any other method if someone presents any (i.e. I understand that not all lands around Melbourne are equal for such purposes,
but I don't have enough knowledge to spot such areas. If anyone's willing to share specific areas which I should be tracking - happy to do so).
And yes, my understanding that all of them are rural/regional areas.
Silver is Money:
I have some knowledge of Sydney area (lived there for 2 years), however have no idea of others

Again, when you say
"would be interesting to see how house prices compare in each capital city" be careful - my opinion that there are lots of price areas in a given capital city,
so taking an average of all of those is meaningless. I can add couple of typical Sydney sububrs, if you (and anyone else?) wish to.
Re: the "small country town" - see Mildura example, 3rd column - yours probably is smaller..
and cheaper!
