I wrote this in a response on another board, but thought some here would find it useful as it's own topic.
From time to time I read about searchers that would like to "up their volume" but their wife/husband wouldn't let them dip into the savings at the bank. Understand that I'm not advocating tapping out the account, but if explained correctly the spouse may be able to see that it isn't such a bad thing to do.
I don't pretend to know how much savings anyone has, or what their monthly budget is, so my numbers are purely random. After reading this you will understand my theory, and then you can apply your own numbers when you speak to your wife/husband.
Using $12,000 as the amount in your savings account, and $4,000 as the amount of your monthly expenses (rent/mortgage, utilities, car payment/ins., etc....) let's view this chart I made. It's like a stop light (stop, caution, go)
I broke up the $12,000 savings into 3 sections.
The red is the top layer that gets used monthly and replenished by your paycheck(s). This is the most active, and never gets touched other then expenses.
The yellow is the middle layer, and the cushion, should any emergencies arise (water heater, leaky roof, etc...). It is an exact full increment of the red so that it could also cover a full month of the budget if need be.
The green is the bottom layer, and in normal conditions is never called to action, so that's where you would draw your additional hunting money from.
Once that money is out of the bank and into your hunting funds, the good part is that if through unforeseen circumstances red and yellow are both end up in play and things are looking tight, the green is no further that your pocket and ready to go back into the original mix to save the day
To my knowledge right now Capital One is offering a strong interest rate which works out to about 1/10th of 1% ($1 per $1,000 in the bank every month), so the $4,000 (green area) that you would be removing from the savings would only be costing you $4 per month which is currently less that a 40% half dollar.
If $4,000 extra hunting money can't make you one 40% half dollar in a month, then maybe you should not be hunting in your area anyway.
Disclaimer: If you get robbed, or somehow lose the $4,000 somewhere along the way, then everything I wrote no longer applies.
Nick