โAug-01-2014 09:51 AM
โAug-03-2014 12:19 PM
SWMO wrote:wbwood wrote:SWMO wrote:
We were shocked yesterday when we went replenish the milk supply. Gallons over $5 and a quart of creme $7+?????
You need to shop somewhere else...we can get a gallon of milk in the $3 price range...
I can't afford to drive to NC.:B
โAug-03-2014 06:54 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:midnightsadie wrote:
fuel cost drives the price of everything. watched oil drop $2.bucks a barrel on thurs so gas goes up .30 cents at the pump. figure that out? there not going to loose. oil is in control of every price out there.
Ethanol boom several years ago.
All my farmer neighbors yanked out their alfalfa/hay fields and planted corn to get rich quick.
Ethanol plants started going in all over. Locals started lawsuits to stop them from being built.
Thousands of acres now in corn. Surplus sitting in dryers and farmers loosing their butts. AND price of alfalfa and hay skyrocketing to all time high prices from the few farmers that didn't jump on the ethanol band wagon demanding the high price because of lack of availability.
Citizens managed to shut down ethanol plants.
Opportunist corn farmers broke.
Thousands of horses go to slaughter because owners can't afford price of hay.
Yup it's hard to be a proud American these days. ๐
โAug-02-2014 06:34 PM
midnightsadie wrote:
fuel cost drives the price of everything. watched oil drop $2.bucks a barrel on thurs so gas goes up .30 cents at the pump. figure that out? there not going to loose. oil is in control of every price out there.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โAug-02-2014 09:42 AM
Super_Dave wrote:
Stopped by the store last night to pick up a gallon of milk so we could have some for breakfast this morning. The "off" brand was $5/gal. It kind of reminded me of growing up poor and my mom trying to sneak powdered milk by us. She would put it in a real milk carton thinking we wouldn't notice.
โAug-02-2014 09:23 AM
Super_Dave wrote:
Stopped by the store last night to pick up a gallon of milk so we could have some for breakfast this morning. The "off" brand was $5/gal. It kind of reminded me of growing up poor and my mom trying to sneak powdered milk by us. She would put it in a real milk carton thinking we wouldn't notice.
โAug-02-2014 08:00 AM
rockhillmanor wrote:My Dad always bought house brand light bulbs. He always said that they were either GE, Westinghouse or Sylvania since they were the only people making light bulbs at that time.
There really is no such thing as a real off brand as they would like us to think! :B
There are only so many milk bottling plants in the US.
ALL milk goes to them and all they do is change the label from Bordon's to Thrifty Milk during the bottling run. One farm may supply the name brand as well as the 'off' brands. Heck all the tankers pull in and the bottling plant spits out 12 different labeled milk bottles!! :B
โAug-02-2014 07:48 AM
Super_Dave wrote:
Stopped by the store last night to pick up a gallon of milk so we could have some for breakfast this morning. The "off" brand was $5/gal. It kind of reminded me of growing up poor and my mom trying to sneak powdered milk by us. She would put it in a real milk carton thinking we wouldn't notice.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โAug-02-2014 07:43 AM
โAug-02-2014 07:33 AM
โAug-02-2014 06:56 AM
wbwood wrote:SWMO wrote:
We were shocked yesterday when we went replenish the milk supply. Gallons over $5 and a quart of creme $7+?????
You need to shop somewhere else...we can get a gallon of milk in the $3 price range...
โAug-02-2014 06:34 AM
SWMO wrote:
We were shocked yesterday when we went replenish the milk supply. Gallons over $5 and a quart of creme $7+?????
โAug-01-2014 08:31 PM
Escargot wrote:
Higher fuel costs, and in the case of California, the drought is making produce prices rise.
โAug-01-2014 08:08 PM
โAug-01-2014 07:52 PM
DiskDoctr wrote:
Cows eat corn. Corn is being redirected to make fuel. Companies who use this food for fuel are subsidized AND get tax breaks.
There is more net profit in using food for fuel than for food.
If you think those prices are bad, hold onto your butt about Nov-Dec as the weather turns very cold.
โAug-01-2014 06:25 PM