Prepping and Panic Buying Question
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
I'm pretty sure that pigeons can only be trained to 'home' in one direction.
(Smacks himself for derailing the thread. Ouch!)
(Smacks himself for derailing the thread. Ouch!)
A dog has a master; a cat has domestic staff.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Well, for the first time since, probably, the end of March, I managed to buy a single pint of milk!
I can't breathe.
- George Floyd, 25th May 2020
- George Floyd, 25th May 2020
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Alan, you are going to be reported to Mr Phipps.Alan Phipps wrote: ↑Fri, 12. Jun 20, 14:06I'm pretty sure that pigeons can only be trained to 'home' in one direction.
(Smacks himself for derailing the thread. Ouch!)
Sending the pidgeon now.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Just make sure you abide by the official protocol
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Only half the people consumes the envelop with the data it contains.[...]with a packet loss ratio of 55%
They're good for save game backups over cloud, then.[...] this technology suffers from poor latency. Nevertheless, for large transfers, avian carriers are capable of high average throughput.[...]
Anyway, we must be careful about malicious users willing to spread viruses.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Baking powder, flour, yeast, brown sugar are still occasionally short here. There's a local bulk supplier that sells the stuff if you reserve an order. Maybe there's one in your city? Check your community internet sites maybe to gather information/ask? Can you reserve or arrange a pick up order at stores?RegisterMe wrote: ↑Fri, 12. Jun 20, 14:28Well, for the first time since, probably, the end of March, I managed to buy a single pint of milk!
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
on my piece of land - the shortage of food has disappeared over here, as somewhat predicted. Though people worry about US supplies of meat.
I have trouble figuring out how much we should carry anyways. I have 4L+ emergency water, some beans, and always about 1-2kg of rice. That in itself isnt really that much. Still unsure if I should have more
I have trouble figuring out how much we should carry anyways. I have 4L+ emergency water, some beans, and always about 1-2kg of rice. That in itself isnt really that much. Still unsure if I should have more
Gimli wrote:Let the Orcs come as thick as summer-moths round a candle!
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
A 10lb - 25lb bag of rice is cheap and can last quite a while. Just don't buy a bag of rice you don't like. Some rice doesn't cook well even after washing it several times. Maybe some flour if you will eventually use it.fiksal wrote: ↑Sat, 13. Jun 20, 03:51on my piece of land - the shortage of food has disappeared over here, as somewhat predicted. Though people worry about US supplies of meat.
I have trouble figuring out how much we should carry anyways. I have 4L+ emergency water, some beans, and always about 1-2kg of rice. That in itself isn't really that much. Still unsure if I should have more
Meat isn't scarce here. Beef just costs more and there's fewer beef sales happening.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
That's basically it. The rice in large quantities is the white one, and of subpar flavor. Hard to come by a tasty basmati or even basmati brown rice at that size.
Gimli wrote:Let the Orcs come as thick as summer-moths round a candle!
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
I passed on the butcher counter because it was understaffed and I didn't want to wait. They had steaks there. I just didn't want to wait and I have steaks in my freezer. It's been my experience of grocery shopping that men walk into a store with a clear list of objectives and that they don't truly want to be there. They grab, they pay, they leave. Every time I shop I assess the conditions of the checkout lines. I refuse to use the automated ones. That's a job that a person isn't doing. I look for the briefest line with the most men. Men are not going to whip out a stack of coupons and delay the transaction. Men don't want to be there. I grab meat off the shelf, I pay, I leave, I put my cart in the stall. You can judge a person by how they shop. I measure the mission against the terrain, weather, enemies present, and civilians on the battlefield. This is how to shop. This is the way.
Who made that man a gunner?
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Regretfully my meat eating days are behind me, although what goes under the name of red meat or chicken these days in supermarkets is open to question .... Back in the day when the sun shone all day and it only rained at night, Egosoft had just launched X3 Terran (well a couple of months later) and the only cookbooks in the kitchen were by Robert Carrier I enjoyed the consumption of meat with a few vegetables .... Luckily there appeared to be no shortage of fruit, vegetables or fish during the mass hysteria so have not suffered nutritionally .... although Masterbagger may disagree with the lack of meat on the shopping list..
Alan Phipps ..I have not forgiven you yet for your smarty pants response regarding the consumption of the pigeon....
Alan Phipps ..I have not forgiven you yet for your smarty pants response regarding the consumption of the pigeon....
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Why meat days are behind or why regrettably?
Gimli wrote:Let the Orcs come as thick as summer-moths round a candle!
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Meat choice these days (in city):
Good, but expensive, or affordable "meat-like" products (like weiners that contain 30% of actual meat).
Living on the farm is completely different story, but it's full time work intense occupation.
I despise the whole vege movement, but I agree that we, in general eat too much meat based products.
When I was younger, meat was 50-60% of my diet.
Now it's 30% and I won't mind to reduce it to 20%, but with higher quality meat. Unfortunately, what is now "higher quality meat", was a normal meat in my childhood.
On prepping side, thanks to YT culinary videos I found out that making pita bread is cheap and easy - for once YouTube algorithm was useful
Good, but expensive, or affordable "meat-like" products (like weiners that contain 30% of actual meat).
Living on the farm is completely different story, but it's full time work intense occupation.
I despise the whole vege movement, but I agree that we, in general eat too much meat based products.
When I was younger, meat was 50-60% of my diet.
Now it's 30% and I won't mind to reduce it to 20%, but with higher quality meat. Unfortunately, what is now "higher quality meat", was a normal meat in my childhood.
On prepping side, thanks to YT culinary videos I found out that making pita bread is cheap and easy - for once YouTube algorithm was useful
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
I am certainly no "vegetarian" but modern manufacturing methods required to deliver meat products at a cheap price is totally unacceptable in my opinion,, to be able to produce a final packaged chicken in a supermarket for under 3 UK pounds/dollars or euros must cause doubt in the methods required to meet that price point.... I find it a most telling statement on the mass purchasing public that supermarkets never compare with other supermarkets on quality or taste but solely on price... cheap food is a false economy.... I think this also answers the fiksal question.
mr WHO is correct what was normal quality is now high quality,, certainly would like to compare the quality/taste of say a mac or coke from 20/30 years ago to the present product.
mr WHO is correct what was normal quality is now high quality,, certainly would like to compare the quality/taste of say a mac or coke from 20/30 years ago to the present product.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
The day before lockdown started here, back in March, I went to the petrol station to fill my car up with petrol "just in case". Not exactly panic buying, but definitely preparing. But of course lockdown means not travelling too much, so perhaps I was preparing for the wrong thing. On Saturday, 4½ months later, I finally had to go and fill up with petrol again.
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Re: Prepping and Panic Buying Question
Conversely, I've probably been doing a bit more mileage since lockdown started, thanks to the requirement to occasionally do a food shopping trip for my mother who lives 120 miles from me. I remember driving up the motorway I think a week or two after everything kicked off and the road was almost entirely empty--was kind of a creepy feeling, was expecting the dragons from "Reign of Fire" to descend at any moment! It's a lot busier when I make that trip now, obviously.