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KF7EEC
12-09-2010, 12:45 AM
Got this email from someone in a neighboring stake:

...we just stopped off at the [Las Vegas Home Storage Center] cannery today to check out the items on the shelves, and they told us that prices are increasing as much as 50% starting in January. So, stock up now - if you're tight now, imagine how tight you'll be when the prices rise even more

Noahs ARK
12-09-2010, 02:35 AM
I've already noticed the price of Yoder's Bacon has gone up in the Emerg Essentials catalog. :cry:

4evermama
12-09-2010, 03:06 AM
We've been counseled with the same information.
Sadly, not a surprise.

Talked with the manager at our Cash and Carry two days ago and he made an off-handed comment about taking advantage of the sales while prices are still manageable. We've had some frank conversations with him over the years, as he is more than familiar with our shopping habits. He knows that we're LDS. Often, he makes a point to identify similarities between his kids and ours...as a means of instigating conversation. People recognize a mindset when they are "there" or close to it.
Share your wisdom with whomever will listen.

Interesting how pieces of this puzzle keep fitting together.

Noah- Girlfriend, you are 'spose to be canning that bacon!!!!!!:001_sdrool:

KF7EEC
12-09-2010, 11:40 AM
Enviros want beet stecklings mowed, tilled
By WES SANDER
Capital Press
Plaintiffs in a federal lawsuit over biotech sugar beets have proposed that the current root stock be destroyed using mowers and tillers.
But it's unclear whether the proposal will be adopted by a federal judge, who Tuesday ordered that root stock containing Monsanto Co.'s Roundup Ready trait be "removed from the ground."
Judge Jeffrey White said he may not have authority to amend his ruling and order something more severe or specific since the case has been appealed. Late Wednesday, USDA and the industry appealed White's decision to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.
The Center for Food Safety, Organic Seed Alliance, the Sierra Club and High Mowing Organic Seeds sued in September to revoke four steckling-production permits issued days earlier by USDA.
The permits came three weeks after White revoked the federal deregulation of Roundup Ready beet seeds, pending a new environmental study. The plaintiffs contend that the permits defy White's ruling.
The plaintiffs asked White for an injunction to uproot the stecklings before the case progressed. White granted the request Tuesday.
White ordered that the injunction take effect on Dec. 7.
Plaintiffs now want White to order the root stock, or stecklings, "mowed with a rotary mower, set as low to the ground as possible," according to the proposal, filed late Thursday in federal court in San Francisco.
"As soon as possible after completion of the mowing, the remaining steckling material shall be destroyed with a roto-tiller or like device," the plaintiffs wrote.
In a brief quickly following plaintiffs' proposal, White also pointed out that his order uses the same language used by plaintiffs in requesting the injunction.
White ordered plaintiffs to file a brief by 4 p.m. Friday justifying their proposal's new destruction requirements.
The stecklings, currently in nurseries, are normally replanted in January and February to grow seed-producing plants. There is potential that stecklings uprooted in the next few days could be stored and used next year.
USDA is in the process of formulating rules that would regulate the planting and cultivation of Roundup Ready sugar beets next year. Seeds for that crop have already been harvested.



from: http://capitalpress.com/california/ws-sugar-beets-121010

Noahs ARK
12-09-2010, 06:50 PM
Noah- Girlfriend, you are 'spose to be canning that bacon!!!!!!:001_sdrool:

:smilielol5: Good one!