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-   -   Milk and Eggs (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/showthread.php?t=941869)

legion 01-09-2017 05:43 AM

Milk and Eggs
 
Not sure what is going on, but milk is 60¢ a gallon and eggs are 26¢ for a dozen, locally.

Just a few years ago I recall paying $4.50 a gallon for milk. Just a few months ago eggs were $2.67 for a dozen.

targa911S 01-09-2017 05:46 AM

did you invent a time machine?

Oh Haha 01-09-2017 05:57 AM

Say what?!

I just bought both and milk was 1.99 for Spartan brand and eggs were 2.something for 18.

WPOZZZ 01-09-2017 06:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Oh Haha (Post 9425675)
Say what?!

I just bought both and milk was 1.99 for Spartan brand and eggs were 2.something for 18.

Double that for my local prices, and that is for a dozen eggs.

Don Ro 01-09-2017 06:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 9425668)
Not sure what is going on, but milk is 60¢ a gallon and eggs are 26¢ for a dozen, locally.

The Trump effect.
.
:cool:

stevej37 01-09-2017 06:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 9425668)
Not sure what is going on, but milk is 60¢ a gallon and eggs are 26¢ for a dozen, locally.

Just a few years ago I recall paying $4.50 a gallon for milk. Just a few months ago eggs were $2.67 for a dozen.

Where is locally?

freeform911 01-09-2017 07:04 AM

Nos!!?

legion 01-09-2017 07:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevej37 (Post 9425735)
Where is locally?

Bloomington, Illinois.

Oh Haha 01-09-2017 07:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by legion (Post 9425753)
Bloomington, Illinois.

Hmmmm, its only 6 hours away. Milk and eggs run? SmileWavy

legion 01-09-2017 07:58 AM

So what I'm hearing is that this is, in fact, a local anomaly. Weird.

vash 01-09-2017 08:11 AM

damn. that is damn near free.

i just paid 4.29 for a dozen at Trader Joes. happy chickens, organic, free range, brown, extra large, hand petted, hand fed, butt wiped..........

stevej37 01-09-2017 08:24 AM

Amazing prices! A person could live for a month on $1..eating just eggs. Eggs are the best!

ckelly78z 01-09-2017 08:41 AM

I remember $3.00+ a gallon for milk just last year. I commented on Sunday to my wife that milk (in NW Ohio) at WallyWorld is now $1.04 a gallon.....did the price of corn bottom out ?

wildthing 01-09-2017 08:45 AM

It's anywhere from 2 to 8 here for a gallon depending on the brand and store.

M.D. Holloway 01-09-2017 09:18 AM

check the expiration dates

JackDidley 01-09-2017 09:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by targa911S (Post 9425670)
did you invent a time machine?

I was thinking that. 1925 ??

rusnak 01-09-2017 09:58 AM

How do you guys remember to the penny how much you pay for that stuff?

I want to say 18 eggs cost around $3 or so, but I am more or less guessing. Less than $5 and I'm not that into it.

Oh Haha 01-09-2017 10:06 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rusnak (Post 9426008)
How do you guys remember to the penny how much you pay for that stuff?

I want to say 18 eggs cost around $3 or so, but I am more or less guessing. Less than $5 and I'm not that into it.

I just bought those things yesterday so it was fresh on my mind.

stevej37 01-09-2017 10:11 AM

I don't think of it either...but I do know that .26/doz is way lower than average. What else can you buy for .26 that is worth anything???

legion 01-09-2017 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by M.D. Holloway (Post 9425951)
check the expiration dates

All new stuff. This has been going on for a couple of months.

legion 01-09-2017 10:23 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rusnak (Post 9426008)
How do you guys remember to the penny how much you pay for that stuff?

I want to say 18 eggs cost around $3 or so, but I am more or less guessing. Less than $5 and I'm not that into it.

I generally remember the highs and the lows.

stevej37 01-09-2017 11:22 AM

a quick search on prices from a hundred years ago...

According to statistics from the Census Bureau, typical prices for 1915 food include:

a loaf of bread: 7 cents
a dozen eggs: 34 cents
a quart of milk: 9 cents
a pound of steak: 26 cents


And also it went on to say that the average price of a home in 1915 was $5000
At the same rate that homes have increased....eggs should be about $30/doz. !!

rusnak 01-09-2017 11:38 AM

I think I was born 100 years too late.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1483990671.jpg
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1483990671.jpg

GH85Carrera 01-09-2017 12:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rusnak (Post 9426192)

Not me!

I can't imagine no air conditioning and gasp, no internet or antibiotics.

aigel 01-09-2017 12:09 PM

That is very weird pricing. There shouldn't be that big a local difference. At that price, you can ship the goods a little and get a lot more elsewhere.

The cost of food in relationship to people's income is very very low these days. Sure, 7 cents for a loaf of bread sound great now, but not if you make a buck a day.

https://3.bp.blogspot.com/_otfwl2zc6...s1600/food.jpg

stevej37 01-09-2017 12:12 PM

I don't see any of the people in those pics looking down at their cellphones?? How did they manage?

wdfifteen 01-09-2017 12:19 PM

Eggs, bread, and milk used to be commodities, but thanks to marketing, an increased interest in healthy eating, and a lot of disposable income, they have become consumer products. I can buy eggs anywhere from $1.59 to $3.99 at the local grocery. The price depends on color, size, and lifestyle of the chickens. Same with milk. Whole, skim, 2%, flash pasteurized, slow pasteurized, organic, etc. There are probably two dozen different kinds of bread.
I would sure look at the fine print on a carton of 29 cent eggs.

wdfifteen 01-09-2017 12:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevej37 (Post 9426252)
I don't see any of the people in those pics looking down at their cellphones??

If they're looking down they're looking for road apples.

sammyg2 01-09-2017 12:22 PM

Are these eggs from free range chickens that could wander around, and did they get along well with the other chickens?

Porchdog 01-09-2017 12:28 PM

I thought that wholesale milk prices were regulated?

I can't imagine that egg price covering inspection, packaging and shipping.

vash 01-09-2017 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by stevej37 (Post 9426252)
I don't see any of the people in those pics looking down at their cellphones?? How did they manage?

yes..and all the women's legs are covered up to the ground..all proper-like. :)

wdfifteen 01-09-2017 12:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Porchdog (Post 9426280)
I thought that wholesale milk prices were regulated?

There are various programs to limit the minimum price farmers get for milk, but no actual price controls that I know of. The 2014 farm bill got rid of a really bad policy of having the government buy butter, cheese, and milk products from processors so they could supposedly pay more to farmers.

rusnak 01-09-2017 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GH85Carrera (Post 9426241)
Not me!

I can't imagine no air conditioning and gasp, no internet or antibiotics.

I would have enjoyed it right up until the movie camera was invented by Edison. After that, I'm sure everyone was wondering where the hell that crazy piano music was coming from.

Oh Haha 01-09-2017 01:08 PM

Ok, I'm going to stop by our Spartan store after dropping my daughter off for gymnastics. Not sure I can get a pic but I will try to document the current prices.

Think they'll price match?:D

Crowbob 01-09-2017 01:52 PM

Spartan grade AA large huevos = fiddy cent a dozen here.

Oh Haha 01-09-2017 02:14 PM

Cheapest milk--$1.99 gal

Eggs-1.09 per dozen

I looked at every option for eggs and milk and these were the lowest prices.

ben parrish 01-09-2017 02:14 PM

Loss leaders advertised heavily to get shopper in the door. Bet things like bacon or toilet tissue are higher than normal. Below is a current market pricing for these items...I sell food for a living and am very in tune of pricing

Below is wholesale pricing that is only given to repackers.

Egg pricing; cents per dozen..min purchase is tractor trailer load.
Extra-Large 109-118 112-115
Large 108-117 110-113
Medium 71-80 73-76

Milk
Class 1 Milk per 100 gallons $17.45..base on full tanker load.

rusnak 01-09-2017 02:17 PM

^ That's what they do with pumpkins. They're selling at a loss in order to get customers in the door. The problem with that, is the producer isn't making any money either. Eventually they have to raise the prices or the farmer will have to cut them off.

ben parrish 01-09-2017 02:25 PM

Not quiet..the grocery chain is paying the above prices....the farmer is getting the same price he gets from all. The grocery chain is simply taking it in the shorts on that item but making it up elsewhere. just like thanksgiving, whole turkeys are being sold at Walmart and Kroger for .89# but their dressing and yams are twice the price of other stores to make up for the loss.

sammyg2 01-09-2017 02:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ben parrish (Post 9426424)
Not quiet..the grocery chain is paying the above prices....the farmer is getting the same price he gets from all. The grocery chain is simply taking it in the shorts on that item but making it up elsewhere. just like thanksgiving, whole turkeys are being sold at Walmart and Kroger for .89# but their dressing and yams are twice the price of other stores to make up for the loss.

The yams did it! THE YAMS DID IT!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Q-qW3lvzDw

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1484001487.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1484001487.jpg

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1484001487.jpg


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