The low cost of food in the US

20 10 2014

I spotted these food prices in some US grocery store catalogues. They are all much cheaper than prices in Australia for similar items.

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As a comparison,  $2 per pound of chicken breasts would be equivalent to about $5 per kilogram,  which would be about $6 Australian  (AUD).  The cheapest I can buy chicken breasts for its about $8 AUD,  and is often $12 AUD per kg; same for pork. Avocados where I live are cheap if they are $1.70 AUD each,  and are often $3.40 each. And I don’t think I’ve ever been able to get peppers (capsicum) for that sort of  price.

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But this one is the biggie! I pay $160 AUD per month just for cable TV (and not 200 HD channels either,  and not even cable – instead satellite that drops out in bad weather),  another $130/month for internet and phone and definitely not 60 Mbps (the maximum where I live is 24 Mbps,  but the reality is more like 15), and another $70/month for mobile phone. That’s some $360/month for what this US company is advertising at $30 / month.  No,  I know nothing about this company,  its services,  or its reliability,  but I wonder why we pay 10x what the US pays for similar services? Those Australian prices seem like a rip-off to me!





Let’s go to the pond!

20 10 2014

On the family farm,  which my cousin now owns,  is this great secluded pond that he had dug out of a swale in among the corn fields. It’s very private and unless you were in a plane going overhead,  or had been invited to a bonfire/BBQ or summer party there, you’d have no idea it existed.  There’s a diving board,  a dock,  a fire pit,  even a sandy beach,  and I believe there are bass and possibly turtles living in the pond,  which in parts is 30 feet deep. Because it hasn’t been used much recently (summer is long gone),  the sand is peppered with deer tracks.

As it was such a nice day,  my aunt and I took the ‘jitney’ through the corn fields to the pond and I took some pictures (no surprises there  😉 ).

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