Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're getting outside every day. We play in our yard for a while and we do one away from the house activity (walk, bike ride, scooter ride). No playgrounds (they're closed where we are now anyway) or other places where we would get close to anyone.
Oh and I stocked up on groceries last week so I'm not doing any shopping. I'm good for another 2+ weeks at least (though bread is in short supply, but I'm not going to a store just for bread, I plan to bake biscuits instead). I do get a vegetable delivery from Hungry Harvest, but it's already delayed and they're out of 2 of the things in my order--so I'm not sure how reliable they're going to be longterm. Not knocking them, they've had a huge increase in demand AND the supply chain is screwy. They're doing the best they can, but I used to be able to get eggs and bread from them in addition to produce and that's a lost cause now just like everywhere else.
I have to think that at some point, the demand for online grocery delivery and in-store panic buying will subside since people are already stocked up now.
We do the same but use playgrounds when they are empty. What’s the rationale not to use them? Is that the fear that the virus lives on the surface?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're getting outside every day. We play in our yard for a while and we do one away from the house activity (walk, bike ride, scooter ride). No playgrounds (they're closed where we are now anyway) or other places where we would get close to anyone.
Oh and I stocked up on groceries last week so I'm not doing any shopping. I'm good for another 2+ weeks at least (though bread is in short supply, but I'm not going to a store just for bread, I plan to bake biscuits instead). I do get a vegetable delivery from Hungry Harvest, but it's already delayed and they're out of 2 of the things in my order--so I'm not sure how reliable they're going to be longterm. Not knocking them, they've had a huge increase in demand AND the supply chain is screwy. They're doing the best they can, but I used to be able to get eggs and bread from them in addition to produce and that's a lost cause now just like everywhere else.
I have to think that at some point, the demand for online grocery delivery and in-store panic buying will subside since people are already stocked up now.
Anonymous wrote:We're getting outside every day. We play in our yard for a while and we do one away from the house activity (walk, bike ride, scooter ride). No playgrounds (they're closed where we are now anyway) or other places where we would get close to anyone.
Anonymous wrote:We're getting outside every day. We play in our yard for a while and we do one away from the house activity (walk, bike ride, scooter ride). No playgrounds (they're closed where we are now anyway) or other places where we would get close to anyone.