Anonymous wrote:I paid $4.99. Good time to go vegan.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got home from Costco in Fairfax. White XL Cage Free Eggs for the two dozen cartons was $6.49 or $3.25 / dozen. Brown Organic XL Eggs were $7.59 or $3.80 a dozen. Limit two cartons for each so you can walk out with 8 dozen essentially. 4 dozen white and 4 dozen brown.
I just paid $15.99 at costco for 5 dozen. It's unreal. I ate two eggs this morning and I actually felt guilty about it. I hope prices start dropping in the next few months.
Anonymous wrote:I have backyard chickens. Given the limits of of how many I'm allowed to have (4), it's not really a money saving venture. Feed prices have increased over the past year, and because I live in suburbia I have a nice coop and not a knocked-together coop like my grandparents had for their dozen chickens. It's also not self-sustaining because I'm not allowed to have a rooster, which also means my chickens need constant human supervision when I let them out of their run, and I have a roofed, predator proof run (also more money) for them because again, no rooster to help make sure they're safe. My grandparents had roosters with their chickens, so were fine with fencing where the chickens could range around during the day as long as they had a reasonable coop for them to sleep in.
Chickens do make fantastic pets, however. The kids adore them and the eggs are a million times better than even the free-range, organic, fancy eggs we get from the grocery store. If where you live has laws that allow for a larger flock and rooster(s), you might come out ahead financially. Also keep in mind that egg production changes throughout the year. We get fewer (or none) in winter, and more in summer. And hens don't lay their whole lives, so have a plan. Ours are pets. When they stop laying, we just don't get any eggs. For people who have hens for egg production, that might be when they kill and process the chicken for dinner, which is what my grandparents did.
Anonymous wrote:that’s 27c per egg. Your 2 eggs for your healthy breakfast cos you 54c. You felt guilt over this?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got home from Costco in Fairfax. White XL Cage Free Eggs for the two dozen cartons was $6.49 or $3.25 / dozen. Brown Organic XL Eggs were $7.59 or $3.80 a dozen. Limit two cartons for each so you can walk out with 8 dozen essentially. 4 dozen white and 4 dozen brown.
I just paid $15.99 at costco for 5 dozen. It's unreal. I ate two eggs this morning and I actually felt guilty about it. I hope prices start dropping in the next few months.
that’s 27c per egg. Your 2 eggs for your healthy breakfast cos you 54c. You felt guilt over this?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just got home from Costco in Fairfax. White XL Cage Free Eggs for the two dozen cartons was $6.49 or $3.25 / dozen. Brown Organic XL Eggs were $7.59 or $3.80 a dozen. Limit two cartons for each so you can walk out with 8 dozen essentially. 4 dozen white and 4 dozen brown.
I just paid $15.99 at costco for 5 dozen. It's unreal. I ate two eggs this morning and I actually felt guilty about it. I hope prices start dropping in the next few months.
Anonymous wrote:I just got home from Costco in Fairfax. White XL Cage Free Eggs for the two dozen cartons was $6.49 or $3.25 / dozen. Brown Organic XL Eggs were $7.59 or $3.80 a dozen. Limit two cartons for each so you can walk out with 8 dozen essentially. 4 dozen white and 4 dozen brown.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:organic doesn’t mean cruelty free fyi. Caged hens can be labeled organic. Do your research into the suppliers the company uses..Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Avian flu, supply chain issues.
Some of it is localized due to specific regulations as well. ABC re: California:
“California's cage free laws implemented on Jan. 1, 2022 also contributed to especially high prices in the Golden State.
AB1437 required all eggs sold in the state come from hens living in cage-free barns. This in turn resulted in a smaller pool of sellers CA grocers can purchase eggs from, in turn driving prices up.
"You're buying from a smaller range of options in terms of where you can buy eggs from to be able to meet the regulatory conditions that are required.””
MA too. Fewer suppliers because they can only sell cage-free eggs. We pay $5.49/dozen for the house brand at my local Stop and Shop (aka Giant). Organic is at least $8.
Honestly? I just want cheaper eggs. It was the state government that decided that cage-free must inherently be better in some way (although as you point out, that’s not necessarily true).
The average battery caged laying hen spends her entire life in a space the size of an 8x11 sheet of paper. Her. Entire. Life.
That’s the kind of eggs you want to put in your body? Do you not think that there is a connection between the stress endured by an animal and the quality of its bodily processes? If you were caged in a way that you couldn’t move your body or exercise or get good sleep and fresh air, how healthy do you think your baby would be?
People should pay a few bucks more and buy eggs from hens that scratched the ground outside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:organic doesn’t mean cruelty free fyi. Caged hens can be labeled organic. Do your research into the suppliers the company uses..Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Avian flu, supply chain issues.
Some of it is localized due to specific regulations as well. ABC re: California:
“California's cage free laws implemented on Jan. 1, 2022 also contributed to especially high prices in the Golden State.
AB1437 required all eggs sold in the state come from hens living in cage-free barns. This in turn resulted in a smaller pool of sellers CA grocers can purchase eggs from, in turn driving prices up.
"You're buying from a smaller range of options in terms of where you can buy eggs from to be able to meet the regulatory conditions that are required.””
MA too. Fewer suppliers because they can only sell cage-free eggs. We pay $5.49/dozen for the house brand at my local Stop and Shop (aka Giant). Organic is at least $8.
Honestly? I just want cheaper eggs. It was the state government that decided that cage-free must inherently be better in some way (although as you point out, that’s not necessarily true).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please provide a link for the quote from Eggland’s best.
And a link showing his political affiliation.
+1
Anonymous wrote:organic doesn’t mean cruelty free fyi. Caged hens can be labeled organic. Do your research into the suppliers the company uses..Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Avian flu, supply chain issues.
Some of it is localized due to specific regulations as well. ABC re: California:
“California's cage free laws implemented on Jan. 1, 2022 also contributed to especially high prices in the Golden State.
AB1437 required all eggs sold in the state come from hens living in cage-free barns. This in turn resulted in a smaller pool of sellers CA grocers can purchase eggs from, in turn driving prices up.
"You're buying from a smaller range of options in terms of where you can buy eggs from to be able to meet the regulatory conditions that are required.””
MA too. Fewer suppliers because they can only sell cage-free eggs. We pay $5.49/dozen for the house brand at my local Stop and Shop (aka Giant). Organic is at least $8.