Anonymous wrote:https://www.costco.com/kirkland-signature-vitamin-c-1000-mg.%2c-500-tablets.product.10015954.htmlAnonymous wrote:Maybe it was the fact that it seems like it was APs first week and just assumed that the host family would buy her the vitamins? IDK.
They are like $15 for more than she'll likely use. Why would she assume that would be a problem or 'too much'? I wouldn't.
https://www.costco.com/kirkland-signature-vitamin-c-1000-mg.%2c-500-tablets.product.10015954.htmlAnonymous wrote:Maybe it was the fact that it seems like it was APs first week and just assumed that the host family would buy her the vitamins? IDK.
Anonymous wrote:Another option is to buy salmon, explain it's expensive and you will buy her a couple times of month, and show her what more inexpensive options are. I buy our AP sole, cod, and flounder, which she was not used to, but now she really likes. Tilapia is another option. We do not buy farmed fish, and we showed her the prices for wild salmon, and she agreed that eating frozen wild salmon from Costco was fine. Try explaining that most Atlantic salmon is dyed and farm-raised. She would probably prefer wild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our new AP has been here for a less than a week and is asking for salmon as part of the grocery list. She's a second year, so i'ts not like she is clueless about prices in the area (she lived elsewhere in the DMV). She also asked for cilantro lime salad dressing and vitamin C tablets. I will obviously talk to her about this to remind her how we agreed groceries work in our house (as detailed in our handbook)--but I do find this presumptuous.
I do not know how groceries work in your house. In our house, I would not find this presumptions. But we like fish and healthy choices. As for vitamins, I would ask AP to buy them herself. It's a slippery slope....
Anonymous wrote:Our APs always eat what we eat but sometimes they want one of two items each week that are not on our standard grocery list so we get it for her. If it were my daughter asking for salmon, I would get it. Same for AP who is a part of our family. I would not, however, get the vitamins. That is her responsibility. That is not considered food.
If this is such a budget breaking item for you, then perhaps the AP program is not for you.
Anonymous wrote:Our new AP has been here for a less than a week and is asking for salmon as part of the grocery list. She's a second year, so i'ts not like she is clueless about prices in the area (she lived elsewhere in the DMV). She also asked for cilantro lime salad dressing and vitamin C tablets. I will obviously talk to her about this to remind her how we agreed groceries work in our house (as detailed in our handbook)--but I do find this presumptuous.