Posted on 04/19/2025 6:47:12 AM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin
I don’t think he gets that many eggs a day I’ve seen his chickens, and while I didn’t official count them, I reckon they number about 7. You sound like someone that should get you a few. 🙂👍
I was born in 1936. We didn’t buy Eggs we sold them. We always raised 200 to 300 Chickens. We were a Family of 6. We would take a 12 Dozen crate of Eggs to the Grocery store and trade them for the food we didn’t raise on the farm. Our Eggs kept us fed.
Reminds me of the Jack London story The One Thousand Dozen.
We got a 18 carton and a dozen carton for free the a few days ago.
Been getting them constantly. Neighbors got about 15 hens and they are all laying. He has been giving them away since they started laying.
We all send him our potato peelings, etc to supplement his chickens and hogs.
I intend to put in a patch of dryland wheat for him next year. Was going to do it this, but last winter we got zero for rain.
Born in 1957 and eggs were $.57 / dozen. Using an inflation calculator, that is $6.95 today but eggs are more down to $4.90 - way better than inflation.
We can thank God for sending Donald Trump to expose it and help put a stop to it.
When you consider the magnitude of wealth generated in and concentrated in the USA, it's inevitable that greedy looters would figure out how to seize as much of it as they can. Corrupt government and corrupt politicians are not victimless. The price of protecting against their exploitation is--like liberty--eternal vigilance.
Potato is said by some to be bad for them. Check it out.
The governments goal of 4% inflation basically doubles the price of ANYTHING every 20 years.
so:
1940 .33 cents
1960 .66 cents
1980 $1.32
2000 $2.64
2020 $5.28
Eggs are exactly priced where you would expect them to be
most poor people dont understand inflation and how it works against them
basically, if your net worth is not DOUBLING every 20 years, you are actually falling behind and don’t even realize it.
We have always dumped peelings down for them to pick through.
Always.
All these goody two shoe assholes.
1944: 55 cents
The price of eggs had more or less stabilized by the time the U.S. troops landed in France in 1944.
But my markers were always
College: Brussels sprouts 4 cents each.
Marriage: Hamburger 29 cents/lb.
We always raised 200 to 300 Chickens.
**********
Ditto. I grew up with chickens abound. My dad sold the eggs
to a processing facility by the 48 dozen crates. We had a small
cafe like facility where the north/south/east/west buses cross.
My mom made sandwhiches, egg salad - chicken-salad thus my
dose of chickens abounded. It took many years before I enjoyed
any kind of chicken for food.
If that particular statistic is important to you, and you can't find the information at pretty much every whining complaining current news site out there, you have the internet. Some starting points:
https://www.dol.gov/general/topic/statistics/wagesearnings
https://www.ams.usda.gov/mnreports/ams_3725.pdf
I really enjoy the photos and snippets of food culture for each year.
I was buying a dozen eggs for 99 cents until the 2020 lockdown. I always bought them on sale at the supermarket.
So maybe just a cow no no
In inflation adjusted dollars eggs were more expensive the year I was born.
Unless you spring for the Vital Farms eggs! Much more expensive but amazingly wonderful!
The pics don’t match the dates. 1938 is showing a ‘55 Chevy. For example.
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