To: blanknoone
Shrimp Seen As Big BusinessEspecially in South Dakota.
2 posted on
03/29/2004 5:17:54 PM PST by
South40
(No amnesty for ILLEGALS!)
To: blanknoone
"Shrimp Seen As Big Business"
Wasn't this reported about Julio Iglasis (sp). . . .
Ummm . . . . oh . . . never mind. That was something else entirely. (snicker, snicker)
Carry on.
4 posted on
03/29/2004 5:23:17 PM PST by
BluSky
(“Don’t make me come down there.”)
To: blanknoone
"Personally, I think it's going to stink," said Thomas Zaker, whose home on Yardville-Allentown Road is opposite the proposed farm. "I bought this house here because it was out in the country, so I would rather not see anything across the street." Someone tell this socialist animal to STFU .. you want to restrict the land use ... buy the land then.
6 posted on
03/29/2004 5:28:03 PM PST by
Centurion2000
(Resolve to perform what you must; perform without fail that what you resolve.)
To: blanknoone
In Southeast Asia, shrimp farms and hog farms have about equal desirability as neighbors. Proximity is obvious. On the positive side, they help you in your diet greatly. Drive by one and you will have no desire to eat for at least 12 hours. In short, they make chicken farms seem attractive.
7 posted on
03/29/2004 5:29:14 PM PST by
JimSEA
( "More Bush, Less Taxes.")
To: blanknoone
Heck, he could have been going into dairy hogs. Unpasturized pig milk is the latest in the diet-crazed California market.
8 posted on
03/29/2004 5:37:04 PM PST by
pointsal
To: blanknoone
"I bought this house here because it was out in the country, so I would rather not see anything across the street."Then you should have bought the land across the street, you jerk.
12 posted on
03/29/2004 5:54:28 PM PST by
SpyGuy
To: blanknoone; Coleus
Funny, I saw an article about how Jersey was down to its last few dairy farms and that development was continuing apace in the western and central parts of the state.
I hope that Southern New Jersey (I'm talking Cumberland and Salem counties) remains largely undeveloped as it produces the best tomatoes and eggplants in the country.
13 posted on
03/29/2004 5:56:33 PM PST by
Clemenza
("Knowledge is Good" --- Emil Faber, Founder of Faber College)
To: blanknoone
They had an article in the WSJ a few months back, in which they pointed out that although the supply of shrimp was outpacing the demand, restaurants and stores could still charge a pretty penny because Americans view shrimp as something rich people eat.
Pretty sad...
17 posted on
03/29/2004 6:19:11 PM PST by
Tuco Ramirez
(Ideas have consequences.)
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