Yeah, I took econ too. I'm just asking if you have any egg-bird specific experience. If you know about the details of dealing with each kind of bird and the complications that come with the different types. Anyone can econsplain. But do you have industry specific knowledge? Are you successful in this industry? Do you have actionable information that leads to success? Or if are you just repeating highschool level generalities.
There is this idea out there that people shouldn't take unsolicited advice, especially from people that don't have any experience in what you are trying to do. So I'm asking the questions to see if you are offering anything of value or are just repeating things without providing that value.
Most people are clueless about the actual costs of eggs. In my area I'm pretty sure most of them think eggs are mass produced in a factory even though cows outnumber people on an average block and they should know how eggs are made but they are too busy avoiding education at every opportunity because that is the will of Daddy Leader. I'm only half joking.
If they wanted to go buy a commercial goose egg that's how it works. Geese eggs are rare. They take a lot of investment in time to produce. If you can't recoup the costs then you can't sell as selling requires time and time is money if you believe that labor should be compensated.
Eggs go to waste. There is no way we can eat them as fast as they come. It's not really even a factor of price. We could list them as free and even though the stores are sold out we'd still not get rid of them.
Selling eggs is similar to the worst parts of Facebook marketplace. People say they will come and don't. They show up and the eggs aren't good enough because you don't feed them the same exact feed they would if they had chickens. They can only buy if there are at least five dozen available. The eggs aren't white, or blue, or green, or whatever their kink is.
Egg buyers are the most picky people on earth. We did get lucky last year with one couple that would always take whatever we had. But we don't actually set a price. We live in poverty. We let anyone that shows up pay whatever they want. These people covered our feed costs but that was about it.
It takes a full year to hatch them and then wait for them to become soldiers since they are only aggressive in the spring. Ain'tnobodygottimeforthat-meme.gif
I have chickens. People refuse to pay $5 a dozen for our pasture eggs. Even though that's cheaper than any other eggs in the area. I'm also sitting on a dozen goose eggs. A goose egg is three times the size of a chicken egg. They want to pay less than three times the cost of a chicken egg, even though geese only lay during the spring and only lay every other day.
Article doesn't tell us if this is part of the inmate immune system or adaptive immune system. Can it, in theory, be programmed? Could these be engineered to rip apart things that aren't protein, such as plastics?
I was 61kg at 187cm from 15 to 30. I was eating 6000 calories a day to maintain that weight. Then I gained 22kg over the next three years and finally felt healthy for the first time. I had all the same health problems as anorexics while eating like an Olympic athlete.
It was just genetics. Multiple family members were like this but not as bad as I had it. Now I have a nephew who has it just as bad as I did. He just has to wait another decade or so to achieve normalcy.
I have bad news for you about babies.
And many people make sure to fully evacuate before a flight because they will do anything to avoid that bathroom.
It's a little hard to tease out some of the details here but if I'm reading it right calories were cut by about 500 a day. UPF (junk food) was decreased by a third and there was zero attempt at blinding or using a control. Oh and each person got $100 to put towards groceries each week.
After the end of the 8 weeks people lost an average of 7.7 pounds, Which is acceptable because anything more than 2 pounds a week is unsustainable and this just under one pound a week is slow enough that the body won't recognize that it's being starved and retaliate. So it sucks you have to go slow but slow wins long term. But buried in the details is that the standard deviation was 6.6 pounds meaning someone might have lost just 1.1 pounds and someone else might have lost 14.3. there is no way to tell from the released data what that standard deviation of a whopping 86% looked like in the individual level. I don't know if I could bring myself to publish a study with a standard deviation of 86%. I'd be afraid of getting bullied in the break room.
There should be a $100 per week for groceries study with zero interventions like counseling. Do you know how much healthier I would eat with $100 a week? I don't buy boxed mac and cheese because I want to. I buy it because I can't buy anything else.
It's kinda weird that UPFs accounted for 75% of the subjects diet to begin with. But then I see people's shopping carts and the amount of calories consumed as liquid sugar is insane. And I'm guilty of drinking too much ginger ale myself.
Did you see Section 31? People standing around in a circle telling us what they will do, then doing it, and finally telling us what they did. It felt like it burned a third of the screen time.
I'm not on ca. I'm on world. But I can see how I might have been first because I had just hit the scales sort and it was the first post I saw. It's possible that I was in before anyone else on the instance.
Yeah, I took econ too. I'm just asking if you have any egg-bird specific experience. If you know about the details of dealing with each kind of bird and the complications that come with the different types. Anyone can econsplain. But do you have industry specific knowledge? Are you successful in this industry? Do you have actionable information that leads to success? Or if are you just repeating highschool level generalities.
There is this idea out there that people shouldn't take unsolicited advice, especially from people that don't have any experience in what you are trying to do. So I'm asking the questions to see if you are offering anything of value or are just repeating things without providing that value.