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Author Topic: What next?!  (Read 262671 times)

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Offline LPS

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Just looked, Feb gas futures (RBOB or RBG20.nym) were up 4 cents on the new york mercantile to 1.7488

Just thought you guys would like to know.

What are you getting at Del?  Of course we know what you mean....   Will this effect the price of beer?

Offline delcecchi

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Just looked, Feb gas futures (RBOB or RBG20.nym) were up 4 cents on the new york mercantile to 1.7488

Just thought you guys would like to know.

What are you getting at Del?  Of course we know what you mean....   Will this effect the price of beer?

I don't think it will affect beer or whiskey prices at least in the short term.  But you can check pork bellies to see what will be happening with bacon.... :sleazy:   

Folks were talking about filling up to avoid the hypothetical spike in gas prices so I did some research....

Online glenn57

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I didn't see any prices raised on my way home...…...matter of fact the holiday in Otsago gas was 2.24 at 4;30 tonight.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline LPS

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Thanks Del.  I am going to get some ribs out of the freezer to smome whilst watching football this weekend. 

Offline delcecchi

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Thanks Del.  I am going to get some ribs out of the freezer to smome whilst watching football this weekend.

Sounds great.    Hope the Vikings don't spoil your appetite.    :angry2:

Online Dotch

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I didn't see any prices raised on my way home...…...matter of fact the holiday in Otsago gas was 2.24 at 4;30 tonight.

Yup, it went down here actually. Casey's had dropped from $2.39 to $2.38 so I wasn't seeing things. The kwop was $2.38 also when I departed metropolitan Bugtussle.
Time itself is bought and sold, the spreading fear of growing old contains a thousand foolish games that we play. (Neil Young)

Offline Rebel SS

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Piffle. It's all gone up here to $2.49...............


2.49
update
Kwik Trip
1350 Salem Rd SW near 16th St SW
Rochester   
Buddy_w0bmvcy8
1 hour ago
2.49
update
Kwik Trip
2109 2nd St SW & 21st Ave SW
Rochester   
Flatlander1985
2 hours ago
2.49
update
Holiday
1520 2nd St SW & US-52
Rochester   
Flatlander1985
2 hours ago
2.49
update
Kwik Trip
3520 Sarah Pl Nw & Valleyhigh Rd N.W.
Rochester   
CRVer42
2 hours ago
2.49
update
Holiday
3225 40th Ave NW & Valleyhigh Dr NW
Rochester   
CRVer42
2 hours ago
2.49
update
Hy-Vee
3650 3rd Ave NW & 37th St NW
Rochester   
papagreen
3 hours ago
2.49
update
Holiday
919 37th St NW & W River Pkwy NW
Rochester   
papagreen
3 hours ago
2.49
update
Holiday
1851 Assisi Dr NW & Elton HIlls Dr

Offline delcecchi

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So what was it yesterday?   2.46?

Went back and looked at your post from morning.... 2.45
« Last Edit: January 01/03/20, 10:26:48 PM by delcecchi »

Offline Rebel SS

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Holding at $2.49 this am. Now watch it drop ten cents since I filled up.  :rolleyes:
« Last Edit: January 01/04/20, 07:23:16 AM by Rebel SS »

Offline Rebel SS

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« Last Edit: January 01/04/20, 08:10:59 AM by Rebel SS »


Offline LPS

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How sad.  Man how irresponsible if they determine they weren't wearing orange clothing even though it wasn't required on private land.  And how irresponsible that someone would shoot without identifying their target.  And it was their own people. 

Offline Gunner55

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Life............. what happens while your making other plans. John Lennon

Offline Reinhard

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So tragic.  Never should have happened.  good luck.

Online glenn57

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this is one of the main reasons I hate and don't do deer drives. someone on stand and others walking towards you is a bad start right outta da gate.  that and shooting at a running wide open deer, odds aren't really all that good. even with a sharp shooter like me!!!!!!! :nerd: :nerd: :evil:
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Online Cooperman

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I never thought deer drives were a good idea either. I have been watching two shows on tv, Northwoods Law (New Hampshire) and Lone star Law. I couldn’t believe all the hunters that were wearing camouflage instead of BO?

Online glenn57

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and that's the other thing. even if its private land...…...not required to wear orange....how friggin stupid is that. :pouty: :pouty: and that's a lack of state regs…..should be required for cripes sake!!!!!!
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline delcecchi

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and that's the other thing. even if its private land...…...not required to wear orange....how friggin stupid is that. :pouty: :pouty: and that's a lack of state regs…..should be required for cripes sake!!!!!!

I guess they figure you should be smart enough to realize that orange is the new camo (rimshot) and wear it if other hunters are going to be around, unlike MN that seems to want to pass a law to make you wipe after a dump.

Offline Rebel SS

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     :shocked:

Online glenn57

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Well I'll take those kind of laws that makes it safer in the woods. Even when they changes the law to require orange above the waste small game hunting. Hell I wear orange going out to bear hunt.once on my stand I go camo though.
2015 deer slayer!!!!!!!!!!

Offline Rebel SS

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What used to get me was when we'd duck hunt down in Weaver Bottoms, and at the stroke of sunrise, everyone opened up at the first string overhead. Sounded like a friggin' firefight with shotguns. It's a huge area with lots of hunters. The pellets would  rain down on ya occasionally, and although most shot pretty much up, there were those that would stand up and shoot at a low flyer. Was always thinking one day I'd get a face full of pellets...
« Last Edit: January 01/04/20, 05:35:23 PM by Rebel SS »

Offline Rebel SS

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Offline delcecchi

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Finally, a new job for Reb (on one side or the other)   

At Border, Customs Work Includes Taking a Lot of Bologna
Day-to-day reality for some border officers amid immigration crisis is far more mundane

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers routinely seize Mexican bologna that people try to smuggle into the U.S., including 14 rolls in November. PHOTO: U.S. CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION

Customs and Border Protection official Chad Gerber spends much of his time overseeing the hunt for dangerous products travelers try to sneak into the U.S. Among the most popular: Mexican bologna.


In November, his team in El Paso, Texas, seized 154 pounds of Mexican bologna in 14 frozen rolls hidden behind the back seat of a Chevrolet pickup. A CBP officer had spotted the tops of red packaging poking out.

“It’s hard to hide that much bologna,” said Mr. Gerber, one of the CBP’s top two agriculture officials in El Paso. He estimates he has seized thousands of pounds of Mexican bologna over his 21 years with agency.

Following department protocol, officers took the meat to a local incinerator and burned it, Mr. Gerber said.

Amid what officials have called an immigration crisis at the border, the day-to-day reality for some officers is often more mundane. It can involve interacting with people making legal drives back and forth for shopping trips and family visits, and officers looking for all sorts of forbidden fruit, dairy products and processed meat, just like at any other U.S. port of entry. The work of agriculture specialists like Mr. Gerber is a small but vital piece of the CBP workload at air, land and seaports as they root out dangerous products or pests before they make their way into the U.S.

Mr. Gerber and his team in El Paso typically encounter only a fraction of the tens of thousands of travelers who cross the border in El Paso each day. They see only the people line officers suspect of trying to sneak in prohibited items, including bologna.

Travelers are allowed to take cheese and many other kinds of food from Mexico into the U.S., but many meats are banned because of health concerns such as swine flu and other animal-borne illnesses. The products can be legally imported by licensed importers who can verify the origins of the meat and certify that the animals it came from were healthy.

On a typical day during the budget year that ended in September, officers found more than 4,500 prohibited agricultural items, including food and plants, according to CBP.

East Coast-based agricultural officers routinely find African game meat tucked inside luggage. In November, customs officers seized nearly 16 pounds of unpasteurized soft cheese wrapped in five tanned animal skins that had been brought in from Turkey, according to CBP.

Fans of Mexican bologna, which typically comes in large rolls like Italian salami, say its richer, less salty taste is far superior to the prepackaged processed meat in American grocery stores. It is eaten as slices, unadorned, on a sandwich, or cooked.

It is sold in the U.S. at specialty Hispanic-foods markets, at higher prices than in Mexico. At one Phoenix-area market specializing in Hispanic foods, chicken and pork bologna from Mexican meat company Chimex sells for $4.99 a pound, or about $50 per roll. In Mexico, the rolls sell for about $10.

The bologna can have a street value of $100 or more for a 10-pound roll in areas where there are no stores that legally import and sell it, said Roger Maier, a CBP spokesman.

“It’s really good,” said Maria Batista, a 23-year-old social worker from South Florida. “I’m Dominican and we usually use it with breakfast, fry it in a pan and eat it with eggs.” She said she finds the imported version at local grocery stores.

As for Mr. Gerber, he said he had never tried Mexican bologna. “It’s probably got a unique taste and flavor that these folks grew up on,” he said.

A hidden sandwich’s worth of bologna or a small chorizo roll tucked away in a purse can result in a fine of a few hundred dollars. Larger amounts that authorities suspect will be sold on the black market carry fines starting at $1,000.

Mr. Gerber said travelers carrying small quantities of bologna or other banned items for their personal use routinely try to sneak them past border officers while declaring a variety of other groceries.

SHARE YOUR THOUGHTS
Have you been made to discard foreign items when traveling back to the U.S.? Which ones—and what was the explanation given to you? Join the conversation below.

Big-time bologna smugglers often borrow tactics from their counterparts in the illicit drug trade, stashing the meat rolls in hidden compartments along the sidewalls of a van or inside a spare tire. Customs officers assume the larger quantities of bologna are bound for illicit sales at inflated prices.

CBP officers “are trained in deep concealment, and 99% of the time, they assume drugs,” Mr. Gerber said. “The next thing you know, they are looking at rolls of bologna.”
(Reb and NL working together in picture)

Offline Rebel SS

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Ha! I get enough baloney from Glenn! He gives it away!  That stuff is mostly ground up pack burros....burrito baloney. I hear it can be cut into steaks and Soused- up for a real Mexi treat.  Might be an opening at the border for a Baloney Burrito stand. You could start one up at the border during yer trips to southern Cali.  Delrito's Donkey Delites. Ole!  :tongue:
« Last Edit: January 01/05/20, 07:47:14 AM by Rebel SS »

Offline Gunner55

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I think glenn gives away enough for ALL OF MNO :pouty:, not just you Reb. Although you seem to get more than your fair share. ;) :laugh: :laugh:
Life............. what happens while your making other plans. John Lennon

Offline Rebel SS

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Those danged self-firing, self-aiming shotguns! We gotta get rid of 'em!  :doofus:


ROSEAU, Minn. (AP) - A Minnesota man is accused of fatally shooting a woman who yelled at him to hurry up and honked her horn while waiting for him outside his home.


Fifty-six-year-old Angelo Borreson was charged Friday with second-degree murder and second-degree assault in the death of 51-year-old Angela Wynne. Borreson told authorities Wynne drove to his home near Badger in northern Minnesota on Wednesday to help him get gas for his vehicle.

According to the complaint, Borrenson said he accidentally shot Wynne after she started yelling at him to hurry. Borrenson said he did not mean for his shotgun to fire, that it fired  by itself.

Online mike89

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yea right...    :doofus:
a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!

Online Dotch

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Pretending he was Jack Elam in Rio Lobo?  :confused:  :crazy:
Time itself is bought and sold, the spreading fear of growing old contains a thousand foolish games that we play. (Neil Young)

Online mike89

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his face looks like he's a real winner in the mug shot....
a bad day of fishing is still better than a good day at work!!

Online Steve-o

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Those danged self-firing, self-aiming shotguns! We gotta get rid of 'em!  :doofus:


ROSEAU, Minn. (AP) - A Minnesota man is accused of fatally shooting a woman who yelled at him to hurry up and honked her horn while waiting for him outside his home.


Fifty-six-year-old Angelo Borreson was charged Friday with second-degree murder and second-degree assault in the death of 51-year-old Angela Wynne. Borreson told authorities Wynne drove to his home near Badger in northern Minnesota on Wednesday to help him get gas for his vehicle.

According to the complaint, Borrenson said he accidentally shot Wynne after she started yelling at him to hurry. Borrenson said he did not mean for his shotgun to fire, that it fired  by itself.

He must'a been using one of 'dem Remington 700 shotguns.