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Amishway Homesteaders

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Posts posted by Amishway Homesteaders

  1. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear WiccadStargazer

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  2. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear Yart

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  3. our Wednesday................................

    After a few days of rain it was nice to be able to work out in the gardens again. Also much cooler out after hot days beginning of week.

    Lots of running around trying to get things done before the weekend - another Outdoor Flea Market to do so hoping for nice weather.

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

  4. Good Job! You know when you go to sleep at night and when you look yourself in the eye in the mirror just why you took the higher ground.

     

    Sleep? Did you say sleep?

    I wish . . . . . here it is 4:30 am (been up since 3 am) and that was after a 3 hour 'nap'!

    But I have always been like that most of my life so no worries here.

    Just lots of time to do things that need doing. :sHa_sarcasticlol:

     

    We were talking, the other day, about all the things going on in our area like shop lifting and I don't know how they do it? I could NEVER eat (or use) anything if I stole it.

    Same with all the people that steal gas locally they have no problem KNOWING that it is wrong AND that the station owner has to pay for it NOT the big company name!

    And Don't get me started on how many people abuse the food stamp program.

    :AmishMichaelstraw: stepping down :soapbox:

     

  5. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear bibliomane

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  6. You are right and as I told the guy I bet the next 5 guys (around here) that saw them would have picked them up and taken them home and not given it a second though.

     

    the hard part was ......................

    It was all DeWalt Tools with all the power chargers (think yellow)and with Fathers Day just around the corner , I would LOVE some new tools!

    But then I couldn't sleep at night OR use them.

    SO I guess I did the right thing!

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

  7. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear maw

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸♥¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸♥ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  8. I wonder how much of these recalls are form products imported. Even if they re made in the US

    ,it is often made with at least imported items, containers or parts.

    Too much of the food including the salad are shipped in from other countries.

    I see no sign that imports are going to be checked.

     

    I would say that MOST are from Overseas and it seems that most are coming from China BUT yet we keep ordering from them?

    THAT's the Government for you!

     

    Cat just posted about kids shoes.

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

     

  9. Did my good deed for the day.

     

    Right after Lori left for work I went to the van to get something when a truck when around the corner (with tail gate down) and as it did a big tool bag fell off! I knew right away that it was a bag full of power tools by the way it hit the ground!

     

    Did the guy STOP!............no

     

    So I ran out to grab it to return to the truck but the light changed and off it went.

     

    Should I put it on the side of the road in hopes he get to work and sees them missing and come back looking for them?

     

    NOT WHERE I LIVE! They would be gone in a second!

     

    So I cared them home to see if I could find a name or something to call? EVERY power toll had DOBBINS written on it. COOL! I know them!

     

    So I came into the house to look up phone number - got someone on phone and she said she would call who she "Thinks did it" and they will come right back to get them.

     

    And They did, and thanked me over and over.

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

  10. Surge in products being recalled may be numbing consumers

    By Christopher Doering, Gannett Washington Bureau

    U.S. regulators, retailers and manufacturers are growing increasingly concerned that a surge in the number of products being recalled is resulting in "fatigue" by the public — increasing the chance that consumers could ignore or miss a recall that could ultimately endanger their health.

    Consumers last year were deluged with 2,363 recalls, or about 6.5 recalls each day, covering consumer products, pharmaceuticals, medical devices and food, according to data from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Department of Agriculture and the Consumer Product Safety Commission. The recalls announced mark a nearly 14 percent increase from 2,081 in 2010 and compare with about 1,460 in 2007.

    Experts say the increase is the result of a combination of greater oversight by regulators, better testing procedures and the use of social media where consumers can quickly point out and discuss problems with other people.

    "We're experiencing recall fatigue in my mind at the consumer level and also perhaps at the business level, and we all have to worry about that," said Mike Rozembajgier, vice president of recalls for Stericycle ExpertRecall, an Indianapolis-based firm which has provided advice and helped major U.S. companies, including Merck, General Electric and Wendy's, carry out recalls.

    "We have this growing concern for safety, but with there being so many recalls going on (is the public) paying attention to them and responding to them in a manner that is necessary for the recalls to be handled effectively?" he said.

    This year alone hundreds of recalls have already been announced. Pfizer recalled birth control pills after it was found there may have been an inexact number of pills that also could have been out of sequence, increasing the chance of an unintended pregnancy. IKEA asked its customers to return about 169,000 high chairs because the restraint buckle could open unexpectedly. And Dole warned the public not to eat a lettuce salad mix because of a possible health risk from salmonella.

    Retailers and government regulators are increasingly struggling to reach people who may not know about a recall, or choose to ignore it despite the potential dangers. A 2009 study conducted by Rutgers found 12% of Americans ate food they knew had been recalled and 40% admitted never having looked for recalled products in their homes.

    Increasingly, retailers and government agencies are expanding the methods they use to communicate with the public — from social-media technologies such as Twitter and Facebook to more traditional methods such as phone calls and postings within their stores. But the same methods that prove successful in reaching one customer could just as easily be ignored by another.

    "We don't feel that our members are getting bombarded but certainly the general public is and sooner or later you don't know what to believe," said Craig Wilson, vice president for quality assurance and food safety at the warehouse giant Costco.

    The 602-store warehouse chain uses data supplied from its estimated 60 million members and notifies them within 24 hours if they've purchased a recalled item. It then follows up with a letter. The result is that customers return about 90% of recently recalled products and, in the case of major recalls such as when a food product could cause serious health problems or death, Costco gets "the majority of everything that was sold back."

    But Wilson says the national recall system "doesn't work as designed" and that consumers and retailers alike would benefit from a single, uniform network. He says the CPSC, USDA and FDA each have a different recall system with unique requirements, making it more difficult for companies like his to make sure they are complying with the rules.

    At Rochester, New York-based Wegmans, the grocery chain has a detailed recall plan that can require hundreds of people to carry out. The 81-store East Coast chain follows a recall protocol increasingly common among retailers: posting recall information on its web page and within stores for customers, notifying its followers using social media tools and, when possible, calling individuals who may have used a store card for the purchase.

    "We do what we can to protect our customers but then our customers have to protect themselves and they can't do that unless they have the information," said Jeanne Colleluori with Wegmans. Last year alone, Colleluori said Wegmans participated in about 40 recalls, and the retailer was ahead of that pace in 2012 with about 16 recalls as of early May.

    Businesses can ease the burden of a recall on their reputation and bottom line by being honest and upfront with their customers and crafting a response plan before any recall occurs that outlines what they will do with the public, media and regulators, industry watchers say.

    "Many companies are being criticized not because they are not doing the right thing but because they are taking too long," said Sophie Ann Terrisse, chief executive of STC Associates, a brand-management firm.

    She said some firms fail to estimate the work needed to conduct a recall and quickly become overwhelmed, leading to slow responses or poor customer service from representatives who don't have the time or know how to respond properly. "Things can get out of hand very quickly and it's hard to recover from that" for the brand and the company's core audience, said Terrisse.

    Companies involved in recalls all say their primary concern is protecting the public — but they also have a business interest as well. "Our concern is for our customers but we have to protect our name as well, and we are very much aware that when there is a recall if it is a Wegmans brand product our reputation is at stake," said Wegmans' Colleluori.

    Some businesses have managed to take a recall and turn it into a marketing bonanza that benefits the company. Two years ago McDonald's took the unusual step of paying customers a premium to return Shrek glasses to the restaurants following concerns that paint used to depict characters on the glasses contained cadmium — a carcinogen known to cause kidney problems.

    "Mistakes can be made, but the way they are dealt with is by being completely open and letting the customer become part of the recall," said Terrisse.

    For Stericycle ExpertRecall's Rozembajgier, the recall surge has turned into a lucrative business for his company, the largest U.S. firm handing consumer product, food and pharmaceutical recalls. The firm has its hands in nearly every stage of the process from storing a recalled product, helping warehouses and stores remove the item from shelves, dealing with customers and ensuring the company conducting the recall is complying with guidelines set out by U.S. regulators.

    At its five warehouses in Indianapolis totaling 700,000 square feet (about 12 football fields), the firm collects and stores recalled items — everything from household appliance components to sporting/recreational equipment to jewelry.

    In fact, eight years after Merck voluntarily recalled Vioxx, Stericycle ExpertRecall still has a full side of a warehouse stacked floor to ceiling with cases of the arthritis drug. There are still a number of lawsuits pending, and Stericycle ExpertRecall must keep the drug under lock and key until the FDA says it can be destroyed.

    "Recalled products come here to die," said Rozembajgier, whose firm has been involved in nearly 3,000 recalls during the last decade. "If they come to Indianapolis they're not getting back into the supply chain."

    The firm has started to recycle some of the recalled items. For example, it has recycled the batteries and plastic components from recalled medical devices; copper from the wiring in electrical products; and sugar has been extracted from liquid medication.

    The government operates a recalled website,

    http://recalls.gov/, which offers the public information on all recalls including cars, boats, food, consumer products, medicine and cosmetics.

    The U.S. Agriculture Department's Food Safety and Inspection Service improved its recall system in March by rolling out a Twitter feed that targets consumers only if their state is impacted. In the past, FSIS would send out a Tweet to the 250,000 people who follow everything that happens at the agency.

    USDA Secretary Tom Vilsack downplayed the number of recalls that are announced considering the number of products that are produced, items that are sold and meals consumed each day.

    "I think people want to know and need to know and have a right to know if there is a problem with a particular product," said Vilsack. "We're going to look at ways in which we (communicate) and constantly improve how we communicate but we're not going to stop communicating."

    Copyright 2012 USA TODAY

     

  11. I have been planting that way for YEARS!

    I also use 'natural' fertilizers like (ground up)egg shells for calcium, dog biscuits for bone meal, matches for sulfur, etc. that I 'plant' along with each type of vegetable.

    You can also plant flowers in with vegetables to help - like marigolds and bee balm.

     

    Good luck with the garden this year - it is so much fun planting this way as you watch things grow.

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

  12. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear Doral

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  13. Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday dear Jeepers

    ♪♫•*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪•.¸¸♪♫•*

    Happy Birthday to YOU

    ♪♫ •*¨*•.¸¸ ¸¸.•*¨*•♫♪

  14. Good Job Mike!

    and good that you asked the question to be safe.

    We like it when members ask questions becuse that way we ALL get to see and hear the answers.

     

    b.t.w. IF you think one or two may not have sealed just put them in frige and use them soon.

    :AmishMichaelstraw: a.k.a. Michael

  15. I just downloaded TMC's book 'Bystander'! I didn't know that it was available for Kindle. I'm into 'Dark Grid' right now, but I bet I can finish it fast! Congrats Carolyn. We are very proud of you!!! :bouquet:

     

     

    Just check 2 Library Systems database (that is 82 Libraries total) and nobody has it. I am very sad! :sad-smiley-012:

    :AmishMichael2:

     

    OK, So now at least 1 Library System has it! :thumbs:

    Lori got her Boss at the Library to let her order 1 for the system!

     

    AND THEN............................

    She surprized me by getting a copy for me for Fathers Day! :woohoo:

    And even gave it to me early - :faint3:

     

    BUT now she is Reading it! I wonder WHY I got it early? :shrug:

     

    So remember it is a great book!

    and would make a great gift!

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

  16. good thing you bought cheese sticks . . . . . .

    or who knows WHAT else he may have eatten? :sHa_sarcasticlol:

     

    Hope he is old enough to be in kitchen and working the stove all by himself.

    3 minutes is a long time while eatting cheese sticks BUT a short time IF he spilled that pot of hot water on himself while alone? :shrug:

    :AmishMichaelstraw:

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