Our products are grown using sustainable organic materials to help us do our part to make the world better for future generations. We grow all of our products in house, using our unique systems and methodologies to ensure a consistent, flavorful, and nutritious harvest every time. Let's hope leveler heads prevail at the Cheyenne City Council, and they don't have to pry our free plastic bags out of our cold, dead hands.Dedicated to providing wholesome, nutritious foods to promote a healthy lifestyleĪs our name implies, Dayton Microgreens based in Dayton, Ohio, a city with a long history steeped in innovative new ideas. Merry Christmas to the garbage truck guys. (A big job, so to speak.)Īnd I laugh when I put a big bag of poop in the trash around Christmas, when the message on the bag is “Season's Greetings!” So I save them out in the garage, and put them to re-use when I clean up the back yard after our Labrador Retriever (the Cadillac of Dogs), Mitch. In closing, the plastic bags at Menards are the best around. Can't do it.Īnd the news this week is that they're going after our ceiling fans, making them more expensive and probably less effective. Try buying a traditional light bulb today. They want to make all new cars electric over the next 10 years, even though nobody knows where the extra electricity is going to come from. They want to outlaw the gas stoves in our kitchens, after we paid extra for the gas line because we like gas stoves. Washing machines and dishwashers ain't what they used to be, thanks to the do-gooders. This comes at a time when the pointy-headed intellectuals are nipping at our heels on multiple fronts. Even when there's a line of shoppers, the line moves fast, because we all want to get checked out and on with out lives as quickly as possible.īut, if the Cheyenne City Council bans those free plastic bags, I'll have to bring my own bags for my cans of pinto beans, or buy them.Īnd guess who absorbs the added cost of all this: Us. Today, you only see a few traditional grocery checkers at Walmart, for the late-adopters, and people with small kids.īut since I finally figured out how to check out vegetables at the self check-out stations, there has been a lot less waiting in lines at the grocery store. I was against self check-out initially, figuring I would put grocery store clerks out of work, and that was probably true. My concern over this potential plastic bag ban in Cheyenne is that they are going to screw up one of the most impressive technological wonders of our time: the ability to get in and out of Walmart in a few minutes, using the self check-out stations. We are not single-use plastic bag people. That's the case at our house, where the plastic bags get wadded up and shoved in a kitchen cabinet, then put to use lining waste baskets, cleaning up wet spills, and carrying multiple items like books headed back to the library, or groceries headed to the cabin. The lesser level heads among us somehow conclude that plastic bags are always “single use,” when some egghead somewhere did a study that showed that 77 percent of plastic bags are not single use at all, and get used again. So it is with surprise that I see that Cheyenne's city council apparently wants to save the world by banning plastic shopping bags, and maybe charging us despoilers of the earth 7 to 10 cents per bag for the environmental infraction of putting our cans of pinto beans in a free plastic bag. (The weather here helps with that last one.) We shake our flat heads in disbelief at states where you can shoplift at will, where violent people get turned right back out on the street without posting cash bond, and where you can pitch a tent on a city sidewalk and pee in the gutter as long as you like. A simple carpenter's level could probably prove that our noggins are more level than most. The only thing pointy about most of us is the tips of our boots, not the tops of our heads. The pointy-headed intellectuals among us, in the words of Merle Haggard in “Okie from Muskogie,” “are seldom seen.” Here in Wyoming, you can avoid the Birkenstock-wearing Save the World types if you avoid liberal enclaves like Jackson Hole and Laramie. One of the best reasons to live in Wyoming is that we tend to be a level-headed bunch.
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