We should be weighing the urban foxesdemi wrote:It's also possible that the animals living in close proximity to humans are gaining weight due to scavenging off the copious amounts human waste, raiding bins, being fed and steeling food ect .

We should be weighing the urban foxesdemi wrote:It's also possible that the animals living in close proximity to humans are gaining weight due to scavenging off the copious amounts human waste, raiding bins, being fed and steeling food ect .
http://boboffs.blogspot.co.uk/Millymollymandy wrote:Bloody smilies, always being used. I hate them and they should be banned.
No I won't use a smiley because I've decided to turn into Boboff, as he's turned all nice all of a sudden. Grumble grumble.
Hells bells Bartie, £18 a Kilo!!!!! And 60p for spuds, how the devil do people afford to live in the UK now?boboff wrote:Those are all true jerry.
However it does take a bit of care, take frozen chips as a case in point. 89p for 2 kilos in Morrisons, 3% fat, no other added ingredients, it's a "healthy" starch for 44p a kilo. White rice is 40p for a kilo, again low fat.
Minced Welsh Lean beef in Waitrose £18 a kilo, 17% fat.
With "Fresh" potatoes going up starkly in price (60p a kilo versus 28p a year ago) you do have to budget with some sence.
diggernotdreamer wrote:my weekly shop (excluding milk and bread as i buy these as and when) was £30 a week for two. some weeks i can just about scrape by with £30 but to give the boy fresh fruit and veg daily i sometimes need nearly double that now. thankfully ive persuaded him a fresh carrot is just like eating an apple!
Berry, I am quite distressed reading your post, my daughter gets vouchers for her kids which she redeems for fruit and veg onl and I think she gets milk tokens too, are you not eligible for this kind of thing? it seems really awful that in this day and age, people are struggling so hard to afford to eat properly. Seems to be the people who need the most help never get it, after reading about these people who come to the UK and milk to benefits system by inventing a 100 children and buying property with the proceeds and all the prescription medicines they are getting and flogging as well.
I wish you well with your business xx Lyn
That depends where you draw the line, I'd put the line somewhere around £30-35k/year household income for a two person or family household. This is above the defined poverty line and I suspect it's probably above where most people might put a low-paid line. But I would also include those that would be low paid if they weren't working hours that make family life difficult. So a family with a children <12 years of age where both parents must work a combined >1.8x f-t hours in order to balance the family budget. That to me counts as low paid for the purpose of discussing diet and convenience foods - because the hours that must be worked to live are going to cut into the hours for food preperation and family time. And where something has to give, it's easier and cheaper to buy-in the food preperation time.oldjerry wrote:I'd agree with all that(though I think it's a bit condescending,well wrong actually,to suggest that this is mainly a problem for the low paid.)
If you look at the demographics, obesity is more pronounced amongst low income groups. A lot of high "added value" foods (i.e., stuffed with cheap fats, sugar and salt) are also relatively inexpensive. It's not simply the price of food either - the cost of transport and cooking are often significant enough to make a difference. As Berry pointed out, £3.50 bus fare means that she doesn't go to buy fruit as often as she'd like to and it's the same for lots of other people. Why on earth the voucher scheme isn't continued past five years of age... But then, where's the money in that? I noticed that there is now a plan to vaccinate children against "winter vomiting virus" at a cost of £25 million per year. This will, apparently, save the UK NHS £20 million per year. The company making the vaccine must be paying their lobbying firm quite wellGeorgeSalt wrote: Obesity is not mainly a problem for the low paid, but for they are the ones for whom it may not be elective and where society has a greater responsibility to help.