However, the company has recently announced a sausage shortage due to a production issue. This has caused many fans of the brand to be disappointed, as they will not be able to enjoy their favorite sausage for a while. The company is working to resolve the issue and hopes to have the sausage back in stock soon.
To address somebody directly, type the "@" and their name. After 3 or so letters, the system will give you a list of matches to choose from. For example, here's what you get when you use the @ and type in Joh: The more letters you type, the fewer names it will show that exactly match. Then you just click on the one you want. The only thing the @Name does is send someone an email telling them that they have been "tagged" in a message.
You can use this Owens website to search by zip code. It says No Results Found within 50 miles of Dodge City.
you have got to be kidding ? I am cleaning and bagging up last of carrots from garden,, so am on and off for a bit
I am "food suggestible." I've received recipes in emails, and because it looked so daggone good, I'm off to the store and making it for dinner that night. I lack gastronomic impulse control. Regarding your carrots: how do you store them? A friend grew up in rural Virginia and he said they piled their root veggies in a corner of the garden and covered then with leaves. When they wanted potatoes, carrots, etc throughout the winter, they would just reach into the leaves and grabbed some.
Um , did not think of that.. but the rabbits and coyotes and dogs here might get to them that way. First time we have ever grown a real garden I wash them, clean off tops, scrape off the hairs and freeze them.
We store our carrots in a "humidified" refrigerator. We have tried storing them in the ground and cellaring them, but neither worked for them. I have seen that some store carrots in the ground and overlay with straw bales. Daughter in Seattle stores hers in the ground, but then here winter climate is a bit different than ours. You should be able to store them in the ground in Virginia, but as @Hedi Mitchell said, the rodents, pests and other things might get them on the surface. I have lost an entire garlic crop to voles even underground.
Lost all my beets last year from some underground critter. I haven't heard about daughter's parsnips this year. She usually brags on them. She didn't even put any carrots in this year.
Do you have gophers @Mary Stetler ? Other than gophers, voles are the most likely issue. We had a barn/farm cat for many years and she kept the voles under control, but the winter after she died, the voles went crazy and caused all kinds of damage. I had to use vole poison stations to control them and it seems to be working. A feral cat from our past has shown up, so she may get the better of the voles and the rabbits/hares.