ext_330348 (
m00n.livejournal.com) wrote in
davis_square2009-01-31 08:47 pm
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Medford Whole Foods bird house?
Has anyone else noticed that the new(ish) Whole Foods on the Mystic Valley Parkway in Medford has a tiny, wooden bird house attached to the rafters over the bulk display?
What's with that?
I probably would never have noticed except that I went in there today and there was a little sparrow flying around while I was buying my groceries.
What's with that?
I probably would never have noticed except that I went in there today and there was a little sparrow flying around while I was buying my groceries.
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while i have seen birds get into stores, food courts, etc, i would not encourage them to live around food like that. seems pretty unsanitary.
gross.
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Humane traps.
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But it doesn't seem to want to cooperate.
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That said, if you are buying liquor, prepared, frozen, or any other kind of packaged food like snacks like crackers, nuts, or chips, canned food, etc., they are usually considerably cheaper.
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I'm still running on the college kid budget, so price is generally my first and only main consideration.
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I just tend to think of "overpriced" as meaning that you're being ripped off and/or wasting your money by going there, and as a regular Whole Foods customer, that tends to make me a little defensive. :-)
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most regular grocery stuff you can get at shaw's for cheaper than either place, so i like whole foods for produce i can't get there or the bulk bins, which actually are pretty reasonably priced. whole foods really gets you with their prepared stuff, but everything else seems pretty average. their 365 brand is also decently priced, but again you could just go to shaw's.
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Also, there's a food co-op in Central Square with bulk bins.
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anyway, i really loathe stop and shop. they are frequently out of whatever is on sale, and their produce is the worst i've seen of any of the chains. i like shaw's because they often have the brands and things i buy on sale, and i always save a lot with my shaws card. if it wasn't for that, i probably would go elsewhere, but i do pretty well there.
[should also clarify i live in brighton, and spend a lot of time in cambridge, so shaws is also most convenient.]
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Yep. And besides, their prepared food is usually *real food* so it is worth the money if you can afford it.
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You mean Harvest Co-op (http://www.harvestcoop.com)? I like their store in JP a lot more, and in that neighborhood they are the main organic grocer. The problem with Harvest is that, at least compared to Whole Foods, their stores are dirty and their produce isn't as good (i.e. rotten) and costs more. Their bulk section is nice, and quite extensive, but the store is just so much less pleasant to be in than a Whole Foods, and when I'm buying my food I don't want to be thinking about antiseptic.
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That said, I have to ask: why is it that Whole Foods, the national chain store, carries so many more local brands than any of our locally owned supermarkets combined? It really drives me nuts how almost all of the shelf space at Market Basket/Shaws/Stop & Shop/Foodmaster are completely occupied by products from ADM, ConAgra, or Tyson with few exceptions anywhere in the store. I feel like most of these stores do not sell a single thing that isn't available at supermarkets everywhere in the country.
Also, food + fluorescent lighting + antiseptic smell = yuck.
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We haven't had a Whole Foods vs. TJ's fight in a while...
Whole Foods is not a regular grocery store, though. So the question really is: overpriced compared to what?
Whole Foods provides all natural/organic foods. And those foods often cost significantly more than their regular counterparts.
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(I don't know this as a fact, feel free to point out that I am wrong, but it certainly *seems* to be true, even within WF)
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To Whole Foods credit, I've never seen bird droppings or the like. I'm sure they're there somewhere, but they keep the store in good shape (generally).
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How depressing. Kind of makes you wonder why they bother carrying anything that's not store brand at all.
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Which may have had something to do with the game (there were three bottles of caffeine-free Diet Coke mid-afternoon - the only Coke products left in the entire store), but I didn't see a label on the shelf for RealLemon. Major suck.