One pound is 2 ounces ... oops, 2 dollars, and 31 cents in my lovely, un-Trump run, country. $2.30 for half a dozen eggs is quite cheap, free range eggs, from the farm where you can actually see the chickens walking around pecking in the grass, are normally $10-12 a dozen.
Sometimes it is either the eggs for $10 or 3 litres of petrol for $10. 3 litres is about 88% of a U.S. gallon, and in my 1.4 turbo'd car that gives me 50 kilometres of travel, 30 miles in old school. In my bigger faster car 3 litres takes me 35 kilometres, no idea what that is in miles. Used to use miles here, stopped in 1976 when we aligned with every other country apart from the U.S.A. and Myanmar, I think the United Kingdom (ha, that's what you will be soon, a kingdom) still uses some bits of the imperial storm trooper measurement system.
Anyhow, 4 omelettes or go vists my friend who lives 25 kilometres away ... hard call, I do do a darn good omelette.
One pound is 2 ounces ... oops, 2 dollars, and 31 cents in my lovely, un-Trump run, country.
ReplyDelete$2.30 for half a dozen eggs is quite cheap, free range eggs, from the farm where you can actually see the chickens walking around pecking in the grass, are normally $10-12 a dozen.
Sometimes it is either the eggs for $10 or 3 litres of petrol for $10.
3 litres is about 88% of a U.S. gallon, and in my 1.4 turbo'd car that gives me 50 kilometres of travel, 30 miles in old school.
In my bigger faster car 3 litres takes me 35 kilometres, no idea what that is in miles.
Used to use miles here, stopped in 1976 when we aligned with every other country apart from the U.S.A. and Myanmar, I think the United Kingdom (ha, that's what you will be soon, a kingdom) still uses some bits of the imperial storm trooper measurement system.
Anyhow, 4 omelettes or go vists my friend who lives 25 kilometres away ... hard call, I do do a darn good omelette.
Lol, said do do.