Haunted House of Horrors and Haunted Catacombs and Shady Acre's blah blah blah.
If you may go there, you may not want to read this, as I will be giving away some of the details...
Okay this was a pretty intense haunted house. I'm not one who gets scared very easily - and there were a few times that I jumped. I mostly enjoy other people getting scared. There were a few things that were odd here. There were so many really dark and really confusing mazes.
sometimes there was strobe lights that fucked you up. Sometimes its was black as the blackest night. Sometimes they put strobe lights up, and made all the walls different shades of black, so you think - oh this way looks lighter! but no you are just walking directly into a wall.
There are mirrors that fuck with you too. At one point we couldn't get out of the strobe light filled, different colored wall maze and we couldn't find help and we felt like we were going crazy! When a worker finally emerged,
(e:lauren) must have looked like a lunatic running up and asking for help.
Then there was crawling through a wet maze of hanging vines so thick you couldn't see where you were going.
Or, the most disturbing part of the whole thing - was when you came across the outhouse and you looked inside and it was full of poo and you felt revolted, but then they squirt water at you from out of the middle of the poo and then you throw up in your mouth a little.
Very elaborate set, very cool. Definetely worth the $20 a ticket.
Peace my friends.
I haven't seen it in a while, but Republic of Tea makes a good chai that comes in teabags, or just loose. Yummy.
Maybe I should maintain a journal about the prices as well... Good idea, (e:pmrk)
yEAH!! Double votes for Super Bazaar, their produce is fresh and cheaper than the rest - comparable to Guercios. :)
I forgot to add that I grew up on the west side and have shopped for a long time at Guercio's. If the old Italian Grandmas shop there its a good sign. :-)
The Ni Hoowa Supermarket on Sheridan has a good and reasonably priced selection of Asian foods.
The Super Bazaar on Sheridan specializes in Indian food and I have found their prices on spices to be very competitive.
The Farmers market at Bidwell and Elmwood often has reasonably priced seasonal produce. We shop there weekly. It helps to know your prices. All summer red bell peppers were 75 cents each at the Farmers as compared to $3.99 a lb at Wegmans. I'm sure somewhere I have a note to myself about how much my farmers market peppers weighed vs. Wegmans peppers so I could get a more accurate cost comparison, I just don't know where that note is.
The lady with the eggs charges $3.50 per dozen which is expensive if you compare them to Wegmans but if you want to know where your eggs come from and like farm fresh eggs and I do care about these things the cost is worth it for me but we don't eat many eggs and I don't bake much.
I recently stopped by the Hertel Farmers Market. They also have a small deli in back but I didn't check it out. I found they had butternut squash for 49 cents per ld. vs. Wegmans 99 per pound. Limited selection but ok prices.
Aldi has cheap bagged and shredded cheese that tastes fine to me.
Target on NFB has a big dairy section that is often cheaper than anywhere else.
Lexington Food Co-Op for bulk grains.
As you can tell, I do most of the grocery shopping for my household and I often keep a notebook of prices.
The way I shop is by what place has stuff I like on sale, sometimes it is tops,Wegmans, Rite Aid, or even Walgreens. I haven't been to Aldi to shop ever. On a side note I have no idea if it will open in a month or in two years but I read that the quality Markets on Elmwood that closed is going to be another supermarket it is some cheap place I have never heard of.
Survey:
1. Another vote for Guercios (Grant and Lafayette)
2. Many. Produce is cheap and fresh at Guercios. Dairy is reasonable at Wegmans. Cheese is reasonable in Guercios. Non-edible groceries are cheap at Big Lots.
3. Some times, the farmer's market at Roswell. Because it's where I work. It too expensive and small though. :/ Clinton and Bailey is a good one too buts its two bus rides away from me so its not that practical to go there. The Rochester Public market is the cheapest and the most awesomest an the biggest farmer's market I have seen and experienced. Only, its in Rochester. :(
4. Sure there is. You just toss all the unground spices in one bag and sell it. It's just like unground garam masala. It doesn't work when its consumers are as lazy as I am.
5. I like most types of Chai (hindi for "Tea"). It's the most awesome drink in the world. I don't like beer. But I don't have a specific opinion as to what might happen when you pour your tea into beer.
Halloween:
Dammit, I need to get some wool yarn for mine and some pieces of fabric and get cracking. :(
Guercio's at 250 Grant is the bestest. Their produce is generally very good and very cheap. They always have a dozen different kinds of hot peppers, a great mescaline salad mix, lots of great fruit and other vegies. They deliver produce to most of the restaurants in Buffalo, and for good reason. Also, it is DIRT cheap. Seriously dirt cheap. I bough heirloom tomatoes there this summer for 99 cents a pound. RIDICULOUS!
Their deli counter is also very good, and again, dirt cheap. They have a dozen different salads in the case all of which have been very good. And olives.... can we talk about olives for a second? Every olive you have eaten so far has been merely the shadow of an olive. The olives they have here are so good you will do a little dance while eating them. Just thinking about them I have my toes tapping.
They have full dairy case too, again cheap. Several coffee bean varieties. A freezer filled with Gondola brand ravioli and shells. A pasta section with more variety than you know what to do with.
Felly, I could not make a more impassioned plea for you to do most of your shopping at Guercio's.
And I would be willing to try Chai beer. I know you can buy the whole herbs at, where else, Guercio's but I am not sure if you want that quantity.
Cheers.