Last trip to the grocery store I couldn’t find any non-US salad kits, and Silk NextMilk is made down there now, because I guess our plants were the listeria ones. Chip dip was surprisingly hard to find too, although I did it.

I’m very pleased with how many vegetables actually come from Mexico (definitely via the US though), and there’s even a few things you can get from greenhouses, so that situation is less dire than I’d expected.

  • LittleTarsier@lemmy.ca
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    30 minutes ago

    Very disappointed to hear Silk NextMilk is made in America. Other plant based milks just aren’t the same. Have you found a good alternative?

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    Most of my groceries accidentally end up being nearly all Canadian products.

    I haven’t really needed to buy anything other than groceries this past week, but I have been looking for alternatives to other products I’ll eventually need, and I will make buying Canadian first a priority, followed by Not American™ as a close second. 😂

  • BenVimes@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    It’s generally going well. I already did this boycott once before during Trump 1.0, so I know what do look for.

    It’s a bit harder this time around because there are things we need where a Canadian (or at least non-American) alternative doesn’t exist. The big one is diapers, as we haven’t been able to find anything non-American that also works within our budget and time constraints.

    It’s unfortunate, but also only temporary. My kids should be out of diapers in a few years, provided the world doesn’t end before then.

  • reddig33@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    Considering how much stuff isn’t made in the US anymore, this should be easy. For a real challenge, try avoiding items made in China.

    • ikt
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      9 hours ago

      sorry to butt in but that’s a hobby of mine 😀

      for example going full renewables: solar panels made in south korea (qcells), battery german (sonnen), ev south korea (hyundai ioniq), heat pump australia/japan (reclaim energy)

      I’m now looking at computer parts made exclusively in taiwan (looks like gigabyte mainly) because europe appears to have 0 competitive chip makers

      it seems you can still buy bigger items that are local or non-china made but you will be punished for it, prices are anywhere from 10% to 100% higher

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        2 hours ago

        I went to buy a pair of scissors this week. I could not find a pair that wasn’t made in China.

        I went to buy a greeting card, 75% of them were made in China. It makes absolutely no sense. It’s a freaking happy birthday card. There is no way it’s cheaper to cut down the tree, mill the paper, send it to China on a boat, have it printed, then have it sent back to North America on another boat. WTF?

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          2 hours ago

          yep small items i’ve pretty much given up on, nobody seems to care that $2 worth of stickers are made in China

          It just keeps going though, weirdest one for me was those little marshmallows you put on cakes:

          Coles Bake and Create Pink and White Mallows, 100g. Great for creating a delicious rocky road or topping hot drinks.

          Made in China

          https://www.coles.com.au/product/coles-mallows-pink-and-white-100g-2441652

          Really???

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    8 hours ago

    I had to buy moisturizer. I saw two on the shelf. Flipped the labels, one was made in USA, the other made Canada. I picked the latter. That was it.

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    11 hours ago

    I’m currently switching all my computing/cloud stuff over to Canadian and/or EU providers. I’m going to move my domains to Easy DNS and try out a VPS from LunaNode.

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    11 hours ago

    Anyone have suggestions for Canadian cat food that isn’t overpriced? I’ve got like 15 cats so I go through a lot in a month.

    • noseatbelt@lemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      Acana is Canadian, though they are not super cheap but certainly not the most expensive either. My dogs like it, and one of them is a picky eater.

      • Jay@lemmy.ca
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        11 hours ago

        Huh TIL. I’ve mainly been feeding them that and the co-op stuff (Which they don’t care for so I usually blend them together.)

        • Spacehooks@reddthat.com
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          28 minutes ago

          It’s not really cost effective versus buying separate but way cheaper than going to a salad place and it saves stocking space for different toppings and dressings. We started eating more salads because we dont have to eat the same kind daily.

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    11 hours ago

    Most of my groceries are either already made in Canada or imported from Mexico. I didn’t have to change much.

    It’s not a cheap way to shop, I will admit, but it can be done. Canada makes a lot of food, especially here in BC where I live. Beef, pork, sausages, honey, dairy, milk-alternatives, breads, and so much more.

    For non-grocery items there are numerous retailers that are Canadian. London Drugs is a great one here in western Canada. Online shopping is a bit harder because Amazon is so hard to replicate, but honestly at that point I just buy from Aliexpress. If I’m going to order cheap crap online I’ll just get it from the source instead of sending money to the US.

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    10 hours ago

    I thought looking at the list online would be annoying until I realized you can just look at the food labels. So it’s easy. Had to buy cabbage instead of lettuce last time I was at the store. That’s about it.

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    10 hours ago

    Yeah it’s going well. I already knew in November that Trump was going to fuck up the economy one way or another, so I bought a handful of bigger ticket stuff from the states at that time for Black Friday.

    The main food staple I’ve had to change so far is baby carrots, I usually get the California organic ones in bulk at Costco. I just have to make a separate trip to my smaller local grocer for substitutes.