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How we SPEND $1200 per month on Groceries | TWO people

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Cecilia Blomdahl

Cecilia Blomdahl

2 жыл бұрын

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How do we spend $1200 per month on groceries, in a household with 2 people?! Well... we live on Svalbard an island close to the North Pole 🙈 Come shopping with me in our only grocery store in Longyearbyen, where I show you some prices and what we have available to us this far north! I hope you enjoy the video! 🧡
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About Cecilia:
Cecilia Blomdahl is originally from Sweden and moved to Svalbard 6.5 years ago. She works as a photographer and videographer in Longyearbyen, and with her social media channels. Check her out on tiktok and instagram under her handle @sejsejlija! Here on youtube she posts videos about her daily life in her cabin with her boyfriend Christoffer and her dog Grim, living just outside of Longyearbyen. Subscribe for videos about her daily life as well as adventures on an island close to the North Pole. They have polar bears there!

Пікірлер: 2 000
@MailyNguyengetconnected
@MailyNguyengetconnected 2 жыл бұрын
Being born in a country where foods in general are dirt cheap like Vietnam and ended up living now in Finland, my eyes tear up every time I have to spend ~€4 for a tiny mango. Summer fruits like watermelon, dragonfruits, pineapple, etc used to be so available for me have now became luxury items. When you live in a climate that so dang difficult to grow anything, you just become so grateful for anything you can get your hands on, I guess.
@MailyNguyengetconnected
@MailyNguyengetconnected 2 жыл бұрын
@@nifnavje according to my own account, gas price isn't lower here than the rest of Europe. Baltics sea isn't clean so fishes are imported, many other European countries also provide free school meals. Finland is in fact the 5th most expensive country in Europe. Even though I am paying properly more for everything, I am happy being here for other reasons
@RosesAndIvy
@RosesAndIvy 2 жыл бұрын
What about European fruits like berries, apples, pears etc.? Aren't they cheaper?
@MailyNguyengetconnected
@MailyNguyengetconnected 2 жыл бұрын
@@RosesAndIvy Not in Finland, nope. Most of those comes from Spain and Netherlands. Finnish origined ones are even more expensive. In the end, if you wants things affordable, try to avoid Northern European countries. However, if you want overall quality of life, like affordable healthcare, education, good social security and never have to deal with corruption, etc then they are the destination 😉
@Jazzatic2011
@Jazzatic2011 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve never thought of Finland as being a hard climate to grow anything? Can you elaborate? Canadian here so I have no idea what Europe is like period but if it’s just a condense living thing, I do believe there are ways around that.
@MailyNguyengetconnected
@MailyNguyengetconnected 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jazzatic2011 I'm not a farmer so I cannot give you the details but pretty much everything grown locally is at least 50% more expensive than imported goods. Parts of it could be labour costs and taxes but it could also be difficulties due to extreme weather. I personally have a tiny kitchen garden. I do grow anything I want but the success rates with anything else rather than common short-term crops is low, that is for me being at the very southern part of the land. Could be me just being bad at growing stuffs but I can only speak for myself :)
@dr.apollo4226
@dr.apollo4226 2 жыл бұрын
Even ignoring the fact that this grocery store has no competition, it is surprisingly well stocked and organized. That’s fascinating to me!
@kp782
@kp782 Жыл бұрын
Thats Norway :D Norway is so rich they make even store like this good lol
@LalaCats3
@LalaCats3 2 жыл бұрын
The prices on many items you chose are not much higher than prices in the USA right now during this period of high inflation, and the price of your apples was actually less than I paid for 3 apples the other day in my town. It was fun to see your market. And I am envious of all the fresh fish you two caught. Fish where I live is expensive because I am not near any large bodies of water. Thank you for sharing with us.
@ro.3645
@ro.3645 Жыл бұрын
Yes! The exact oat milk they bought - on sale I’ve never seen it below $3.99. When it is at the sale price I buy 6 boxes because regular price is $5.49 avg.
@cassandrap.3183
@cassandrap.3183 Жыл бұрын
I was thinking the same thing
@Katarina23
@Katarina23 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. I live in Australia and although we are surrounded by the ocean, fish is outrageously expensive. I don't understand why.
@laleepets
@laleepets Жыл бұрын
Most of the things you pointed out were surprising cheap compared to what they would cost in Canada!
@primeaardvark646
@primeaardvark646 Жыл бұрын
20 USD for a watermelon in season is nuts. Out of season maybe 9 USD. Perhaps for a larger one too. In season stateside a larger melon than that, at a not cheap place is 5 USD.
@Anna-oi7yg
@Anna-oi7yg Жыл бұрын
im a cashier in a Canadian grocery store and food is so expensive here that these prices don't seem to far off of ours, i always get customers complaining about the prices as if i made them lol
@nunyadambusiness3530
@nunyadambusiness3530 Жыл бұрын
Here in the US, some places is pushing $15/gallon for milk! yet our wages are still at $7.25. (in comparison, a gallon of milk in 2019 was just $3) An honest hour of work used to get you two gallons of gas, or milk, or like 5 loafs of bread. Now? its extremely saddening. One hour of labor doesn't earn us a gallon of milk, barely a gallon of gas, and now i've had to buy $2 pre-made sandwiches because breads and delimeats are $10+
@hol8642
@hol8642 Жыл бұрын
I was literally just thinking this! Some things are literally cheaper than they are in no frills
@rachelcribby5130
@rachelcribby5130 Жыл бұрын
Lol I'm watching this and being like, wait a minute....this isn't very different from Canada
@777Bviews
@777Bviews Жыл бұрын
Anna we all know that you control the global trade of produce and you set the prices so high for us so you can live a life of luxury.. 😂🙄
@heathermichelleheather9348
@heathermichelleheather9348 Жыл бұрын
I agree. And we Canadians have diary, fresh produce,meats, farms,fishing,,, we are an agriculture country. not north pole freight and shipping where no farms in yet our prices are high
@kevinhenry7273
@kevinhenry7273 2 жыл бұрын
The selection of items was amazing for a village of approx 2500. Having to keep a 3 months inventory must add to the costs. I'm amazed at how much is available and the modern housing.
@solrackyer8113
@solrackyer8113 Жыл бұрын
I dont think so... they not use machines to keep cool the food... maybe! :v
@iriaxitorres9876
@iriaxitorres9876 Жыл бұрын
I think you are right. They must pay (buy or rent) the storage space, and have an extra cost on labor as it requires more manpower to manage a 3 months inventory (do not underestimate the cost of logistics).
@kevinfuca
@kevinfuca 2 жыл бұрын
I love Christopher’s face when you asked him questions in the supermarket. He’s like: “let’s just grab things and go…” 😆
@RainbowSky3693
@RainbowSky3693 2 жыл бұрын
My mood in the supermarket also 😅
@ponyo_4ever
@ponyo_4ever 2 жыл бұрын
Exactly how my partner acts when I’m being flippant in the store😂
@GracefullyPlanned
@GracefullyPlanned 2 жыл бұрын
My husband only visits a grocery store 2-3 times a year. He despises shopping!
@mom-ys9sb
@mom-ys9sb 8 ай бұрын
I know - he's a trip isn't he ??!!
@mom-ys9sb
@mom-ys9sb 8 ай бұрын
I know - he's a trip isn't he ??!!
@Doreen_FaithL
@Doreen_FaithL Жыл бұрын
Very impressed with the amount and variety in your food store. I live in Pennsylvania, USA and our prices aren’t too far off from Svalbard! An exception being the watermelon…
@fernandoben5605
@fernandoben5605 2 жыл бұрын
Hi Cecilia, the whole world is taken the hit with this inflation. Here in the USA, even shopping at Walmart is expensive now ! For an island like Svalvard, it's not bad.
@lorifernandes4082
@lorifernandes4082 Жыл бұрын
I agree. The prices don't seem to be that bad.
@melodioushaste
@melodioushaste 2 жыл бұрын
When your avocado is just ripe, maybe less than a day from perfect, put them in the fridge and they will keep like that for a couple of weeks. I just pull one out the night before and it ripens right up for breakfast.
@lauraelisee
@lauraelisee 2 жыл бұрын
I do this and avocados last so much longer!! Place in the fridge a little before perfect to pines and it’ll last so much longer! Xx
@adam6134
@adam6134 2 жыл бұрын
Even for milk, you can safely store frozen milk in your freezer for up to 6 months, but it's best if you can use it within 1 month of freezing
@zenabraithwaite1934
@zenabraithwaite1934 2 жыл бұрын
We put our avocado in the fridge and take them out a day before and pop them with the bananas to finish ripening them.
@pansprayers
@pansprayers 2 жыл бұрын
Better to place them in water if you're putting them in the refrigerator, to avoid too rapid of a breakdown of the pectinase within the fruit that can occur if your refrigerator is too cold.
@lauraelisee
@lauraelisee 2 жыл бұрын
@@pansprayers it’s actually not good to put them in water! They could grow harmful bacteria. I used to think this was fine but recently found out it’s not so good.
@tracymitchell400
@tracymitchell400 2 жыл бұрын
For the price, I’d freeze some avocados. Mash them with lemon or lime juice and store in a quart size freezer bag. Squeeze out the extra air and seal it up. Should be good for several months. Makes great avocado toast, guacamole and is pretty good with sushi.
@waterfallsandrain
@waterfallsandrain 2 жыл бұрын
You can submerge uncut avocados in water and keep them in the fridge. They last a long time that way!
@JenRob1109
@JenRob1109 2 жыл бұрын
@@waterfallsandrain You can do that if you would like salmonella. FDA came out with a recommendation to not do that because there has been several case reports about people getting salmonella that way. I will pass on that! **edit it was the FDA not the CDC**
@fanzbeans
@fanzbeans 2 жыл бұрын
Or just put them in the fridge when they're ripe
@sonyaberry9805
@sonyaberry9805 2 жыл бұрын
I put mine in smoothies
@claudettemalespina60
@claudettemalespina60 2 жыл бұрын
The prices of food here in Ontario, Canada is accually more expensive. Suddenly the price of everything has gone crazy. A pound of butter is $7.99. Eggs × 12 $4.99 etc I can't believe how much the prices have gone up .Love from Ontario. Canada 🇨🇦 🍁 💖💫
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
well then leave that leftist area and move elsewhere. and stop eating butter. I quit butter and now use diet mayo instead; one third the calories, taste way better and cost way less. eggs, buy the liquid carton instead, i get wayyy more than using whole intact eggs.
@joywebster2678
@joywebster2678 Жыл бұрын
Every shop the prices climb another 2 bucks. Coffee is getting ridiculous.
@leduomo
@leduomo Жыл бұрын
I know I was watching this and thinking to myself that the prices were cheap compared to Alberta LOL.
@LILY-os1vo
@LILY-os1vo Жыл бұрын
Wow that was a huge difference. I now live in Slovenia and we have a pound of butter for 3.99 and I already thought it was expensive ... Anyways, thanks for the insight :D
@Chances29
@Chances29 Жыл бұрын
Wow and I thought $3.99 for a pound of butter in the US was a lot. Our eggs (organic) are around the same price.
@danniijane778
@danniijane778 2 жыл бұрын
In the UK people often complain about prices but I've noticed food is cheaper than many places. I do think watermelons are pricey at £3 but after you paid 17euros I can't complain! Oatly is £1.30 so similar in Euros x
@smustipher
@smustipher Жыл бұрын
Just visited the EK (Edinburgh and London) from US and the food is WAY less expensive, even eating out. Cocktails were only 12£! Where I live, they are at least $14 6 US, and the "nice" places, $20, $26.
@FishPractise09
@FishPractise09 Жыл бұрын
It would be interesting though to see what average wages, pensions , housing and fuel bills are too though.
@SymphonySolstice
@SymphonySolstice 2 жыл бұрын
Is it bad that I live in a city in west/central Canada and am marveling at how reasonably priced most of these items are? 😂Such is life when you live in a place where everything fresh has to be imported! (At least, for most of the year in Canada.) The strawberries in particular is what struck me - they're cheaper right now because they're in season for the summer and can be grown locally, but I've definitely paid over $12CAD for that size in the winter. The oat milk, juice, and meat don't strike me as "expensive" right now either!
@winniechen4311
@winniechen4311 2 жыл бұрын
Yup, totally agreed. My parents went to Costco and saw the pair of olive oils were only $1 more than usual. So my mom thinks it's already a good price since the mark up for that is only 50cents each bottle. She bought 3 pairs (total of 6 bottles). Also got a box of 18 mangos for $10 which is a good price also. Overall, prices at Costco was still decent with a few sales. I would definitely buy a bunch of fruits now and freeze them. Summer is great for gardening, my garden has lots of kale grown, and possibly tomatoes so we can save money on some veggies. With inflation so high we pick and choose what we can and should buy/eat. I'm sure most families are also doing that.
@natalyaakselaleksander4502
@natalyaakselaleksander4502 Жыл бұрын
It’s not bad! I live in Los Angeles and spend almost that much on strawberries even though almost everything grows here in California😣 I buy mostly all organic so I guess…
@SarahWelstead
@SarahWelstead Жыл бұрын
Here in Toronto, 1lb of butter is $6-$8 - in fact most of the prices aren’t much less than Svalbard.
@anjihc8797
@anjihc8797 2 жыл бұрын
Food has been high for awhile here in Canada and it's going up again. I now know people who can pay their bills and not afford food. I'm in the middle of setting up an emergency shelter but I anticipate a huge increase in those who will be accessing our food programs. I know your videos are usually light and positive but this highlights a sobering issue where I live. Thank you for sharing your life.
@catchyname5403
@catchyname5403 2 жыл бұрын
Many well wishes on your endeavors. May you have much to give and may there be few in need. It’s looking bleak in the States as well. So many barely making it, becoming homeless or moving into their vehicles. It’s not only the gas prices but the price of rent and utilities rising at an alarming rate at which ppl are not capable of sustaining. Renting a room in my area starts at $1,000 and that’s not including utilities and often no access to the rest of the home.
@anitatroyer2066
@anitatroyer2066 2 жыл бұрын
I'm also Canadian and also work in emergency shelter and with homelessness. With rising cost of food, affordable housing, gas etc.... the needs just keeps increasing. All the best in your program work.
@kb9847
@kb9847 2 жыл бұрын
Canadian here too. I live in Manitoba and a lot of the prices she showed in the video are comparable to our prices here. I used to live in Nunavut and 20 yrs ago a 4L Jug of milk was $16!! We bought a Watermellon once!! it was $60.
@amyswimglasgow
@amyswimglasgow 2 жыл бұрын
You are a great person, that is so amazing!
@magicalgina2010
@magicalgina2010 2 жыл бұрын
Can confirm that living on the Canadian East Coast is quite similar to what she is paying for groceries :/ I even live in a province (Nova Scotia) that grows its own apples and they still cost an arm and a leg most of the year. The recent inflation in general hasn't helped anything either. My husband and I have decent jobs but still need to be careful not to go too crazy. The number of people asking for money on the streets and at traffic lights have gone up too. I try to pass along a toonie if I have one, but don't usually carry cash. Things are getting tough for sure.
@LeilaLamb
@LeilaLamb 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Scotland, fairly near Glasgow with my husband and son. Our weekly shop is around £50, shopping at Aldi and being vegetarian definitely helps. The thought of not having a choice of where to shop is mind-boggling to me!
@playmeagain
@playmeagain 2 жыл бұрын
we are in London family of four and spend at least x4 that much per week and are vegan and gluten free.....what do you buy ..? plus eating out is expensive
@LythaWausW
@LythaWausW Жыл бұрын
I shop at Aldi twice a week and I feel that they are trying to make all Germans vegetarian. Just in the last year, I stand at the meat area and there is nothing I can afford.
@annoyedgamer8847
@annoyedgamer8847 Жыл бұрын
@@playmeagain I live in Glasgow with 3 children and I spend the same as you 😭 my children like eating 😂
@pyewacket60
@pyewacket60 2 жыл бұрын
Top tip: The larger and deeper in color the yellow spot is (where the melon lay in the field), the sweeter the fruit.
@mrdaym
@mrdaym 2 жыл бұрын
It's like you said, you can go super budget with the food. Only buy frozen veggies, buy plenty flour and make your own bread/pasta, then of course lean heavily on fish you catch yourself during summer and then freeze all year round. But I too need my apples and citrus fruits, damned be the cost.
@bobthompson2013
@bobthompson2013 2 жыл бұрын
I did a quick crosscheck on prices here in the midwest US--not that much different. In fact, flour and apples were more expensive here!
@chayarubin7991
@chayarubin7991 2 жыл бұрын
i was about to say its less or cheaper for them than my diet...
@Carolina-nn6ye
@Carolina-nn6ye 2 жыл бұрын
I'm in new England. Not unusual to see avocados for 5.00$ EACH 🤣 that's why I don't buy them, also, we Americans are the only ones that seem to sell milk by the gallon, ( that I have seen so far, compared to Europe) which btw is practically same prices as gallon of gas.
@klio1212
@klio1212 2 жыл бұрын
I live in PA and strawberries are $7 a quart.
@papabear562
@papabear562 2 жыл бұрын
You beat me to it, but yes, the prices that Cecilia pays and what I pay in central Indiana are not much different these days! The prices used to be much less before Bidenflation set in (opps, did I just say that?? 😆) but honestly, I think I could shop there in Longyearbyen for about the same that I pay here. How cool is that!
@maddieb.4282
@maddieb.4282 2 жыл бұрын
@@papabear562 super curious because nobody has been able to explain it to me (maybe I’m just dumb) how Biden has caused inflation to happen! My conservative friends are always joking about it and I see memes and comments like this but I just don’t get it. Which of his specific policies and actions directly caused inflation and was it him alone?
@donna-n5h
@donna-n5h 2 жыл бұрын
Prices are increasing here in the U.S. too. I think the entire world is feeling the effects of inflation. It's good your supermarket keeps 3 months of food supplies on hand because global food shortages might be on the way. It might be a good idea for you and Christoffer to have some extra canned foods on hand. Informative vlog!
@reginalemoine5809
@reginalemoine5809 2 жыл бұрын
I’m in the New Orleans area (southern US) and until you got to the produce, the prices of things didn’t seem outrageous, but I admit I’ve never seen $16 bacon! Here, I get 4 avocados for $5.00 USD, and a watermelon of the size you bought is about $4.00. Looking at everything you bought, a comparable shopping trip probably would have cost about $60-$75 here.
@Hejirah
@Hejirah Жыл бұрын
yeah I was like that would cost like 60 euros here, in europe - slovakia
@scottsaunders5087
@scottsaunders5087 2 жыл бұрын
High cost of living I think many of us can relate to that currently! I hope summer is filled with joy for you guys
@jodylancaster8706
@jodylancaster8706 2 жыл бұрын
Your grocery store and warehouse are both so clean and organized. The Scandinavian way!❤
@heididopita7608
@heididopita7608 Жыл бұрын
Cecelia did you know if your avocado is ripe but you’re not ready to eat it you can freeze it. Then when you thaw it out it is perfect. No more wasted avocados! 😊
@laurelaigilmore
@laurelaigilmore 2 жыл бұрын
I've recently stumbled upon your videos and I'm just amazed how much effort you put into them. So many beautiful shots and I love that you add so much info about the place you're living in. Thank you for that!
@CeciliaBlomdahl
@CeciliaBlomdahl 2 жыл бұрын
🧡🧡🧡
@irenedavo3768
@irenedavo3768 2 жыл бұрын
@@CeciliaBlomdahl please watch Jim Nduruchi
@FlintIronstag23
@FlintIronstag23 2 жыл бұрын
That is wise keeping a three-month supply of food stocked up considering the community is 100% dependent on imports. If there is one thing this pandemic has taught, is that just-in-time supply chains can have breakdowns.
@debbieframpton3857
@debbieframpton3857 2 жыл бұрын
More like a year would be better
@alk3078
@alk3078 2 жыл бұрын
Every household should have at least a years worth of food stored in their house. Other than milk and eggs and fresh fruit and veggies.
@debbieframpton3857
@debbieframpton3857 2 жыл бұрын
@@alk3078 , I have at least a Year's worth a lot of canned pork tuna fish canned salmon chicken I have a lot of canned vegetables a lot of them dated 2024 flour sugar some beans and rice but not fond of that as long as my freezer holds up plus two refrigerators I'd say I have close to a years worth of canned cat food if I find a deal I keep buying more
@alk3078
@alk3078 2 жыл бұрын
@@debbieframpton3857 Way to go 👍
@sarahstoz6768
@sarahstoz6768 2 жыл бұрын
@@alk3078 where do you keep them though? I've thought I should do this but just don't have the room. I'm in the UK, we probably have smaller houses I don't know 🤷‍♂️.
@shortygreyhannah
@shortygreyhannah 2 жыл бұрын
Put the avocadoes in the fridge once ripe....you can get 3-5 more days of shelf life from them. Watermelon should be heavy, have a yellow spot on the spot where it was on the ground (more yellow more ripe), and have a deep bass sound when you knock on it.
@kcali_058
@kcali_058 10 ай бұрын
Congrats on hitting 700K! Love your videos, so serene and beautiful in any season. Take Care.
@jjbutterbeans1515
@jjbutterbeans1515 2 жыл бұрын
You can mash avocados and freeze them The texture is a little different when they thaw but they're still good when I mash them I add a little bit of lemon juice or lime juice too to keep the browning at a minimum.
@melissablair4233
@melissablair4233 2 жыл бұрын
Great idea!
@cherylb6755
@cherylb6755 2 жыл бұрын
I like this idea… thank you for sharing it, JJ Butter beans! I’ve also bought frozen avocado chunks that have lasted well in the freezer.
@pansprayers
@pansprayers 2 жыл бұрын
If you mash them with about 5 g of baking soda per two large avacados before freezing, it avoids the weird texture breakdown that occurs when pectinase is exposed to low temperatures.
@cherylb6755
@cherylb6755 2 жыл бұрын
@@pansprayers~ OK... now I want to go out and get some avocados to try these tips! Thank you!
@oftin_wong
@oftin_wong 2 жыл бұрын
Hi from Australia ...getting sunburnt here in the winter
@missychan63
@missychan63 2 жыл бұрын
You can freeze avocados once they go ripe and they are perfectly good for months. I know, I didn't believe it either until I did it lol. I volunteered at a food pantry and we were gifted two huge boxes of avocados that were so ripe you couldn't even pick them up without putting your thumb through the skin. We tried to give them away and people weren't interested so a couple of us decided we would take them home and figure something out instead of just wasting them. I scooped all of the meat out and portioned it into "guacamole sized servings" 😅 (maybe two cups?) and put them in bags that I sealed with my food sealer. I tossed them in the freezer and 6 months later we were having "fresh" guacamole with our New Year's Eve dinner. You don't want to put anything in with it - Don't make the guacamole and THEN try to freeze it or you're going to end up with a disgusting bag of mush. The tomato and onion add too much moisture to the mix - just freeze the avocado all by itself and once it's thawed you use it just like it was fresh - add your ingredients and let people wonder how they have fresh guac on their tacos in February. They don't go brown, the texture changes a tad but it's so minor that you don't even notice. Believe me... I'm not proud of the fact that I can be a little picky with my food sometimes and I have no problem with frozen avocado.
@catarinamadeira5104
@catarinamadeira5104 2 жыл бұрын
Hey Cecilia, love your videos :) Me and my boyfriend in Portugal for our groceries we spend around 300 euros per month for the two, and that includes fish, meat and all of that.
@susanclark7872
@susanclark7872 Жыл бұрын
A few weeks ago at our local farmers market I bought a watermelon for $6US dollars and almost had a stroke. It was locally grown and the absolutely best Watermelon we have ever had. So I went back the following week and bought another WM. We spent a lot on groceries cause we try to buy from local farmers. I feel fortunate we can do that.
@pansprayers
@pansprayers 2 жыл бұрын
Protip on the pork belly: that package, even for the higher calories required for extreme climates, can be used in up to three meals for two or six adult servings. Break it down into individual meal allotments (cheap digital scales are LIFE), and freeze them until use. I literally measure out everything for my husband and I, out of pure habit from getting my degree.
@natalielandry1037
@natalielandry1037 2 жыл бұрын
I live on the Canadian prairies, and some fresh produce is priced pretty closely to what you pay on Svalbard, depending on the time of year (e.g. asparagus is $7/lb in winter, but $1.50/lb in summer). Flour, lentils, hemp, flax, and mustard, are super cheap year-round because it's grown locally.
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
u can get canned asparagus much cheaper
@bellathemusicaddict
@bellathemusicaddict 2 жыл бұрын
Compared to my home country, Germany, which probably has some of the cheapest groceries in Europe, the prices are mind boggling. However, having lived in Norway, the prices don’t seem crazy compared to the mainland, especially when the transport is factored in. I learned to buy mostly frozen and canned vegetables except for root veg when I lived there on a student budget (I don’t think I ever had watermelon there) 😅
@mediagirl
@mediagirl Жыл бұрын
To be fair, 250gr of Butter cost atm in Germany around 2,50€ to 3€, so that 500gr of butter for 4,83€ was insanely cheap (given that it must be shipped up there and here we have farms in walking distance).
@Nursemtv
@Nursemtv 2 жыл бұрын
I’d love to see the type of meals you make with your staples or the fish you and Christopher caught! Thanks for sharing! 😊
@mayhamilton6652
@mayhamilton6652 2 жыл бұрын
That was really interesting. The prices here in Scotland have increased drastically this year but our imported watermelons are still only around £3.50 (€4 roughly) so your price is eye-watering!
@odilebuoncristiano9221
@odilebuoncristiano9221 2 жыл бұрын
I paid 7 bucks for a watermelon today in the US 😭
@AF-sl4rz
@AF-sl4rz 2 жыл бұрын
@@odilebuoncristiano9221 damn that is extortion 😂
@lukaszbien2904
@lukaszbien2904 2 жыл бұрын
Paid 0.60 EUR/Kg in Cyprus for watermelon (1/2 was around 5Kg) 2 weeks ago in supermarket.
@da1stamericus
@da1stamericus 2 жыл бұрын
@@lukaszbien2904 so jealous. Here in the Netherlands it is about €1,50 a kg at most markets, and more at the supermarket.
@slovakgal
@slovakgal 2 жыл бұрын
I was just about to come here to say that yeah, Scotland prices are heading in a similar direction!
@tanasarahdesign3781
@tanasarahdesign3781 2 жыл бұрын
Growing up in Barrow Alaska in the 1970s, the store had milk for $8 a gallon. We never bought any. We had to drink orange powdered milk. It was orange from the rusty water that came from the pipes. Most of our food came in on the barge in the fall and it had to last all winter. Food could come in by plane but it was too expensive. The upside was that my dad always ordered cases of Oreos and Strawberry Crush soda to last us all winter.
@WondervilleSeries
@WondervilleSeries 2 жыл бұрын
Yah! for the Oreos and Strawberry Crush :)
@schwaggybammer968
@schwaggybammer968 2 жыл бұрын
K?
@redhammer5783
@redhammer5783 2 жыл бұрын
What a guy lol thats sick
@seanthegod4585
@seanthegod4585 2 жыл бұрын
Wtf!? How are your teeth, if you still have any? Do any, or most of you, have diabetes? Just curious. 😐
@seanthegod4585
@seanthegod4585 2 жыл бұрын
@@redhammer5783 exactly. The crap the poor have to endure. 🙄
@JoannaLouise200
@JoannaLouise200 Жыл бұрын
I love watching a food shop at your supermarket! Most of your groceries cost about double the equivalent in £ Sterling here in the UK. Your more exotic fruit/veg is about 4 times the equivalent UK price.
@sondrajohnson2564
@sondrajohnson2564 Жыл бұрын
There is one thing I would do. I would set up a small growing area in the house. The green things ambience would be welcome, yes. But other things better. A miniature lemon tree. Two ever bearing cherry tomato plants. Maybe a chili pepper plant. A couple pots of lettuce and another of chives. Maybe some herbs. And an everbearing strawberry plant! You could even have a zucchini and or cucumber. All of these are easy and bring freshness. I don't know how you heat. A small clear curtain could fall down from the ceiling at night and in day while working to insulate them. Do you heat only with wood, use wind generator, summer solar? These are my thoughts. Thank you!
@frankopena6662
@frankopena6662 2 жыл бұрын
Hi. Love the video. Can you do a video one day showing where you get your water at in town and the containers and how you bring it back and fill your water tank. How often do you do it. How much does it cost you for the water. I think that would be interesting as most people have running water in their homes. Thx. Love your channel.
@KurtDepner
@KurtDepner 2 жыл бұрын
Nice video, Cecilia. FYI: for avocados, get them well before they are ripe and put them in a paper bag. They'll ripen perfectly in a few days. And once they are ripe, you can store them in your refrigerator no problem for a week or two.
@pansprayers
@pansprayers 2 жыл бұрын
You don't need the paper bag, as avacados don't ripen on the tree, they ripen over time after being harvested. All you have to do is toss them on the counter for about four days, and they'll ripen on their own. The paper bag method only speeds it up by about a day, and is best accomplished by adding a banana or apple, if you're going for the asthetic (green) look that will introduce the proper amount of carbon dioxide to the skin. But literally, all you have to do is toss them on the counter for a couple of days, and let nature do it's thing 🤷‍♂️
@searchlessrawdiet
@searchlessrawdiet 2 жыл бұрын
I live in California--eat tons of avocados--and have never had one rippen in a paper bag. It's a myth in my experience! We use our pantry and they do great.
@thecranberrytruth6437
@thecranberrytruth6437 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, fridge is the best how to keep them for weeks in perfectly ripe condition, saved so many avocado lifes :D
@stacey738
@stacey738 2 жыл бұрын
Yup, I buy 2 of the bags of 6 (my family eats a LOT of avos) and the bags sit on the counter until they go into the fridge on day 4. And while they're ripening we eat the ones from last week that are in the fridge (Avos for me are $3 for 6).
@searchlessrawdiet
@searchlessrawdiet 2 жыл бұрын
@@stacey738 Same here!
@jollyfish84
@jollyfish84 2 жыл бұрын
That was really interesting! I was actually surprised a lot of things cost not at lot more than here in Australia (I looked at the USD and added about 40% in my head for the approx AUD). I have done a lot of travel in the outback, we always try to stock up in the bigger towns at major supermarkets because they only have slightly elevated prices because of the transport costs. If you need anything in the small towns, it's a Wild West of pricing - non perishable grocery items can be 4-5 times the price, bread and milk is frozen, and don't even try to buy fresh produce, it doesn't exist.
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
leave australia.
@elenaplavsic7374
@elenaplavsic7374 2 жыл бұрын
My husband and I used to spend around $1300 while living in the Bay Area, California. Fresh vegetables and fruits were always our priority. To me it seems normal. Love your channel and the video is wonderful!
@carolynanderson6545
@carolynanderson6545 2 жыл бұрын
Food here in the US has skyrocketed recently, sending everyone into sticker shock so your video isn't as over the top as you may think! 😉 EXCEPT for that watermelon price...holy mackerel!
@claudiasutherland3544
@claudiasutherland3544 2 жыл бұрын
Watermelon in Kansas City is $7.00. Other than that everything else seems close in price.
@jennifertoth221
@jennifertoth221 2 жыл бұрын
Everything is about the same price in Cleveland, Ohio. We are a port city and everything has skyrocketed in price-practically overnight!
@tabbyc3970
@tabbyc3970 2 жыл бұрын
I agree. NYC has become sooo expensive
@incogneeto2418
@incogneeto2418 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know where you shop your milk and other groceries, but certain things here like eggs, milk, bacon etc. is way higher.
@lb3659
@lb3659 2 жыл бұрын
I was going to say some thing similar. I will say that the prices aren’t that much higher than the US right now but the sizes are smaller. The oatly is about half the size of ours for the same price and the bacon looked like a very small package
@markuserikssen
@markuserikssen 2 жыл бұрын
Fun to see how much prices are different from other countries. Some products don't seem to be that expensive, whereas others are crazy expensive.
@CB-sr8ee
@CB-sr8ee 2 жыл бұрын
Your windows look pretty bright. You might be able to grow salad greens right in the window. They’re cool weather crops so the cool air near the windows wouldn’t bother them.
@philenabetz2547
@philenabetz2547 Жыл бұрын
I adore your videos. I found your channel last November, I believe, and watched all throughout Christmas season. Life got busy for me and I wasn’t able to watch as much as before. I recently rediscovered your channel and I am really enjoying it. I truly hope I can someday visit there. Thanks for your videos.
@MargaretUK
@MargaretUK 2 жыл бұрын
Great video Cecilia. I love seeing how shops and prices are different in different countries, and your prices are pretty scary 😲 but having read some of the comments I can see that you are not alone. It's a very depressing time for all of us 😔
@jacarajc
@jacarajc 2 жыл бұрын
I live in the center of America. I spend roughly 400 (budget) to about 600 (treating myself decent) each month.
@augustek5382
@augustek5382 2 жыл бұрын
I spend about the same here in Montana! That includes 4-7 trips to local coffee shops a month and maybe 1-4 take outs. I always try to spend 100 a week on food, but it usually ends up costing more (about 120-130).
@rachelathome7516
@rachelathome7516 2 жыл бұрын
You can freeze avocados when they are ripe. Just de-stone them first. Storing them in the fridge slows down ripening.
@michadybczak4862
@michadybczak4862 Жыл бұрын
The products are twice to 4 times more expensive than in Poland, in average 3 times. Strawberries are for free in our garden every June, and we have a lot of them for 3 weeks (in total ca. 20 kg per year, so depending on a day or period from 0,5 to 2 kg a day). So when there is strawberry season, we eat strawberries a few times a day and have salads with strawberries, cocktails with strawberries, cakes with strawberries... Add to that infinite amount of wild strawberries on grass yards everywhere for over 2 months - it's impossible to gather all, we take only a fraction of them. The strawberries escape their designated area all the time, so you can find them almost everywhere. Wild strawberries are naturally growing in our area whenever there is a sunny, dry lawn or meadow and around the house, paths, basically like a weed.
@selene4621
@selene4621 2 жыл бұрын
Food prices even here in Australia have gone thru the roof and apparently some stuffs are set to go higher. So i do understand for sure. Gorgeous views you have just LOVE them
@bethanyplatt8154
@bethanyplatt8154 2 жыл бұрын
For the avocados, I learned an amazing tip. Once they are ripe, throw them in the fridge if you're not going to eat it right away. They stay good for WAY longer that way.
@happygirl65
@happygirl65 2 жыл бұрын
They really do. Also using a “Food Saver” or other brand of food sealer is great for a Avocados. I use half the avocado and seal the other half and it keeps for several days.
@charitys.3862
@charitys.3862 2 жыл бұрын
@@happygirl65 or if you don't have a food saver and just use half, cover it very snuggly with regular plastic wrap it helps keep it for a couple of days at least . 😉
@maxineb9598
@maxineb9598 2 жыл бұрын
@@happygirl65 I do that and its brilliant.
@joleend8086
@joleend8086 2 жыл бұрын
Aloha from the USA HAWAII!! I love your stories mahalo so much for letting us into your lives on your beautiful ISLAND!!! ANd it does pay to live in paradise!
@candyhr4152
@candyhr4152 Жыл бұрын
My family of 7 eats for 1200 a month and that includes toiletries. Texas 🇺🇸
@blancacordero3998
@blancacordero3998 2 жыл бұрын
Hello Cecilia, Christoffer, Grim and Fenris😍. With inflation here in the U.S., the prices in Svalbard are pretty similar to our own. Well, except for that watermelon! Wow.
@TroyGlover
@TroyGlover 2 жыл бұрын
The prices in the Canadian far north (Yukon, NWT, and Nunavut) are FAR higher than in Svalbard. You also have substantially better selection and quality.
@loissaedder2214
@loissaedder2214 2 жыл бұрын
I think that is probably true for the outback areas in Australia too. Even where I am in Hervey Bay, Queensland, about 4 hours from Brisbane, grocery prices are high atm. Vegetables are expensive as the floods we had on the east coast recently affected a lot of the vegetable farming areas very badly. Plus it's our winter now so things are not growing so quickly.
@searchlessrawdiet
@searchlessrawdiet 2 жыл бұрын
You did really well in my opinion. I live in N. California and my husband and I spend over $2K every month on food. We eat all produce as we're mostly raw vegans. I applaud you for buying as much produce as you do!!! Would be my priority if I lived there. Enjoy that food!
@ifihadfriends437
@ifihadfriends437 2 жыл бұрын
Bruh why - cooked vegan food could save you a pretty penny
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
TWO THOUSAND a month on food? are u eating OUT for every meal? what? if u are vegans then why dont u GROW your own food
@andie2809
@andie2809 2 жыл бұрын
😱 for what you spent I buy my entire months worth of food and supplies. That's so crazy, but I also understand that it's all shipped in and that makes the price so much higher. I also live in Costa Rica so our fruits and vegetables are very inexpensive. However anything that comes from America cost twice as much as it would in the states. Those things are my " luxury items"... ( usually it's dill pickles and Sriracha for me)😂🤣 So considering where you live and how it gets to you... I think it's pretty "normal" price wise.
@ellegrunenwald8589
@ellegrunenwald8589 2 жыл бұрын
Once your avocados ripen you can keep them in the refrigerator and they’ll stay that level of ripeness for at least a week.
@CeciliaBlomdahl
@CeciliaBlomdahl 2 жыл бұрын
Whaaaaat!
@hectorbrown656
@hectorbrown656 2 жыл бұрын
Could you please explain what the habitants of the island ate 100 years ago , and if possible what was their life like . Thank you 🇫🇷🇫🇷
@MM-bh7me
@MM-bh7me 2 жыл бұрын
I don´t think people lived there a hundred years ago. Did they? Does anyone know?
@powexor
@powexor 2 жыл бұрын
@@MM-bh7me You can find this easily on Wikipedia. It was used as a base for whalers since the 17th century and from the 20th century coal mining brought permanent habitants.
@MM-bh7me
@MM-bh7me 2 жыл бұрын
@@powexor Thank you, Samuel! I also went to Wikipedia to read that, but was to lazy to add the information here. Felt a bit ashamed when I saw your comment. Thank you again!
@wbarney59
@wbarney59 2 жыл бұрын
They probably had a variable diet. Cod, halibut and whale maybe some moss.
@Anna-pj8te
@Anna-pj8te 2 жыл бұрын
My grandmother lived there 60 years ago. They’d eat mostly dried cod and potatoes brought from the mainland. To get vitamins they’d bring large barrels of lingonberry jam. My grandmother worked at the bakery, so they would also eat baked goods.
@dianabass4489
@dianabass4489 2 жыл бұрын
I was surprised that some of the prices were pretty comparable to Maryland, USA. But then prices have skyrocketed all over the world lately.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah I'm on Maryland too. Eggs are like $3.49 here right ? Milk is cheaper here for sure . 2- qts is $1.79 at trader Joe's today, watermelon is not $18.00, mustard probably the same. Avocados at cheaper stores are $1.50.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
If your near an Amish market you can make out really well.
@catchyname5403
@catchyname5403 2 жыл бұрын
I’m in SoCal.. • dozen eggs is $6.99 • gallon of milk $4.99, • Oatly $5.99, •avocados $3.50/ea, • bleached flour is $5.49 & unbleached is $8.49 • 12 rolls TP (mega rolls) $16.99 & 24 (mega rolls) $26.99 😩
@jenniferw1595
@jenniferw1595 2 жыл бұрын
A dozen eggs is $7?!? That is scary! I am in NJ and a dozen eggs are $2
@catchyname5403
@catchyname5403 2 жыл бұрын
@@jenniferw1595 it is very scary and I’m thankful I don’t care for eggs too much. I am sure if I look for deals and coupon I could find them cheaper but these are the current prices @ the grocery store in my neighborhood.
@oldragon666
@oldragon666 2 жыл бұрын
Prices here in Anchorage, Alaska, USA are about the same, higher in some cases. We have a very similar food shipping situation here.
@namenl2205
@namenl2205 2 жыл бұрын
Alaska sucks tho
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
Don't you get a lot by train? My family is in Fairbanks and says a lot comes on trains.
@lorifarmer9692
@lorifarmer9692 2 жыл бұрын
@@carochan86 fairbanks gets stuff from anchorage by train. The ports deliver to anchorage then go all over the state
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
@@lorifarmer9692 ah cool . I never knew that .
@kristalynncreates
@kristalynncreates 2 жыл бұрын
I LOVE that there is a mandatory leash period. I live in an environmental reserve, and this year a family with a bird dog moved in next door. Guess how well that has been going...
@Kowalski301
@Kowalski301 2 жыл бұрын
That's terrible! Where is this in the world? Even if there is no mandatory leash period, can't the (conservation) police do anything?
@kristalynncreates
@kristalynncreates 2 жыл бұрын
@@Kowalski301 Well maybe. I could look into if the harm to the wildlife is a violation of our national Wildlife Act.
@kholdstare90
@kholdstare90 2 жыл бұрын
Being on the west coast of Australia the prices are pretty common to what we have been paying for a couple years now. Several times I caught myself thinking "I figured it would have cost more". One of the few things cheaper are butter and eggs, but we also have many local farms who make great produce.
@aragorn4242
@aragorn4242 2 жыл бұрын
not what other Australians have said. on a variety of locations.
@hrosanna
@hrosanna 2 жыл бұрын
@@aragorn4242 Coming from an Australian about Australia - you have a lot of price variation depending on where exactly you live. I was living in the mid north of my state until I recently moved back to the costal areas, and the difference is notable. What OP is saying tracks with what I know about WA prices.
@infamoussphere7228
@infamoussphere7228 Жыл бұрын
In Australia it's really varied. I'm in Canberra and I discovered this one IGA where the vegetables are suspiciously cheap. Under $2 a kg for sweet potatoes, broccoli, oranges, granny smith apples etc. Coriander is under $2. Asian vegetables usually around $3. But that's not indicative of most of the prices in Canberra - at the moment things like wombok or lettuce can be anything from $5 to $12. Also it's only the vegetables in the IGA that are cheap - the other goods are more expensive so I only buy veggies there. Asian shops are good for coriander, Asian vegetables and spices.
@gabriellagirardi4741
@gabriellagirardi4741 2 жыл бұрын
The differences in prices between the Svalbard islands and my country (Italy) is rather important, probably because you live very far from the Continent, in a remote place. Moreover the fact that there is only one grocery shop without any competition is fundamental, so that they try to take advantage of it. Unfortunately also in Italy prices are increasing more and more and this is mainly due to the higher costs of electricity, gas and petrol which affect the cost of food. We are two people and we spend about € 200 per week (only for food). Anyway there is a wide range of supermarkets..so we can choose. Thank you for sharing this awesome video with us.
@roachtoasties
@roachtoasties 2 жыл бұрын
This reminds of prices in Iceland, that are similar. I bought a few items at Target this morning (near L.A.). Some prices are: Bananas 29 cents each, drinking water $1.19 one liter bottle, Head & Shoulders shampoo $5.99, peaches $1.59 each, Lactaid 2% milk approx $4 two liters/half gallon, Quaker Oatmeal $2.89 (they say 8 servings, I say 4), fruit cups $2.39 (4), Smuckers jam $3.89 for a jar, pack of cherry tomatoes $3.39, four bottles Starbucks frapaccino drinks ($6.99).
@11kathleenanne
@11kathleenanne 2 жыл бұрын
Your energy is so fresh and friendly 😍thanks for sharing
@CeciliaBlomdahl
@CeciliaBlomdahl 2 жыл бұрын
🧡🧡🧡🧡
@rgeplaydon807
@rgeplaydon807 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting video on shopping experience. I would say your prices are at least double the amount we pay in the UK. Our Lidl supermarket is consistently cheaper than other supermarkets.
@Naedlj
@Naedlj 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly.. right now in the US the prices are very similar, at least where I live.
@1ACL
@1ACL 2 жыл бұрын
Where? What, specifically?
@claudiasutherland3544
@claudiasutherland3544 2 жыл бұрын
@@lillian5982 ??????????
@caceysedona6487
@caceysedona6487 2 жыл бұрын
You have not paid $20 for a watermelon lol
@matthewluck9077
@matthewluck9077 2 жыл бұрын
Groceries are pretty similar here where I live in the US. The only difference I’d say is that our alternative milks are typically more expensive along with our fruits. Not the watermelons though-yours are much much much more expensive!
@hannahb8689
@hannahb8689 2 жыл бұрын
How much do you pay? I pay 2,50 euro a liter for almond milk, and when I go to the states I am so happy because it's sooo much cheaper. I remember getting it for like 3 dollars a gallon which is 81 cents a liter
@lioramatson2720
@lioramatson2720 2 жыл бұрын
@@hannahb8689 I'm not sure where this person lives, but almond milk where I live can be anywhere from $4.25-$6.00 per gallon or $1.13-$1.58 per liter. But, almonds are grown here in the US making that one of the cheaper plant milks. Other plant milks I've seen go for upwards of $8 per gallon. I used to drink a lot of almond milk but it is getting to the point we can no longer afford it. Just a few years ago I remember almond milk was maximum $2.99 a gallon. Sigh.
@hannahb8689
@hannahb8689 2 жыл бұрын
@@lioramatson2720 That is depressing. Well, since writing this comment almond milk has gone up another 20 cents/liter. A lot of the world is struggling at the grocery store right now. It's possible to make your own vegan milks fairly cheap with a blender but then they are not fortified. I might start doing that and taking a vitamin instead. 😅
@deemorgan5046
@deemorgan5046 2 жыл бұрын
i spend less than 200 in California are you in Alaska or Hawaii? Godspeed Ps Not a vegetarian, buy organic produce and entertain!
@elenaspano5067
@elenaspano5067 Жыл бұрын
I am a student in Amsterdam and I have a weekly grocery budget of 25€ and a monthly budget of 100€. This is mind boggling to me. And it’s not like I try that hard to save up, i buy fresh fruit and veggies and milk and yogurt and all that kind of stuff… absolutely crazy.
@riekster6901
@riekster6901 Жыл бұрын
I live in Holland and my budget is about EUR 75 per week. How do you manage to only spend 25 a week in Amsterdam?
@elenaspano5067
@elenaspano5067 Жыл бұрын
@@riekster6901 I always shop at Jumbo. I am also vegetarian so keep in mind that I don't buy any meat or fish, and really those are the most expensive things in supermarkets a lot of the time. I don't try too hard but it's not like it is easy, I do make sacrifices sometimes. But as a student on a very tight budget, even if I wanted to spend more than that, I couldn't, as I work a part-time, minimum wage job and have almost zero parental support in terms of finance.
@LILY-os1vo
@LILY-os1vo Жыл бұрын
@@elenaspano5067 Amsterdam is crazy expensive, especially the rent so I totally understand. I remember 8 years ago when I was a student in the Netherlands, my weekly budget is 10euro per week, and sometimes I treated myself to a meal outside which costs already 12euro / per meal (= my weekly budget haha, but hey sometimes we deserve it). Student life is always exciting and challenging but also fun at the same time. I hope you will have an amazing student period ;)
@elenaspano5067
@elenaspano5067 Жыл бұрын
@@LILY-os1vo yes, it is quite challenging indeed. but the experience is totally worth it and I love living here, despite the crazy costs. thanks for sharing! wish you the best :)
@txfotog
@txfotog 2 жыл бұрын
Great, informative video! The Wifey & I watched and compared things to that we buy. The sizes were of course different on the bottled/container items but we roughly added it up and guesstimated that you guys might spend almost double what we pay here in Texas. Now the watermelon, WOW! We might pay $6-8 USD for that though! Always love the Grim & Finvess (sp?) shots. Our dog Roger (our last name is Moore)will sometimes watch them. Thanks for all your hard work bringing bits of your life to us. It’s fun for us to see how other people around the world live. 👍🏼⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Erin & Michael
@safe-keeper1042
@safe-keeper1042 2 жыл бұрын
Would love a video on how the climate crisis is affecting Svalbard. I hear there's even flowers there now?
@ritab3957
@ritab3957 Жыл бұрын
The apples were about the same price as they are in California, and I noticed the Oatley is actually cheaper there. That’s another nonnegotiable staple as far as I’m concerned lol. This was a very interesting video. Thank you for posting, Cecilia.
@natalyaakselaleksander4502
@natalyaakselaleksander4502 Жыл бұрын
Sad! I live in California and almost everything grows here but it’s so expensive. I wasn’t that amazed at how much she spends on food because it’s not that far off from here in “the agricultural capital of the US.”
@theamyabeja
@theamyabeja 2 жыл бұрын
Those prices are eye watering. A lot of those items are 4 or 5 times more expensive than in the UK!
@4WhatItsWorth
@4WhatItsWorth 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting. Thanks for sharing! :) Australian food prices can be quite high at times due to us exporting a lot of our produce (thus reducing local supply and increasing prices). Our import costs are high due to being so far removed from the rest of the world. But, generally, if you buy in-season and aren't picky you can keep your grocery bill within a reasonable amount. But with climate affecting our crops and global supply-chain interruptions and shortages, etc the prices are going up even for people who shop conservatively/fiscally. Like most other parts of the world we have been dealing with a 10-20% hike in grocery prices since the start of the pandemic. And then recent adverse weather events (floods) have made certain items go up in price 600%. A head of lettuce is normally 1-2 dollars. Now it is 6-12 dollars! (if you can even get it at all). We have had times where a single banana costs a couple of dollars. A watermelon is 20 dollars. If we didn't export then those wild price swings wouldn't happen as often but we just don't pay our farmers what they deserve so they get better prices internationally for their produce. When there's plenty of supply (ie good weather yields) that isn't an issue and there's enough to go around locally and for exporting. But when crops are in short supply, those international exports make it much more expensive for locals to buy what we need. One of the downsides of a free market. Shelf-stable items (ie- not fresh produce) is much more consistent pricing. Dairy is usually pretty consistent pricing (milk, cheese, yoghurt, butter, etc). But fruit, vegetables and meat always fluctuate considerably. That's why so many people on low incomes survive off junk. It's cheap year round! Of course you can still prepare nutritious meals on a budget but most of the people who need to do that don't have the time. They have kids to look after or are working two jobs or are too sick to do these things for themselves. So they are often forced to buy cheap and convenient. Such a shame because that creates long-term health problems and is more expensive in the long-run. But our housing market is extremely expensive here so most of our money goes to housing and transport costs (we are a big country and have to drive vast distances for work, etc). A major issue now as our fuel prices are also sky-rocketing and vehicle shortages are becoming a problem too! Our public transport systems here are not great outside of major cities. There's just too much ground to cover and not enough population to make extensive networks viable. And remote work is still not widely accepted, even after the pandemic forced businesses to re-evaluate this. They are encouraging people to go back into offices. So everyone is going back to 1-3hr daily commutes. So, even though it's a human necessity, food is often low on the list of people's priorities. They would rather eat 2min noodles + tinned food in order to have a roof over their heads & a way to get to work rather than no job, no house but a good freshly-cooked nutritious meal in their belly. It definitely depends on how you eat but in our household we try to buy good brands with good ingredients (not full of filler ingredients like sugar or flour or palm oil, etc), brands that are sustainable and look after animal welfare (no caged eggs, etc) and the bulk of our shop is fresh food (not processed).... so it adds up VERY quickly. $300/wk minimum ($1200 AUD) for 2 people.
@Sam-wf2ji
@Sam-wf2ji 2 жыл бұрын
Yep, I would co-sign all of this 👍
@sirenarussell9250
@sirenarussell9250 2 жыл бұрын
I had those Nocco drinks when I was in Iceland! They have some nice flavors- mango, etc. Because the caffeine addiction is real and often I cannot be bothered to wait for coffee😅
@michaeldowd8422
@michaeldowd8422 2 жыл бұрын
I think that supermarket is taking advantage of the lack of competition and the fact that people expect everything to be super expensive anyway. I'm sure they could drop prices and still make a healthy profit. The owner of this shop must live in a nice house.
@ESTIsnah
@ESTIsnah 2 жыл бұрын
The owner in this case is a group of customer cooperatives. Anyone who pays a small deposit (currently 300 NOK) become members, and the profits are paid back the next year based on how much you purchased from one of their member stores. Each member gets back, at minimum, 1% of what they paid at their stores, so I assume that is the group's minimum profit margin in any given year. I imagine most people on Svalbard, where the only store is a Coop store, would want to be members. Coop taking advantage of Svalbard to benefit mainland members is of course a possibility.
@annerussell
@annerussell 2 жыл бұрын
The price difference used to be greater before Covid, at least here in the US. I pay almost 7 dollars for free range eggs (a dozen), and milk is also comparable here to what it costs there. And I’m in Florida. Not sure how expensive the rest of the US is getting, but inflation is out of control.
@chayarubin7991
@chayarubin7991 2 жыл бұрын
im inflorida too and exactly. if u want to eat uality stuff its actually more expensive here so im a bitshocked
@pluutoop
@pluutoop 2 жыл бұрын
Wow so that's why Floridians are moving to new Jersey. I live in north jersey on the border with new York city. And we have all of the neighboring states move here. But we also have Texas Alabama Tennessee and north Carolina. New York people are the worse. Sorry. So loud and inconsiderate. Fortunately we are moving to North Carolina because we have remote jobs. It is just getting so congested here and polluted and it smells like sewage.
@u.synlig
@u.synlig 2 жыл бұрын
Wow! I’m shocked to learn that you’re paying approximately $10.74 for one gallon of regular, whole milk in the U.S.!
@squirrel8296
@squirrel8296 2 жыл бұрын
For the items that I also buy, those prices are slightly higher than what they'd be in my area of the US, but not drastically higher. More in line with Whole Foods vs Kroger price differences. I also try to shop sales and stock up/buy in bulk when I can though, so the prices are probably a lot closer than I am thinking.
@iscahcallias9123
@iscahcallias9123 2 жыл бұрын
It's amazing! The prices you are paying for all of this food is less expensive than what I pay in California, and it's already going up too 😖
@staceypiper3319
@staceypiper3319 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting, I think prices in the US are finally catching up to the high prices Europe has always had. I lived in Germany and we Americans complained about prices of gas, food, even stamps. That was back in the 80’s
@stinkygraykitty6808
@stinkygraykitty6808 2 жыл бұрын
Ooooh sounds like you and your family were military? We were stationed in Germany 1995-98. I remember those ration coupons lol.
@wwaxwork
@wwaxwork 2 жыл бұрын
The US has never really paid what food actually cost, it's interesting watching the changes happening here as prices get more in line with the rest of the world. Unfortunately the wages in the US need to catch up to the rest of the world as well.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
@@wwaxwork dairy farmers can finally make some money. Farmers work so hard but don't make a lot at all.
@HelibearWomble
@HelibearWomble Жыл бұрын
Since discovering your channel, I have come to admire so much of the Svalbard life! However after seeing your supermarket prices I am feeling fortunate to live the UK. We budget £100 per week for food (two people) but tend to spend £50-70! What a difference!!! 🫣
@matthewbaynham6286
@matthewbaynham6286 2 жыл бұрын
A couple of months ago I saw a video of people growing food in large industrial buildings. They use renewal energy and it's all very automated. It might have been in the Netherlands or somewhere close to there. They could grow any route vegetable. It seems strange that you wouldn't grow food in doors in such a remote island.
@user-ui1zv8bd4y
@user-ui1zv8bd4y 2 жыл бұрын
I did that in my garage in the US till my RA got really bad last couple of years moving things to the garden depending which state we were living in at the time. Saved a lot on food. I froze corn, tomatoes, strawberries, beans, fresh herb cubes ( chop herbs add to ice trays and layer with miso or veggie broth freeze then remove and put in freezing containers, always ready to use in cooking) I keep fresh Basil, mint and coriander in my small garden pots in the kitchen window as well. I also grow a pot of chives. It has survived 13 states and 27 moves.
@Pebj88
@Pebj88 2 жыл бұрын
Sweden have went up alot in prices in general but svalbard takes another price on being expensive. xD Our standard coffe right now ( zoega ) goes from 60 - 72kr... and oatly goes for 26kr ( for a big pack ). love this kind of video!
@lcrain7840
@lcrain7840 2 жыл бұрын
It's always nice to have insanely tropical things in the arctic, like avocado. Maybe that's why it costs so much? When we think about what goes into food- like raising a whole pig just for bacon and belly fat, that could by why the product costs so much. As a farmer who raises livestock for meat, it's shocking for people to learn how much my meat costs. Sadly, most folks are completely disconnected from food production, don't shop in season, and want healthy clean food grown ethically to still cost nothing. Try growing your own and then get back to me about the price. ;)
@janethomas8494
@janethomas8494 2 жыл бұрын
Love this comment. People are spoilt and completely myopic these days. No understanding of REAL hardship. AVOCADOS and WATERMELONs in the Arctic Circle???? Complete insanity. And misuse of resources to adhere to the whims of SPOILT adult children.
@lostinthecityofbooks6711
@lostinthecityofbooks6711 2 жыл бұрын
She lives in the arctic circle how do you propose to find a live pig or grow food on the tundra?
@FionaEm
@FionaEm 2 жыл бұрын
It's always interesting to see the range and price of foods in such a remote part of the world 🙂 Food prices have gone up around 10-15% in Australia during COVID, and especially since the awful situation in Ukraine. Even basic veggies like broccoli are expensive now. There are some foods I've had to cut out altogether - but what can you do? The situation could be far worse.
@alisoncaller533
@alisoncaller533 2 жыл бұрын
Nothing to do with Ukraine situation, its the floods that have mostly impacted food prices here in Australia. Crops destroyed, loss of cattle, sheep and other livestock. We've been told in northern nsw there will be no lettuce (including rocket, baby spinach, silverbeet etc) until at least August. All due to the floods destroying crops.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
I'd say 20% here in Us ,East Coast
@alk3078
@alk3078 2 жыл бұрын
Ukraine? 😅🤣😂🤣🤣😂 Dementia Joe uses that excuse to cover for his incompetence
@rachelathome7516
@rachelathome7516 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, it’s the war that has affected fuel and wheat . The fresh produce is mostly from floods but there’s a small increase solely due to transport costs
@rachaelh9299
@rachaelh9299 2 жыл бұрын
@@rachelathome7516 wheat price isn’t an issue here since we grow and export wheat. Fuel/fertiliser &Flooding/storms and the odd hot/cold weather destroyed and delayed crops. What we have here is a duopoly setting the prices and rather then an items price rising 3-4 cents every 6 months, prices stayed the same, stayed the same, stayed the same then 2-3 years of price rises have accumulated at once, pushing the price from $1.20 to $1.50 etc Convenience food and fresh are up. But there is still some well priced seasonal veggies at fruit and veg shops just not coles/Woolworths
@dawnwalker5803
@dawnwalker5803 2 жыл бұрын
This is my first time watching your channel. Very interesting. I live in Cape Coral Florida, USA. Yes, the food prices here, and in all of America has " SKYROCKETED" in the past 10 months, or so. Our gasoline for our vehicles, rents for apartments ( or houses) have become UNBELIEVABLE. Many Americans have had to utilize food banks ( I am not sure you know what that is) just to get food on the table. We have to choose whether to put gasoline in our vehicle, or eat, or pay our rent, ( or mortgage). I am an AMERICAN. I love my country. But, I am very, very concerned about the cost of food. My husband and I, Thank God, have very good paying jobs, and can afford what we need. BUT, many, many, " middle class" hard working people here can't even manage to put food on the table..let alone the low income people. They are becoming quickly homeless, no food. As well, as middle class people. Again, this was supposed to be about food prices. Sorry. I apologize.
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
I hope you contribute to a food bank every month ...
@qvantrage
@qvantrage 2 жыл бұрын
I live in turkey and even these prices unfortunately seem very reasonable to me lol 😭
@beetroot48
@beetroot48 2 жыл бұрын
With the exception of the produce, the rest of the items seemed on par with prices we pay in my part of the USA. Thanks for sharing. Could you please give us an overview of your water and septic systems? I know you put a water system in last year but can’t recall if you did a video on it. And in terms of septic, how does that work when you cannot build into the tundra. I’m a technical geek wanting to understand how that all works in your beautiful cabin. Thanks for sharing.
@hsoderberg6505
@hsoderberg6505 2 жыл бұрын
I thought the toilet paper they bought exceptionally high.
@TheBlueWind
@TheBlueWind 2 жыл бұрын
I can add that in the US, depending on the Apple breed, it can range from $0.70 to $1.50 per apple- so seeing your pack of six apples for $4.76 is pretty good. Buying in packs is always cheaper but I prefer choosing my specific apples so I limit to just 2 every trip 😅 Hope that makes you feel a little better about one produce!
@christybirling3299
@christybirling3299 2 жыл бұрын
I'm addicted to Cosmic Crisp apples and they are around $1.00 each. A bit cheaper than the honey crisp, and in my opinion they're better.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
I'd say maybe a bit more if your getting more exotic apples from a organic market.
@carochan86
@carochan86 2 жыл бұрын
I have switched out fruits from bags before to get the texture of say peaches I wanted.
@quantquill
@quantquill 2 жыл бұрын
Very cool video, thank you for sharing the prices and your shopping process. Timely as well. I teach supply chain at university and my students are struggling to pay their grocery bills. Last semester, they told me it cost them twice as much to buy food as the previous semester. We have a campus food pantry and they've never seen so many students coming through. From what I understand, given the war in Ukraine, drought in some places, too much rain in other places, high costs of fuel that increase transport costs/farming costs, and so on, we'll continue to see increasing food prices all over the world. My partner and I have very different food buying habits. He probably spends $300 a month or less because he can eat whatever he wants, no food allergies. I spend $600 a month or more. (We often cook separately, since I can't eat wheat, soy, corn, canola, sugar, peanuts, and lots of other stuff found in most US foods.) We also live in an area with a lot of grocery chains (Whole Foods, Natural Grocers, Trader Joes, Albertsons, Fred Meyer, WinCo, Walmart). I don't know if competition would change things. WF, NG, and TJ all have equivalent prices to one another. WinCo and Walmart compete. And then Albertsons and Fred Meyer compete. At least that's what I see locally. I stopped buying avocados when they were super expensive, and those same very expensive avocados went on sale for a third of the price as they started rotting.
@doreenkthe6613
@doreenkthe6613 2 жыл бұрын
We live in Melbourne, Australia and as a family of 3 (one toddler) we spend about $1000USD per month on groceries and we do shop mainly organic/local produce when we can. I used to live in the UK and 10 years ago it was a lot cheaper but our last trip back 3 years ago shocked us so much as people don't make a lot in the UK but prices are mad! Prices of produce is insane here in Australia, about USD8 for a lettuce and USD30 for snow peas !
@Lauren-vd4qe
@Lauren-vd4qe 2 жыл бұрын
thats insane; i wd leave that country before the asians take over, they will eventually.
@HungryTrashPanda
@HungryTrashPanda 2 жыл бұрын
The prices aren’t that bad! I recently paid $32 for a watermelon here on the island prefecture of Okinawa. You got a deal. 😂
@annah4267
@annah4267 2 жыл бұрын
In Brazil watermelon is so cheap
@monikajohnson8236
@monikajohnson8236 2 жыл бұрын
Yea but that’s not USD that’s probably Yen which is like 24 cent usd
@glengamble526
@glengamble526 2 жыл бұрын
To the Canadians saying that we pay the same prices as Svalbard: we don’t. Please stop exaggerating. Yes, things ARE expensive right now but not nearly as expensive as a polar island that has added shipping costs for every single item.
@jdee2482
@jdee2482 2 жыл бұрын
Nunavut?
@pansprayers
@pansprayers 2 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure that depends on your specific location in Canada, not just your one location that you've declared the only perspective on the subject.
@BrodyYYC
@BrodyYYC 2 жыл бұрын
Glen when I go to Co-op here in Calgary the prices are basically exactly the same as the prices in this video.
@glengamble526
@glengamble526 2 жыл бұрын
@@jdee2482 same issues-extra shipping costs. So it doesn’t apply. And you know it.
@glengamble526
@glengamble526 2 жыл бұрын
@@pansprayers I’ve travelled to 36 countries and four continents. I speak from experience. Places like Svalbard, Faroe Islands etc. are remote and therefore cost a lot more to ship to than continental North American countries and cities. I’ve seen the pricing with my own eyes. You haven’t. Not being a dick, just…trust me, by comparison, we have it good.
@k74728
@k74728 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Tennessee in the US. My wife and I spend $150-200 a week on groceries lately! Food prices have skyrocketed here, so honestly your bill didn’t sound that extreme to me 😅
@augustek5382
@augustek5382 2 жыл бұрын
that sounds accurate to me. I am in MT and spend 100- 130 a week on food that includes coffee from a local coffee shop once or twice a week.
@melissaw815
@melissaw815 2 жыл бұрын
Same here in Indiana.
@drematedesco4095
@drematedesco4095 2 жыл бұрын
$2.18 for 18 eggs, $0.98 for one avocado, oat milk $3.48, $4.48 for a watermelon like the one you purchased. I’m in America. State of West Virginia and prices are going up about everyday. Love your videos and look forward to seeing them. You guys are so cute and do fabulous things I never do. Love from the USA 🇺🇸
@here4usa17
@here4usa17 2 жыл бұрын
Our prices on Avocado’s are $2.99 each in the Pacific Northwest area. :(
@drematedesco4095
@drematedesco4095 2 жыл бұрын
@@here4usa17 wow, that’s a big difference - the avocados here are small if that’s any consolation 🙂
@SuperBotanica
@SuperBotanica 2 жыл бұрын
i also live on an island and everything is more expensive than on the mainland. when the pandemic started, i read the background for hours, found the agenda 2030, looked at Gates and the WEF/SCHwab and so i knew what to expect in the coming years. I changed my entire eating plan. after a lot of trial and error, i've now arrived at 11 foods and only 1-2 meals a day. I have my own chickens and quail - eggs every day. i buy rock salt, coconut milk, coconut oil, butter, beef, kefir, honey, drinking water, coffee and some fruit. I make sauerkraut myself. that's all. costs per month: 120 dollars. Animal feed (cats, chickens, quails, turtles, birds, rabbits) about $100. we all have to learn to adapt, to stop with the usual eating habits, i.e. buying non-essential food. everything is getting more expensive every week - how do you want to compensate for all this?
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