This one is hard to answer without knowing you and your family's likes and dislikes. Staples are good to start with otherwise.
Salt
Pepper
Mustard
Ketchup
BBQ Sauce
Hot Sauce
Steak Sauce
Worstershire Sauce
Soy Sauce
Sugar
Flour
Baking Soda
Baking Powder
Cornstarch
Spices (whatever you like)
Vanilla
Cocoa Powder
Chocolate Chips
Koolaide, Tea, Coffee (coffee filters)
O.J., Apple Juice, Cranberry Juice
Hot Chocolate
Cereal, Oatmeal
Syrup, Pancake Mix
Butter
Snack Bars, Granola
Fruit Snacks, Raisins
Nuts (whatever you like)
Popcorn
Vitamins
Ibuprofen
Toothpicks
Cupcake Cups
Pet Food (if needed)
Macaroni, Spaghetti, Zitti, Rotini, Egg Noodles, etc...
Rice
Canned Milk
Spaghetti Sauce
Sloppy Joe Mix
Pizza Sauce
Mushroom Soup
Cheese Soup
Tuna
Velveeta
American Cheese
Cheddar Cheese
Mozzarella Cheese
String Cheese
Salsa, Chips
Dill Pickles, Sweet Pickles, Pickle Relish
Green Olives, Black Olives
Peanut Butter, Jelly
Honey, Molasses
These are just a few ideas depending on your needs and likes. When you first move in take paper plates, napkins, plastic silverware, plastic cups and trashbags. Save yourself work and get frozen pizzas, frozen lasagnas, frozen fried chicken, pot pies or t.v. dinners. You can add a salad, frozen bread sticks, frozen garlic bread and some fruit to round out the meal. You will be working hard enough with the move and unpacking to not have to worry about cooking as well.
Good Luck! :)
2007-02-23 15:54:40
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answer #1
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answered by Lilly K 2
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- Correct lighting. What breed are they? Chinese and Russians often require uvb lighting. - Good bedding, don't use carefresh, cedar or pine, use plain woodshavings or the paper wool bedding that is from pet shops. (Little bits of white chopped paper and wool layers). - BIG cages - lots of them for different sexes, a seperate one for the father so they dont back to back breed (which is fatal), and extra's incase some fight and need to be seperated. - Quiet room. - Lots of nutrition for the mothers, you'll need multiple females to breed, they can all be bred with that one male. They also can only have up to 3 litters a year, no more because its far too straining on them. She'll need protein, 2 portions per week. Such as a little slice of boiled egg or a tiny bit of cottage cheese. Vegetables too, you can look up lists, give a small amount daily when pregnant and feeding babies and after a week of them being weaned off it. Then every other day when not. - Lots of toys, babies are active. Umm...Wheels, tubes, chew toys etc - A spacious bed, especially good for birth because some run around a bit before birth and dig all the bed and stuff. - Treats twice a week that arent sugary. Or a seed bar in the cage all the time - good for gnawing on too. I know this isn't relavent, but why are you breeding? It should really be left to professionals because if you really do care about them, you should know they are really overpopulated, even if they aren't that common in your area. Also, you wont make nearly enough money out of breeding, because upkeep, food, bedding etc... adds to roughly double the amount you'll make from an average of 6-8 baby litter. I hope I helped.
2016-05-24 04:30:30
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you're looking for nonperishable things to stock your cupboards, you can get things like:
Main dishes - Pasta & pasta sauce (you can usually get pasta very cheaply on sale); soups; chili; all-in-one meals that even include the meat (like Campbell's Super Supper Bakes, for instance); canned tuna and other meats (roast beef, chicken).
Side dishes - rice; packaged potatoes; pasta sides.
Fruits & vegetables - you can get a ton of stuff in cans, like pineapple, pears, peaches, green beans, asparagus, corn, peas, etc. You can also get dried fruit that will keep for a very long time.
Breakfast - packaged oatmeal; dry cereals.
Snacks - chips, crackers, rice cakes, cookies.
Condiments - ketchup, mayo, mustard, relish, salad dressings.
Peanut butter, jam and bread is great to have on hand for a quick bite with no cooking and very little prep.
Once you're ready to buy refrigerator and freezer stuff, you'll want to make a trip for dairy, fresh produce, frozen veggies, fresh meat, frozen foods like pre-made pizzas and other things that won't keep during a move without fridge access. I find I can get a lot of things for good prices when I shop at a bag-it-yourself type of grocery store.
2007-02-23 14:51:43
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answer #3
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answered by ozfan98 4
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A big bag of rice. My wife is Filipino, and they actually consider it bad luck to move into a new house without a bag of rice. When you think of it, it is very practical. Rice takes a very long time to go bad, its very filling, goes well with a lot of things, and its cheap.
2007-02-23 14:43:44
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answer #4
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answered by p_doell 5
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i'll say rice coz i'm asian. Pasta's good too. Next comes sauces like chilli and bbq and mayonnaise. Then comes milk and sugar and eggs and salt and flour. I tend to stock up on chocolates and cookies too... =)
2007-02-23 15:10:37
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answer #5
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answered by oldham_boi 1
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Frozen dinners, like the big lasagnas and stuff.
2007-02-23 14:41:31
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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start with staples then go from there.
2007-02-23 14:48:40
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answer #7
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answered by ALLENROUNDHEAD 2
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