Recent comments in /f/jerseycity

jcdevel OP t1_j5klntk wrote

Thank you all for recommendation. Current mechanic is saying struts leaking, and there does seem some seepage. However car feels fine and after asking Acura forums consensus seems to be it's fine if and I may not have do it right now after all.

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bmcgeehan t1_j5kja2o wrote

you want to hit up Paul Sobstyl in Clifton. certified Honda mechanic, he works out of his home garage and his work is seriously top notch. i went to him for everything on my TL ranging from the 105k water pump/timing service, replacing brake calipers, oil changes, etc. Dude is the best.

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objectimpermanence t1_j5kf8b1 wrote

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brandy716 t1_j5ke3nr wrote

All the places that use to be good are gone now. It’s a shame.

First the name is terrible. I use to order here when I worked the late night shift or wanted a nice bite on a Sunday with the family. It was our go to anytime. Some people just don’t understand what makes a restaurant/ dinner great.

I haven’t been here since the update and will not be going back from the reviews.

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InvaderMixo t1_j5k958m wrote

I haven't been to every single block of JC, but I can't think of a neighborhood where you can put a chicken coop far away for people not to notice. I definitely noticed and heard about complaints.

It's not about the distance for the feed. If you're not growing the feed on site, someone is going to use a vehicle for some part of the delivery whether it's you or someone else.

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Brudesandwich OP t1_j5k824r wrote

You don't need to drive miles away to get them food lol. Plus, the chicken coop doesn't need to be in the dozens. One hen can lay about 100-200 eggs a year. Keeping under 3 hens won't be a drastic change and there are already people who have chickens in JC but youd never notice. because of the density of this city majority of properties wouldn't make the threshold so it's not like we will suddenly have hundreds of chicken coops around

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BeyondDadBod t1_j5k7ash wrote

I was really hoping that in the year 2023, my duty would be done. But, here we are.

The last hipster died cold and alone some time in 2014, in a share house in the Hudson valley. Pushed out by gentrification even from Bushwick (but unwilling to do, you know, ‘real’ bushwick) he had to make a choice, and decamped from Brooklyn along with his Kombucha production cooperative. Unfortunately man can’t live on Kombucha and vinyls alone, and as sales dried up they couldn’t afford heat, which led to the tragic end of the last true hipster. No more exist, and most people have moved on to blaming gen Z for their woes

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InvaderMixo t1_j5k7523 wrote

Sustainability is great, but the fundamentals for a chicken operation are not present in the city. Are you gonna truck in the feed regularly from miles away? Are you going to use expensive city water for them to drink and get cleaned? What if they kept getting stolen or killed and you decide to abandon the coop? just because you bring the animals closer to the dinner table doesn't necessarily equate to it being more environmentally friendly.

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