Monday, August 25, 2008

Power Bars, or How a Blog Was Born

Larry and I are wrapping up a week-long trip to Colorado, New Mexico and Utah. At a convenience store somewhere along Highway 550 in the middle of the New Mexico waste land, we discovered Power Bars. We were tired and hungry, and Larry said that they helped Michael Phelps and the Tour 'de France bicyclists so they would probably work for us. We paid about $1.50 each for two apple-cinnamon Power Bars. It was money well-spent.

Two days later, we stopped at another convenience store as we got to Moab, Utah. We had driven from Mesa Verde National Park and needed gas and more Power Bars. Having passed up stations in Monticello, Utah, selling regular for $4.29, we decided that $3.92 didn't sound too bad. Little did we know that Power Bars were selling for $2.69. We reluctantly bought four--two strawberry and two peanut butter-chocolate chip.

This morning, at a brief (I thought) Wal-Mart stop for eye drops, Larry decided to find out how much Power Bars cost at America's leading retailer. So where would you look for Power Bars at Wal-Mart? They weren't on the racks by the check-out counters. Guess Power Bars don't appeal to kids in shopping carts.

Next, we tried the snack aisle. Plenty of granola bars on the snack aisle, but no Power Bars. Fifteen minutes later, we found them on the cereal aisle. However, Wal-Mart didn't have the exact variety of Power Bars that we had bought at the convenience stores. Five minutes of ingredient reading later, Larry determined that the individually wrapped Power Bars had twice as much protein as those we had bought. The whole-grain varieties came five to a box. How do you begin to compare prices when you can't compare apples to apples or in this case, cinnamon-apple to cinnamon-apple?

Finally back on the road, I sent Ben, our youngest son, a text message which read, "Dad has just spent 15 minutes in Wal-Mart checking out the price of Power Bars."

He replied, "Classic. You should start a blog."

So here it is. By the way, a box of five Power Bars at Wal-Mart in Grand Junction, Colorado, costs $4.67. You do the math.

2 comments:

the osbornes said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
the osbornes said...

Excellent story! Welcome to the world of blogging :)