Graze Counterpart
I love these handy snack boxes from Graze. I have a box delivered every fortnight. I look forward to the different surprises with each delivery. These ensure that I am sticking to healthy snacks at my desk. The snack boxes are just the right size and perfect for sharing if you are feeling generous!Graze also provide excellent customer service. I recently could not get hold of one of my boxes due to Covid-19 lockdown and my office being closed. Graze kindly sent a replacement free of charge to my home address and have arranged for future deliveries to be sent to my home address.
Happy to support this wonderful company in these difficult times and very happy that I can continue to receive their wonderful snacks! Very small amount of snack and wasn't that great. I spent about half an hour going through all their selections liking.disliking.and the first box had 3 things I said no way to. For instance, their peanut butter and jelly. I hate pb&j (No, I'm not weird but my mom used same knife and the jelly would crystallize in the peanut butter for next sandwich) and what's in my box??? It was a handful of peanuts and some jelly stringy things.
Granted with the 2014 award of Best Restaurant by Madison magazine, Graze—the casual counterpart to L'Etoile—introduces pub-style.
Not worth the price to get only a few decent, small snacks. Thanks for leaving a review.
We're sorry to hear you received some snacks you weren't able to enjoy in your first box, and that the portions were smaller than you were expecting. Our snack team work to make sure that every portion is just enough to keep you satisfied between meals - and offer a nutritional benefit too! We will never send you snacks that you have rated as 'dislike', so if you send an email over to hello@graze.com, our friendly customer service team will be happy to look into this for you:). Hi there - thank you for your feedback. It's lovely to hear that you're enjoying the variety of snacks and your kids look forward to their weekly treats:)We do try to provide a wide range of promotional offers, with our intention being that they can be used to 'top up' regular shop orders, as our grazers pick out their favourites from our range. We really appreciate your feedback about this though, so will be sure to pass it on to the team who manage our offers. Thanks again for taking the time to review - we hope you continue to enjoy grazing with us!
I ordered a free box to trial and didn't like it. I was meaning to unsubscribe but only a week later I was sent a second one. When I checked the website they had already charged me for the box only a day after the free trial. In shock of already receiving a 2nd box I cancelled it and saw they had already charged me for a 3rd one!!Besides the money - The snacks had little variety, small proportions and not very original.If these snacks are something you enjoy I would definitely recommend buying them in store where you can pick out the ones you like and how many you want! Plus save the planet without unnecessary postage:). Hi Amelia, thank you very much for taking the time to review graze - we are sorry to hear of your disappointment. We always taken payment for our subscription boxes a few days before its expected arrival, which means that for orders on a weekly frequency, there will be less than 7 days between when your current box arrives and when payment is taken for the following one.
Given the current situation, our boxes are subject to delays which means they may arrive slightly later than expected. This may mean there is less time between when a box arrives and the next payment is processed. Our team would be very happy to look into this for you though, so please do drop us a line at hello@graze.comWe are also sorry for any disappointment with the variety of our snacks - we feature our full range to order on our website via our subscription service and shop, where it's also possible to stock up with multi-packs and larger sharing bags. We'll certainly make sure your feedback is shared with the rest of the team. Thank you again for letting us know and please do contact us, as we'll be happy to help. Hi Jojo - I'm really sorry to hear that you haven't had a 5-star experience with us.Boxes have been prepared much earlier than usual over the last week because of the long Easter weekend - we can't ship any snacks on the two bank holidays, so we send them up to a week in advance to ensure they still reach our customers in time.
You can read about this on our 'cut-off' page:www.graze.com/uk/lastordersIt sounds like your box might have been prepared before your subscription was cancelled but I'm really sorry that this led to an unexpected payment for you. Our customer service team will be able to help out - we're receiving lots of emails at the moment and we were closed over the weekend, but we'll respond to your email as soon as we can. PLEASE STOP SENDING ME THESE BOXES OF BUDGIE FOOD!Who in the world could eat this thrown together shavings of what looks like bird seed and raisins. It really is shameful. Ive just thrown my box of Graze out the window and the birds really do like this.
Maybe this should be marketed as bird feed?Whoever replies to this could you tell me who thought up this idea as i want to shake his or hers hand. Buy a load of seeds almonds and dry plastic coconut. Separate them into segments and we can rob the public!
Absolute shameful waste of unwanted NUTS!
Spring grazing gets all the buzz. But, did you know that fall grass can be just as dangerous as its springtime counterpart?“While grass tends to be lower in fructans and starch during the summer heat, the situation changes as the nighttime temperatures dip in the fall,” said internationally known integrative veterinarian Dr. Joyce Harman, owner and operator of. “Laminitis is a very real threat once the nights turn cool and grass gets stressed.”Here are a few tips:– Watch the overnight temperatures. Grass produces sugar and starch due to photosynthesis during the day.
During warmer months, grass would burn up these carbs during the night (thus making the early morning hours the safest time to graze). However, grass likes to hold onto the sugars overnight during the Fall, therefore it’s not a good idea to let your horse graze on pasture when it was below 40 degrees the night before.– Stressed grass is high in sugar! Grasses that have been over-grazed during the summer months, suffering from drought or grass that has been touched by frost is stressed, therefore it is unsafe to let your at-risk horse graze.Take a close look at brown grass. Although warm season grasses go dormant in the Fall, be careful before you turn your insulin resistant or laminitic horse out on brown grass– many times, if it’s still warm during the day, there will be green, sugar-rich blades still growing.Grab a Muzzle: Muzzles allow a horse to behave normally in the pasture in terms of exercise and socialization without running the risk of over-grazing.The Harmany Muzzle, designed by Dr.
Joyce Harman, is totally customizable, from molding it to a horse’s head shape to determining how much, or how little, grass is available to a horse. It is also made of a medical grade plastic with Kevlar fibers, making it much lighter than other available muzzles without sacrificing durability. Bonus— it’s 50% more breathable than traditional muzzles AND it’s easy to keep clean. Learn more about it.Want to learn more? Check out her recorded webinar on Fall grazing.ABOUT JOYCE HARMANDr.
Joyce Harman opened Harmany Equine Clinic, Ltd in 1990, bringing holistic healing to horses from all walks of life, backyard retirees to Olympic competitors. Over the years, Dr. Joyce Harman has observed and adapted to the changing needs the industry. Nhl eastside hockey manager 2005 game.
Twenty-plus years ago, no one had heard of Lyme disease or Insulin Resistance, yet today that makes up a large part of her clinical practice.In 2001, she wrote the first paper in a peer-reviewed journal about the possibility that horses have insulin resistance (IR), and now it is part of our every day conversation. In 2004 she published the first comprehensive book on English saddle fitting since the 1800’s, with the western version of the book following in 2006. To this date, these books are the only books written by an author who is independent from a saddle company, which brings unbiased information to the horse world.###.