<<Disclaimer: Verify this information before applying it to your situation.>> Dear Listmates - When the terrorist attacks occurred, I watched the news hour after hour, horrified, and ended up with severe colitis attacks from nerves. I haven't had colitis since before I was diagnosed, two years ago. To momentarily distract myself after several hours of watching the news, I decided to order a gluten-free treat - anything - from anywhere, at that point. I was deeply depressed, and my body always turns on itself under stress. I have Fibromyalgia and Osteoarthritis, too. I went to Panne Rizo's Web page, and considered ordering. I noticed that the description page had the price in Canadian dollars, then the order page had the price in US dollars, but for the items I wanted, it was the same number of dollars, without any apparent conversion factor. For example, on the applesauce spice bars (I think that's the name), they were $.99 in Canadian dollars on the initial description page, then 6 for $5.94, I think, in US dollars on the order page. Well, $5.94 in US dollars is about $9.31 Canadian. At $.99 each on the initial product description page in Canadian dollars, Canadians are paying $5.94 in Canadian dollars for six bars, and US residents are paying $9.31 Canadian dollars or $5.89 US dollars for the same six bars, if my logic is correct. I emailed Panne Rizo that day about this, and received a reply I would call judgemental or critical - telling me they would respond after a respectful amount of time had passed. I never heard from them again. (They aren't in the US, either. I think they are in British Columbia.) Until we find out what is going on with their pricing - and if they are using the conversion factor for Canadian dollars to US or not - I recommend that no one order from them. We should be paying a price that takes into account the conversion factor, or, if there is an error in their column headings or pricing, they need to correct it. Vicki