Yesterday I linked to Phil's readers' comments about the current situation in their various parts of the country, and cited several of their comments. If you missed that blog post, you might like to read it before continuing with this one.
I think it's very important to keep up-to-date with what's actually happening on the ground in our country. The USA is big enough that one region may be experiencing problems that might not yet have reached others; but we're all interconnected, so sooner or later those problems will make themselves felt in our areas too.
For example, last week it was announced that the diesel supply in the USA is down to no more than 25 days. The shortage is particularly apparent in the southeastern states, especially on the Atlantic coast. For those living there, this should be a wake-up call to make sure their food reserves are well filled, because every - literally, every - food delivery to distribution centers and supermarkets and restaurants relies at some point on diesel-powered transport. The food may be available, but if it can't be shipped to where you and I can buy it, we're S.O.L. Those living in other regions may be tempted to relax and say, "Well, the shortage isn't as bad here, so we'll be OK" - but they won't be OK, because their "excess" supply is sure and certain to be tapped to send more diesel to areas where the need is greater. This sort of problem can spread with alarming speed.
There's also the fact that diesel fuel comes from the same distillate stream as home heating oil (here's looking at you, north-eastern USA!), jet fuel, farm diesel and other essential fuels. If road diesel is in short supply, all of them will be short, too. If refineries are forced to reconfigure their equipment to produce more diesel and associated fuels, the production of other fuels - for example, automotive gasoline or lubricating oil - must necessarily be reduced to accommodate that need; and that may have a knock-on effect when it comes to filling our tanks at the gas station every week. We live in an interconnected world, where a problem in one area can very easily become a problem in another before we have time to think about it.
Let's look at the availability of food. In the past we've discussed the current drought, and how farmers and ranchers are being forced to reduce their herds due to the lack of fodder and grazing. There doesn't appear to be much relief in sight for the next year or so, what with a third consecutive year of La Niña being forecast, which will produce ongoing drought in many of this country's most productive farming regions. It's been predicted that meat may become so scarce (once herds have been depleted) that a pound of ground beef may fetch as much as $50 next year - more than ten times its present level (at least where I live). Vegetable crops are also way down from normal levels. Remember that the vegetables we've been eating this past year mostly come from 2021's crops, which were canned and/or frozen after being harvested. The 2022 harvest is much smaller, so there'll be less to preserve and put on the shelves next year. We're going to feel that pinch in higher prices in 2023 - while hoping for a better harvest to provide food in 2024. La Niña may make that a pipe dream.
(EDITED TO ADD: See this news report for more on the coming meat shortage.)
A couple of years ago I noted that official government figures about inflation were ridiculous, and offered this rule of thumb:
To know the true rate of consumer inflation in the USA, take the official rate declared by the government and multiply it by 3½. The result will be much closer to reality.
My wife and I have consistently found, over the past year or more, that our personal rate of inflation (i.e. the cost increases in the products we buy and consume, as opposed to general products that we don't buy or need) is 25%-35%. That tends to fit in well with that guideline. If you look at the inflation being experienced by Phil's readers, as mentioned in some of their comments ("Most food items are 30 to 40% higher than this time last year", "canned veggies are double what they were last year", "Currently running my own little CPI on groceries, current annual rate of 57%", "The little food we purchase is up 30~45%", etc.), food inflation overall in many parts of the country now appears to be exceeding that guideline. There were those who thought I was being unduly pessimistic when I offered that multiplier almost two years ago. Now? I think I was being optimistic, at least as far as food costs are concerned.
Let's face it. Most of us simply can't afford to stock up on an extra year's worth of food and essentials. We don't have the spare cash, and we don't have enough storage space for it (let alone being able to handle the hazards involved in storing materials such as fuel or propane). However, we can't afford not to prepare for the sort of dangers that are bearing down on us. Even if it's in a small way, we should be striving to build up a month or two's reserves of essential foodstuffs, so that if we get laid off work, or a system outage makes credit cards temporarily unusable, or we find that meat prices suddenly double or triple in a month, we can get by until things improve.
In that light, look at what's absolutely essential for you, and what you can do without. It's also a good idea to look at replacements. For example, if no meat is available or affordable, rice and beans are (currently) cheap and form a complete protein when eaten together. Grains such as quinoa and amaranth may seem fancy and exotic, but they're also protein-rich, and very easy to prepare (almost as easy as rice - they just take a bit longer to cook). What's more, all these foods can be easily preserved for years (I use mylar bags with oxygen absorbers and a heat sealer). If we have to stretch a soup or stew to feed more people, adding some of those grains (or oatmeal) to the pot will bulk it out, and the grains will absorb the flavor of the main dish, making them just as appetizing. For that matter, we can cook such grains in bouillon, broth or stock of some kind, to provide a meat flavor even if there's no meat in our meal that day.
When it comes to clothing, get used to swapping T-shirts or similar clothes with family and friends. Go to thrift stores such as Goodwill to look for clothes, rather than buying new. If your kids need school uniforms or similar wear, find out whether their school offers any sort of swap facility (many do). Do the same with services and skills you may have that others need. Mow someone's lawn in exchange for them teaching you how to change the oil in your vehicle's engine. Do someone's laundry in exchange for them babysitting for you. There are all sorts of possibilities if cash is short.
Our ancestors knew how to do this as a matter of routine. Remember the Depression-era motto? "Use it up, wear it out, make it do, or do without." That was my parents' watchword during the Great Depression. I guess we're all going to hear it - and apply it - more often in the years ahead.
Peter
Unfortunately, I think your outlook on what is coming to the US is still too optimistic.
ReplyDeleteSo much can be done to prepare for what is coming if people would just take the time and learn.
Sadly, too many believe it can't happen here.
Sir,
ReplyDeleteRegard the following quote from your post:
" However, we can't afford not to prepare for the sort of dangers that are bearing down on us. Even if it's in a small way, we should be striving to build up a month or two's reserves of essential foodstuffs, so that if we get laid off work, or a system outage makes credit cards temporarily unusable, or we find that meat prices suddenly double or triple in a month, we can get by until things improve."
With great regret, and a certain sorrow, may I respectfully suggest to you that things are not going to improve? This is the initial stage of something much bigger, and unfortunately it will not get better. The crises are converging, and feeding each other in turn, and the momentum is now approaching an inflection point.
The things we have all been focusing on, these many months, are only the foreground action. There is something much larger, a deeper backdrop that renders our current concerns, well,... irrelevant:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihwoIlxHI3Q&list=PLHSoxioQtwZf1-8QeggXIVdZ-abyJXaO1&index=1
This is a link to a summary video at a channel called Suspicious Observers. The science is solid, and large portions of the various theories have only been confirmed in the last eighteen months. We have been watching this since 2004, in college...
It would seem, then, that we are beset on all sides, and there is an end in sight, but most of us won't live to see it.
I am sorry.
God help us all.
Mike in Canada
The world wide cotton crop has suffered the same fate as most of the food crops. Pakistan's floods wiped out 90% of their cotton, India has been a net exported of cotton and textiles for years and is importing cotton now. The Texas cotton crop is down by about 2/3 and the California crop is also down but I haven't been able to find out how much. If you think you will need it, buy cotton clothing now. A friend of mine is buying larger sizes for outerwear for her growing young boy in fear that she won't be able to get appropriate sizes when he needs them.
ReplyDeleteAs bad as the obvious outlook is, the reality will be worse. One of my big concerns is that I am not seeing some shortage that I won't recognize until it is too late.
I wonder about statement like 'we can't afford' when if you buy 1 cup of coffee or 1 pack of smokes or a frozen dinner during 1 week then you can buy extra. I am on a fixed income and yet back in early 2020 every time I went to grocery store if I bought a can of corn I would buy 2 can's and an extra bag of beans, lentils or rice. Didn't add but a few dollars to overall bill but I now have about 2 years worth of food in the house. There are sale ads on app's on your cell that are free. Each week on Monday I pull up the adds on Flipp and see what on sale in my area. Most people don't really look at the little things that cost a buck or two but they do add up. Hubby was a great giver of gifts. He constantly brought things home with the 'it only cost a few dollars'. So one month I saved everything he bought and we went and returned all of them. His few dollars added to $139. for 30 days at a time when we couldn't afford that expenditure. So pennies do add up.
ReplyDeleteRice, beans, and grains. Yikes. We diabetics are screwed.
ReplyDeleteAt the same time we're trying to afford to eat, we should be pushing back on the agenda that's put us where we are in the first place! Sure, we can forego meat for rice and beans, but what happens when rice and beans become scarce... and expensive??? Look at Venezuela!!! Much of our food crops are being sent to places like... China. MOST of our diesel is sent to Europe. Only now, as the shortage of Diesel threatens our economy... and an election... is diesel bound for Europe being diverted back to the US. This year's harvests are smaller, meaning less food next year. I'm sure that these scales are being thumbed by various politicians until AFTER Election Day. Somehow though, there's enough food to feed the FIVE MILLION ILLEGAL ALIENS Biden has res-carpeted into the country. California takes in millions of illegal aliens and then tells its citizens that there's no enough water or power, that w just have to suck it up. Our Social Security benefits are ALWAYS being targeted. Funny thing though, WELFARE is NEVER on the chopping block!!! THIS is the kind of thing we need to be pushing back on! Do it now, or spend the rest of your lives scrounging around in what USED to be America...
ReplyDeletePeter, there is only two methods of refining oil. The version used here in the US produces more gasoline than diesel, and the version used in the EU does the opposite.
ReplyDeleteI'm not clear if the same refinery can be repurposed to the other method. It's been many years since I learned about this system, so it's possible that this situation has changed. If not, the proportions of diesel to gasoline is fixed, although there is some wiggle room for the other products from oil. Basically, Biden has screwed the US.
Some fuels don't degrade and, if protected, last for years. I have a gorilla rack in the garage with about 500 pounds of charcoal sitting on top. I doubt a single bag is less than ten years old. It just sits there hoping never to be used. Of course this won't get me anywhere else but works just fine for cooking using a grill or a camp Dutch oven.
ReplyDeleteIf that's not an option, wood scraps and a rocket stove are a possibility. Combined with a thermal cooker, fuel use would be minimal.
We used our thermal cooker on a drive into Yellowstone one winter. A hot lunch was mighty welcome when the nearest restaurant was at least an hour away and the temps remained well below freezing.
Even rice and beans aren't real useful if you can't cook them.
I'm slightly less pessimistic, because the American people tend to be both industrious and creative facong intractable problems. Times will certainly be tough, and those used to getting handouts will likely suffer. This blog, though, serves as Exhibit A in the resilience of true Americans. We see a problem looming, and begin developing solutions.
ReplyDeleteWith regard to Will's post, refinery cracking units are purpose built to take particular crude oils- as not all crudes are equal in composition. As an example, the US refineries are geared more towards high-sulfur 'sour' crudes that produce more light hydrocarbons, from the days when we sourced most of our crude from the middle east and Central and South America. These days our shale gas and domestic land-based "Sweet" oils are of a different quality, which makes it worthwhile to both export sweet crude and import sour crude, although some of our refineries have retooled to be more versitile to handle sweet crude more efficiently.
ReplyDeleteAs I've mentioned elsewhere, we're still losing storage capacity every year, as the EPA makes it impossible for new fuel storage construction or improvements to existing facilities. Just in the past 5 years I personally have seen 3 storage terminals in the NY area dismantled- places that would contract with us for bulk fuel moves 50,000 or 120,000 barrels a few times a week.
I don't believe that this confluence of events is random at all.
As a poster upthread said, there are certain segments of the population that are about to be truly, completely screwed. My father isn't diabetic, but his diet is extremely limited, expensive, and a lot of the staples aren't cutting it. I've been eyeballing this for over a year, so I am not too worried for him beyond what I should be!. But, 'survival of the fittest' is going to start getting ugly and real.
ReplyDeleteI don't think it will be an immediate or overnight change, this is the frog in the boiling pot situation. People who might have been fine in the mid 1990s-2000s era will no longer be fine, they will die sooner and faster in the late 2020s into the 2040s. Yet, it won't be all that obvious, this decline is slow. In a millenia or two it will look fast; but for us living it, it will be gradual. I think comparisons to the fall of Rome are completely overrated. Except when it comes to the timescale. It was over two centuries, obvious in hindsight, that Rome truly, irreversibly fell. The seeds for failure were two centuries before that.
I would prefer an overnight shock. That tends to stimulate people to do something.
Seven days, then we will have at least a 'partial' answer to what the next years will bring... Right now it's NOT looking good!
ReplyDeleteLawDog needs help with legal fees. Details will be found shortly on Old NFO's blog. Please spread the word.
ReplyDeleteIf it helps, I've found that the canned Chili at Costco has a surprising amount of protein, and the canned 'roast beef' tastes good. I keep Minute Rice since it is pre-cooked and my fuel supply is limited and vulnerable. The disposable 1lb propane bottles I bought in 1999 are still rust-free and have fuel, but I buy newer ones and use the old ones for camping or to test out my kit. They are stored outside for obvious reasons.
ReplyDeleteI'm in earthquake country so I'm used to having extra water around, too. 1 gal/day means a 40-pack of 0.5l bottles is good for 5 person-days.
Hamsters may be hoarders, but at least we're selective.
Americans are industrious and can solve problems as has been proven repeatedly. However, we have a government that is stoking the situation, not helping with it.
ReplyDeleteOur government, like the comment above on the EPA, is our biggest problem. Those in charge are insulated from the reality they are creating and are not interested in helping the common man. Our young have been constantly denigrated, kept in ignorance, demoralized, and taught that someone will take care of them.
I do not believe the mid-terms will change anything. Between election fraud, RINOs and special interest groups we will not see a change.
Followed someone in Puerto Rico after Katrina. After 5 days the neighbors had a "Right" to help themselves to the preps the blogger had made.
The point is this house of cards has purposely been engineered to be fragile and it is going to break bad. If you have prepped you are going to be seen as the evil rich who is hoarding. I expect government will try price controls and probably nationalization of the food chain.
Keep in mind that energy controls not just food, but heating and communication as well. Who will be essential workers allowed fuel? If you are rural like me, it is a gallon of gas even to get into town.
This may be closer to nuclear winter than we can imagine, unless we ignore the government and start solving problems. Many folks in my area aren't fooled and are making preps. Figure for electric and fuel shortages. Rural will lose out to the cities further exacerbating the food problems (short term thinking about riots). This will be a problem of years.
The question is, are we willing to fix it and if so, how?
There are still "bargains" to be found here in the mountains of NC if you are willing to hit multiple stores to purchase them. Bone in chicken breasts $1.49/lb, whole chickens $0.99/lb, boneless chicken breasts and center cut pork loin for $1.70-$1.99/lb. Vacuum seal and freeze in portions you usually use. We are still eating frozen meats vacuum sealed almost 2 years ago but continue to buy the sales each week to replace what we use.
ReplyDelete5 gallon buckets of bean, rice, pasta, grains and more sealed in Mylar bags and stored away. Greenhouse kit purchased late last spring goes up next week. Fall crops of broccoli, brussel sprouts, turnips, kholrabi, beets, spinach and many other greens are growing. Grow lights on shelving setup in the heated garage will provide micro greens all winter. Two to three years of seeds sealed and stored away. Firewood stacked high and dry. We have been prepping for years at a slow pace as budget allowed and geared up big time late 2019. It is not too late to add to your preps if you shop the bargains, but it is getting more expensive every week and it is just going to get worse.
https://www.zerohedge.com/commodities/possibility-additional-outbreaks-bird-flu-strikes-iowa-egg-farm-million-hens
No severe shortages here yet but prices are going up every week. Electric prices stable and have not gone up compared to 18 months ago, but not sure how long our small electric co-op can maintain that. Rough waters ahead without a doubt. Trust in the Lord.
https://ncrenegade.com/data-points/
@hamsterman, that recommendation for 1 gal/person/day is subsistence level at best. You will be far closer to reality at 5 gals/per/day. That's based on my hurricane aftermath experience in Houston, and the big freeze last year.
ReplyDeleteThe good news is that it all doesn't have to be potable, just clean, as much of it will be used to flush toilets, and maintain hygiene. I've got clean water in "rainwater" barrels that could easily be filtered/boiled/or otherwise treated if needed for cooking or drinking, but in the mean time can be used as is for other jobs.
After Ike, I seriously upgraded our storage situation to where we are now with almost 500 gallons for the 2 adults, 2 kids, one small dog. I added small backpacking filters and a whole lotta bleach to the stores too so we can prep the water if needed.
For long term collection, I've got an inflatable kiddie pool in a box, and some other empty containers. Rolls of plastic sheet are cheap insurance too.
nick
50lb sack of corn is still $12. Get a few bags!
ReplyDeleteGood morning all,
ReplyDeleteIt is very helpful to have information from all around the country, (and world) to help us prepare. It is true that what is being seen in one area/region may not be what's happening elsewhere..yet. There is a youtube channel called southernprepper1, and he has been doing "boots on the ground" reports almost daily for many months. He gets reports from subscribers around the country and some international, about what is actually happening in their area. Readers here may be interested in that source of information.
I just came across this blog and appreciate the information by both the writer and those leaving comments. While I've been buying extra canned foods and rice/beans, can anyone offer a link so I can learn how to properly store food (e.g., mylar bags?) and better prep for the impending collapse? Any suggested writers, video blogs, etc. would be appreciated.
ReplyDeleteHi. Jud Morrison, Cherokee County, Texas.
ReplyDeleteI found you through Michael Yon. Good guy and a white hat if there ever was one.
I read November 8th mentioned by Old NFO... a monumental date. It's quite possibly the most important election in the history of the country, certainly the most important in my 6+ decades on this planet.
But in my estimationl, it is secondary to November 9th. This country is a powder keg and after all the votes are counted, someone's going to twitch, flinch, or wink like Val Kilmer at Thomas Haden Church --- with about the same results.
Keep your head down and your powder dry.
"it was the Time of the Preacher,
In the year of O-one,
Now the preachin' is over,
And the lesson's begun..." --- Willie Nelson