Midwest Flooding Will Cause Shortages of THESE FOODS

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Floods are dangerous natural disasters. People and animals can be swept away and easily drown. Floods can carry bacteria and pollutants great distances. Floods can bust through levees and tear down bridges. Floods can also lead to food shortages when they destroy farms, like the recent floods in the Midwest have. Smart preppers will take measures to beef up their food storage now.

By now, most US-based preppers have either heard about (or experienced) the massive, damaging floods in the Midwest since this past March. To make matters worse, the potential for more floods in key agricultural states looms in front of us as more rain is predicted for the rest of this spring.

So far, heavy flooding has impacted important agricultural states, including Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, and Missouri. From NOAA:

“Additional spring rain and melting snow will prolong and expand flooding, especially in the central and southern U.S. As this excess water flows downstream through the river basins, the flood threat will become worse and geographically more widespread.”

Let’s take a look at why this is happening, what are the real risks involved, and what steps you can take to keep you and your loved ones fed and safe during a food shortage.

What Caused the Floods

Last fall brought heavy rains which soaked the ground heading into winter. The frozen winter earth was covered in heavier than normal snowfall. As warmer temperatures arrived in early spring, the snow began to melt, but the ground remained frozen underneath.

This would have resulted in minor flooding, except that heavy rains followed. According to The New York Times,

“The flat, frozen land, unable to soak in much of the water, spread it fast and furious, the way liquid would spread across a tiled floor. And the runoff quickly filled many rivers and streams to overflowing.”

The Problems Farmers Now Face

Home gardeners may be familiar with the saying, “The garden waits for no one.” When it’s time to start seeds, time to plant, time to weed, etc, that’s it. It is time. We don’t get the luxury of starting any time we feel like. For example, you can’t start cucumbers and tomatoes outdoors in September in New England and expect to eat them.

Each plant has its own needs for ground temperature, moisture, and sunlight. If you wait too long, your plants just won’t grow well or at all. You snooze, you lose.

Commercial farmers are in the same boat. Many were waiting for the massive rains to stop so their fields could dry out enough to plant their crops. But, that break in the rain never came. For many farmers, the time has simply run out to plant staple crops like wheat and corn.

According to Bloomberg:

“There has never been weather like this, either. The 12 months that ended with April were the wettest ever for the contiguous U.S. That spurred other firsts: Corn plantings are further behind schedule for this time of year than they have been in records dating to 1980 and analysts are predicting an unheard-of 6 million acres intended for the grain may simply go unsown this year.”

Some farmers may get a chance at a later crop, depending upon how fast their fields dry up some and what crop and variety they are growing. Many will not. This could be a disastrous, monstrous loss of income for American family farmers. (source)

In Nebraska and Iowa, cattle and hogs were killed by the floodwaters and their feed lost.

The water rose so quickly that farmers in many areas had no time to get animals out, said Chad Hart, an agricultural economist at Iowa State University.

“Places that haven’t seen animal loss have seen a lot of animal stress. That means they’re not gaining weight and won’t be marketed in as timely a manner, which results in additional cost,” he said. (source)

Which Foods are Going to Be Scarce

When we look at the currently impacted states, here’s which crops and livestock will be impacted:

  • Wheat
  • Corn
  • Soybeans
  • Hay
  • Alfalfa
  • Oats
  • Beef
  • Dairy
  • Pork
  • Chicken
  • Eggs

Take a good look at that list. Grains are not just used for baking bread. They are used extensively in CAFOs for livestock feed. Grain prices go up, so does the cost of meat. Hay and alfalfa are also key crops for feeding cattle and horses. Check out the price increase for hay due to fires, drought, and now, flooding:

RAYMORE, Mo. — The price of hay has tripled for a lot of horse and livestock owners. Hay bales that usually cost $40 are now $150.

That’s because there’s a shortage in the region. The Midwest hay shortage is said to be the result of 2018 wildfires in Kansas, drought in Missouri and wet weather in Iowa. (source)

Also, take a look at nearly any food label on ready-made foods at your local grocery store. You will typically find wheat, corn, dairy, eggs, or soy in nearly every single convenience food out there.

Corn is used for corn syrup and high fructose corn syrup (HFCS). HFCS is added to everything from granola bars to breakfast cereals to deli meats. Corn is added as ethanol to our fuel. Wheat, corn starch, and modified corn starch are added as thickening agents to nearly every sauce. Good luck finding anything that comes packaged that doesn’t contain soy or soy lecithin.

Bottom line: our modern food supply is largely dependent upon grains and soy. With major producers losing at least one harvest this year, the cost of manufactured food and livestock feed will skyrocket. Meat and dairy will be doubly impacted. While many farms lost animals to floodwaters, and farmers lost money due to both lost animals and damage to property, the cost to feed those remaining animals is going to go through the roof.

Add to this livestock disease and tariffs and trade war with both Mexico and China, the two countries from whom we import the most food, both consumers and farmers are in deep financial trouble.

What a Food Shortage Means on Main Street

If that was a lot to take in, here are the four key takeaways about the flooding that you need to know:

  • Flooding has caused massive losses of grain and livestock.
  • Remaining livestock will be much more expensive to raise.
  • Nearly all manufactured and processed foods relies upon abundant, cheap inputs of wheat, corn, and soy.
  • Corn is used to make ethanol, which is added to our fuel at the pump

In a nutshell, expect everything to get more scarce and more expensive from food to fuel. The ever-shrinking middle class and the working poor will be hit the hardest. These groups receive no government assistance to offset the cost of food and do not have the financial resources to absorb the rising costs. This will lead to more and more families tightening their belt buckles, and potential slowdowns in other areas of the economy.

Those who do receive government assistance will also suffer as their benefits will not go up to meet the increased cost of food. And, if you think these folks will be placid, calm, and take this on the chin, think again. (See EBT riots below.)

If you want a great example of what a real food shortage looks like, Venezuela has given us ample evidence. While Venezuela has seen food shortages for entirely different reasons, the result is the same- bare shelves and hungry people. Hungry people are dangerous people. Check out Daisy Luther’s article, Venezuela Is Out of Food, for the stark reality.

A little closer to home, we can look back to 2013 and the EBT riots. As a quick recap, the EBT system suffered an outage for two hours, and people lost their minds. Walmarts closed as people began rioting and looting. Just two hours!

Springhill Police Chief Will Lynd said they were called in to help the employees at Walmart because there were so many people clearing the shelves. The Walmart Supercenter Mansfield shelves were cleared in two hours.

“It was worse than anything we had ever seen in this town,” Lynd said. “There was no food left on any of the shelves, and no meat left. The grocery part of Walmart was totally decimated.” (source)

Take These Steps Now

Mainstream media hasn’t touched this topic with a ten-foot pole. If they did, it would instill panic and a run on grocery stores immediately. The talking heads on TV are pretending there isn’t a potential crisis around the corner.

Don’t fall for it.

The best course of action is to stock up on food. Everyone’s situation is different. Some people have to stockpile in a city apartment, and others have acres to grow their own veggies and raise/hunt their own meat. Whatever your situation is, start thinking about what you eat and how to store those items.

Here are some ideas to get you started.

  • Buy a storage freezer. Check out Facebook and local sales apps if buying a new one is too costly.
  • Buy a cow or pig from a local farm for that freezer. This is the least expensive way to buy meat that I have found. It’s a lot up front, but the best price per pound.
  • Join a wholesale club and buy your meats there. You may need to cut up and portion your meat into freezer bags prior to freezing. This is the second least expensive way to buy meat that I know of, and it has a lower upfront cost.
  • Use a website, like Local Harvest, to find farms near you. Make good use of local CSA farms, farm stands, and farmers markets. You can find everything from meats to dairy, to produce without ever stepping foot into a grocery store. Local food is the hedge against the failures of centralized, modern agriculture.
  • Buy a pressure canner. I started out with a less pricey Mirro pressure canner, but now use the All American 921, which I love. Whenever you find a deal, or if you buy in bulk from a wholesale club, can up that extra food for a rainy day.
  • Buy cheap cuts and stock up. Check out my article on Homesteading Mom on pressure canning beef stew. Stew meat is inexpensive and lasts a long time in the pantry. Pressure canning ensures it is nice and tender.
  • Can’t afford to buy in bulk? Use this opportunity to talk with friends about prepping and make a group purchase.
  • If you have a yard, use some of it to grow some of your own food. Food is expensive. Seeds are cheap. It may be too late today to get certain summer vegetables in the ground depending upon where you live. But, most people still have time to plant a fall garden. If you don’t have much space, look into container gardening.
  • Stock up on grains in bulk – you can learn how to do it inexpensively here.
  • Make use of this site’s search feature! There are tons of great articles on food storage right here.
  • Better yet, check out some of Daisy Luther’s books like The Prepper’s Canning Guide, The Flat Broke Cookbook, and her new book due out next week (available for preorder), Prepper’s Pantry.

The idea of a food shortage is daunting, but don’t let that scare you off stocking that pantry.

What do you think?

What are your favorite food storage tips? Do you have any recipes that help you stretch your food budget? Share your insights in the comments section. We’re all in this together.

About Cat

Cat Ellis is an herbalist,  massage therapist, midwifery student, and urban homesteader from New England. She keeps bees, loves gardening and canning, and practice time at the range. She teaches herbal skills on her website, Herbal Prepper. Cat is a member of the American Herbalists Guild, and the author of two books, Prepper’s Natural Medicine and Prepping for a Pandemic.

Picture of Cat Ellis

Cat Ellis

Cat Ellis is an herbalist,  massage therapist, midwifery student, and urban homesteader from New England. She keeps bees, loves gardening and canning, and practice time at the range. She teaches herbal skills on her website, Herbal Prepper. Cat is a member of the American Herbalists Guild, and the author of two books, Prepper’s Natural Medicine and Prepping for a Pandemic.

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  • Cat, I agree with you that we’ll see major shortages in the corn crop this year. Virtually all farmers have passed their “prevent Planting” date for corn. That date for most soybeans is 6/19 and soybeans are typically the crop corn growers fall back on if they can’t plant corn. Right now the USDA crop forecasts are dismal for corn but not bad for wheat and beans.

    If, and it’s a big if, farmers aren’t able to get their beans planted, we’ll face a shortage there too. But the flip side is that if many corn farmers are able to switch to beans that harvest may end up just fine.

    A lot of corn is used as cattle feed and most of the farmers I know are planning to sell the cattle rather than bear the extra cost of feeding them. That means beef prices could actually go down while many other food prices are going up.

    • Well said, Ray White. People who don’t understand farming & ranching jump to some incomplete conclusions. It never hurts to stock up but panic is not necessary.

      • In the short term, beef prices may go down.

        I question the long term effect. How long will it take ranchers to rebuild/breed their stock back to normal numbers/supply to meet demand?
        Depending on what that looks like, feed costs (lack of feed/corn), other weather issues over the horizon, beef prices could go up.

        Regardless, prep well.

        Excuse me, I have to go and feed the replacement chicks, and breed the rabbits.

  • I bet if they didn’t grow GMO foods and grew organic, they would have incredible luck (blessings) with future crops.

    • Yes, that works so well, and is never-fail! I have 2 that are going constantly, so I get a couple of trays of sprouts per day. Living alone, I often tend to ‘graze’ or might eat something like part of a cooked chicken straight out of the container, so can get shortchanged on the veggie department. Being able to grab a small handfull of sprouts to munch on in the kitchen helps overcome this tendency.

      • Totally agree. Sprouts are easy, tasty and nutritious. I have 4 spouters but usually only keep 2 going at a time. I love alfalfa sprouts on a turkey sandwich and I make a mix of alfalfa, broccoli, clover and radish sprouts for sandwiches and salads. We sprout our own mung beans and peas for stir fry. Sprouts are the most dependable “crop” I grow–and my garden is usually productive. If you can grow your own food, or even a portion of it, you should.

        • Sunflower sprouts are my all-time favorite – they’re a little more hearty and can even be the base of a salad.

  • Interesting thing about the corn problem; TPTB just mandated 15% ethanol year-round.
    Nothing like adding to the problem.

    • Funny thing about that – enzymatic processing of waste wood pulp would get us fuel ethanol a whole lot cheaper. But no, they decided from the start to use corn. I find that interesting.

      • There isn’t much waste wood that is affordable. Energy plants that burn waste wood to make electricity have been closing like crazy. PURPA is forcing a bunch of them to stay operating even though they’re losing money.

        It’s also difficult to convert cellulose to ethanol.

        A noteworthy portion of corn goes to ethanol which goes to spirits.

        What I’m getting at is that waste wood is probably way too expensive to bother with for ethanol in most parts of the country.

  • New England is home of cranberries. Maybe other parts of country that are flooded could grow cranberry.because you crow in flooded swamp.you need fishing boots and overalls that stop water sinking into your skin.

  • I overheard some store employees talking about how they were being shorted on strawberries, too. I’m in Arizona. Time for people who can to start buying grass fed beef, and like the author says, get some chickens of their own!

    • I live in Texas. Usually this time of year the strawberry prices are very low. I stock up with my dehydrator. Wednesday went to the store. Price was nearly double on the berries. Had to leave them there.

  • Rice is grown in a lot of the southern states that were flooded too, so rice will become more expensive and less available.

  • Good news! SHORTAGE of corn syrup. Maybe we can go back to regular sugar. It’s a bit more healthier, IMO.

  • ETOH (ethanol) requires more energy to produce than it provides as a gasoline additive. It is also destructive on smaller gasoline engines. I know because it has cost me $$$ repairing chain saws and similar power equipment. President Trump has OK’ed the percentage of ETOH to move from 10% to 15%, which will be more costly and destructive to an entire new category of engines. Much of the corn crop grown in the Mid-West goes to the production of ethanol, not food products. It has been more lucrative for the growers than food, including livestock feed, and is subsidized by…. guess who.

    Other than livestock feed, most of the products affected appear to be processed food items and unhealthy ingredients such a High-Fructose corn syrup used as a sweeter in place of sugar. We do not consume processed foods for both health and cost reasons. It is both healthier and more cost effective to cook from scratch. Maybe more people should learn how to do that?

    We all can’t just grow our own food that will cover us for the entire year, but most of us can plant in pots around our homes or raise small home gardens to supplement our food needs. We use raised beds and large pots ourselves and have been enjoying fresh organic produce already this year. You can, too.

    Eat local and seasonal. Visit local farmer’s markets. We have just ordered another quarter beef that is grass fed and grass finished… no grains. It meets our need for meat for most of a year and its healthier and cheaper overall than beef from the grocery.

    While this Spring’s wet weather is a disaster for some, it isn’t for everyone. Growers in my region will likely see more and better sales than previously.

    • Some areas of the Midwest were not as affected as others. All the corn is in my area. Some were planting soybeans early this week. A number of retired farmers stepped up to the plate and helped plant. I’m not sure how much of the corn crop in my area is sold for ethanol use. Some farmers use it for feed but there are a number of grass fed cattle producers.

      Will be interesting to see hay sales go. Most in my area get 3 cuttings, not unusual to get 4. I’ll be curious to find out how much is sold to buyers outside my state.

      One thing I’ve not heard mentioned is how the price of pet food will be affected. That too is going to jump in price. Those who feed raw might not be as impacted.

      As the article stated, there will be fall out. Always best to be prepared as none of us can predict the future.

    • ALL of this so called weather is the direct and irrefutable result of Geoengineering through Weather Modification. Learn more at http://www.geoengineeringwatch.org. There is NO natural weather any more. This has all been orchestrated by TPTB and has been for a long time now. Oh how I miss those days of clear deep blue sky devoid of the new milky white haze and exceptional sunsets resulting from the refraction off of all the nano particulate matter in the stratosphere and slowly raining down on all of us ever increasing the incidence of the new normal, Alzheimer’s & Dementia for all. Research aluminum toxicity and Solar Radiation Management to understand the causation.

  • Just left the Midwest last week & the area was still flooded in many sections along the river. I did see many farms planted even if the crop never gets harvested because they opt-in to crop insurance. They still have to plant their fields knowing there won’t come in so they can get paid for crop failure.

  • I am a gardener here in the UK, and I find that a cheap effective way to buy seeds is to buy the grocery store dried beans for cooking; amazingly, they spout! Also, I use popcorn seed for my corn (or sweetcorn as they call it here in the UK). I just plant the bean seed or popcorn seed directly into the ground.

    Also, if you are going to store seeds (whether dried bean, popcorn seed, or garden center seeds) then you need to store them in your refrigerator for long term storage (not the freezer). Most seeds last a year or two in the refrigerator, but some amazingly last three years stored in this cool environment.

  • You Need More Than Food to Survive
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