Solar The Grand Solar Minimum (ORIGINAL)

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TxGal

Day by day
Oppenheimer Ranch Project has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WXSIO1b3oR0


I-25 reopens following Crashes & Blizzard Conditions - Lake Tahoe CA Just Saw 114″ of Snow in 3-Days

Run time is 8:52

I-25 reopens between Castle Rock and Colorado Springs following closure due to crashes, blizzard conditions https://bit.ly/2Qybjk8 Lake Tahoe, CA Just Saw 114″ of Snow in 3-Days… https://bit.ly/398NyFR
After record rainfall on Thursday, blustery Friday kicks off cold stretch for southern Wisconsin https://bit.ly/2vCoQ2O
The 5 Worst Winter U.S. Cities of 2019-20 https://bit.ly/398OI4b Snow may be headed for Northeast just days after spring arrives https://bit.ly/2QOqhCT
SNOWFALL ANALYSIS https://www.weather.gov/crh/snowfall
Heavy Rain and Severe Storms Possible from the Deep South to the Northeast https://www.weather.gov/
Spring is likely to be warmer than normal across most of the US, NOAA says https://cnn.it/3bkcMTf
GFS Model https://bit.ly/3djGBoL
Earthquake with magnitude Mw4,2 in Reykjanes volcano https://www.jonfr.com/volcano/
Worldwide Volcano News http://bit.ly/2v9JJhO
THE NORTHERN HEMISPHERE IS HAVING ONE OF ITS SNOWIEST WINTERS SINCE RECORDS BEGAN IN 1979 https://bit.ly/39868Or
Greenland Mass Ice Budget https://bit.ly/2Qteh9B
Arctic Sea Ice Volume https://bit.ly/2UvboGC
What scientists learned after firing a small cannonball into a near-Earth asteroid https://cnn.it/3bdTWgf
 

TxGal

Day by day
New podcasts from Adapt 2030:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4g38-EJR0v4


Earthquake and Global Cooling Cycles, Whats Next to 2024 (951)

Run time is 12:44

As the largest earthquake to hit Croatia in 140 years occurred, our Earth is beginning to enter an electromagnetic anomaly zone during the next four years as the gas giant planets form a perfect square in one quadrant of the solar system that hasn't been seen since 575AD. CO2 levels globally set to decrease this year as the world ceases business, and because if the decline in solar activity on a 400 year cycle the planet will cool and the IPCC will be there to take credit for a natural cycle. EU survey says 60%+ want to end short haul domestic flights indefinitely.

============================================

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sha8yxudI5s


Global Agriculture Locks Up Do We Starve (952)

Run time is 10:04

Over the last two months as China locked up, so did its agriculture and fertilizer industries. This means delayed or no planting for China with fertilizer shortages in their country as well massive shortfalls for N. American and E.U growers. The climate system is in dissaray from Earth's electromagnetic coupling with the four gas giants moving into 2023-2024. Plantations are ceasing operations across the globe for the next month and global shipping continues to decline. How will the world feed itself this year? Limit One is the new global mantra for 2020.
 

TxGal

Day by day
A new podcast from Ice Age Farmer (I believe AG Barr said critical med supplies and not everything in general, and not from individuals but businesses), but I'll post this anyhow):

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPDwJ6ruan4


"WE ARE COMING FOR YOU" - Preppers & Food Supply Crisis

Run time is 14:15

"If you got any large quantities of material that this country needs right now, we’re going to come for you."-- Trump's executive order makes it a crime to store "unreasonable" amounts of ANYTHING the country needs, as the supply chain shuts down: garden stores, seed companies closing doors as people frantically start gardens. People must understand there are food shortages ahead -- can you grow food?
 

TxGal

Day by day
Been crazy busy working on the garden, planting trees, and I'm still trying to decide on getting some new pullets now - while I know they are available - or waiting until summer like we usually do. I think it's good to keep some young ones in the pipeline for egg laying going forward as others age. Especially since - at this time - DH does not want a rooster again.

My biggest concern is that pullets simply may not be available in the summer with all the craziness going on. Is anyone getting more chickens/other animals right now, or planning to? I do know chicks have been selling out much faster than they usually do.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, things are getting the same here as they are other places I've been reading about. I suspect if you don't get your pullet chicks now, you may not get them at all, let alone anything to feed them with. If you don't have a safe near neighbor to "borrow" a rooster from now and then, possibly there should be a couple of "oops" roosters in with the new pullet chicks. I mean, after all, efficiency in the hatcheries could be breaking down now as people there start getting sick like they have been doing at Amazon, or walking off like at those chicken processing plants.

I'm still listening to some podcasts, but very few. They are all saying the same things and the repetition isn't at all helpful. Christian has gone total conspiracy theory, and even if he's right, that isn't real helpful, either, at this stage. DuByne didn't sound quite so odd in today's podcast and it was certainly better to listen to.

I'm getting about an average of five eggs a day from my eight hens and they are mostly full-sized eggs now. Looks like it's finally stopped raining for a while and I'm hoping to get a few outdoor things done during most of the next ten days. I don't have much lung power left and it's taking a long time to do the least little thing, but I've totally isolated myself now so can't have anyone in to help.

My brother from Iowa and his wife have been here a couple of weeks and will be going back soon. I haven't even been able to see them and will only do so at a distance when they can stop by. I hate for them to go back to a big city, because I don't think I'll ever see them again. I'm not healthy enough to count on being around when they make their fall trip down here. And as of now I don't know whether things will be better by then, or worse, or even if the world as we've known it will even exist then. Can it be possible that all this is hype and it will all go back to normal? I would be ever so happy to have only the GSM to concern myself with. At least the GSM isn't CONTAGIOUS!!!!!

I AM going to plant things, and hope there will be enough sun. Most will be in containers so the plants won't drown. I've seen a few videos telling me which food plants will grow with minimal sun and they are the things I'd already planned to mainly use this year.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Ice Age Farmer has put up a new report and everyone needs to listen to this one right away.

It is only 14:30 minutes, and I swear he is sounding almost frantic!

He's done a good job of connecting lockdown with non-availablity of farm workers and materials needed to get crops in. Also he talks about the same in South American causing the crops they need to harvest and ship having to be left to rot in the fields.

There is still a possibility that I will be getting at least a breeding pair of rabbits. Hoping to get two or three of the older cages cleaned up and repaired sometime in the coming week.
 
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TxGal

Day by day
Ice Age Farmer has put up a new report and everyone needs to listen to this one right away.

It is only 14:30 minutes, and I swear he is sounding almost frantic!

He's done a good job of connecting lockdown with non-availablity of farm workers and materials needed to get crops in. Also he talks about the same in South American causing the crops they need to harvest and ship having to be left to rot in the fields.

There is still a possibility that I will be getting at least a breeding pair of rabbits. Hoping to get two or three of the older cages cleaned up and repaired sometime in the coming week.

Martinhouse and others - medical appts today, but I was able to swing by a Tractor Supply and get Rhode Island Red pullets to add to our flock...they are selling out FAST! Also, they still had seed potatoes, I got more of those, too. Seriously, get what ever you can.

Here is Ice Age Farmer's podcast:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qDFCdw9D_98


Food Production SHUTDOWN - You MUST Grow Your Own Now

Run time is 14:28

Workers are refusing to show up at food producers, processors and packers around the world. They WANT you to think that only big companies can continue to operate. NO! *YOU* ARE CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE! YOU must grow your own! As UK and France create "Land Armies" to help farmers, the USA descends further into complete shutdown and chaos.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Ice Age Farmer has put up a new report and everyone needs to listen to this one right away.

It is only 14:30 minutes, and I swear he is sounding almost frantic!

He's done a good job of connecting lockdown with non-availablity of farm workers and materials needed to get crops in. Also he talks about the same in South American causing the crops they need to harvest and ship having to be left to rot in the fields.

There is still a possibility that I will be getting at least a breeding pair of rabbits. Hoping to get two or three of the older cages cleaned up and repaired sometime in the coming week.

ALL, YOU REALLY NEED TO LISTEN TO THIS PODCAST!!

Holy...Cow....In all the time we've listened to IAF, I've never heard him speak so emphatically and so rapidly. My gosh!! You are right!

I hope you can get the rabbits you want to get. In all our years, I have NEVER seen baby chicks selling out as quickly as I have in the last few weeks. One major feed store got two shipments of chicks in - one Saturday, and one on Monday. I called today, and they were already sold out. Lady I spoke it said it was crazy there.

I was lucky I was able to get the chick starter I did today, only two bags of any brand left (pricier brand), and I bought one. When I walked into the store heading for the chicks, there were several people in line with chick boxes, some had two boxes. We are going down one heck of a rocky road.....
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I called Tractor Supply intending to grab some sex links. They said they were out and would have more in a few days. She said you had to be there because they sold out almost immediately. It was a two hour drive, so I didn't do that crapshoot. I bought all my chick stuff before the madness hit.

I ordered chicks from Ideal Hatchery who are in Texas. They will be here day after tomorrow, if all goes well. I got Gold laced Wyandottes. I got some roos this time because I want to make chicks as well as eggs. I don't expect to be able to just up and drive to town for birds next time.

We are out in the middle of nowhere, but I have started using padlocks on all the buildings and stock pens. We have trap cams up. For all the good it would do.

We are going down a rocky road. Stay safe, ya'll.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Ice Age Farmer has put up a new report and everyone needs to listen to this one right away.

It is only 14:30 minutes, and I swear he is sounding almost frantic!

He's done a good job of connecting lockdown with non-availablity of farm workers and materials needed to get crops in. Also he talks about the same in South American causing the crops they need to harvest and ship having to be left to rot in the fields.

There is still a possibility that I will be getting at least a breeding pair of rabbits. Hoping to get two or three of the older cages cleaned up and repaired sometime in the coming week.

If you get Rabbits, their manure is ready to use right out of the animal. Mulch your veggies with the Rabbit hay right out of the cages and I assure you a good harvest. It's like a natural version of time release Osmakote fertilizer. Anyone who has the room to have Rabbits as well as garden needs to make sourcing some Rabbits and a strong safe shady shelter for them a priority. You will never need commercial fertilizer again.
 

TxGal

Day by day
I called Tractor Supply intending to grab some sex links. They said they were out and would have more in a few days. She said you had to be there because they sold out almost immediately. It was a two hour drive, so I didn't do that crapshoot. I bought all my chick stuff before the madness hit.

I ordered chicks from Ideal Hatchery who are in Texas. They will be here day after tomorrow, if all goes well. I got Gold laced Wyandottes. I got some roos this time because I want to make chicks as well as eggs. I don't expect to be able to just up and drive to town for birds next time.

We are out in the middle of nowhere, but I have started using padlocks on all the buildings and stock pens. We have trap cams up. For all the good it would do.

We are going down a rocky road. Stay safe, ya'll.

Yep, TS is going through chicks like crazy. I really wanted Barred Rocks, but RIRs were a good second choice for us. We actually have two TS stores within about 30 mts of us - the other was nearly sold out already....as soon as they're out on the floor, they're getting snapped up.

We got our Bantams from Ideal two years ago...they've done pretty darn well once we got past the crazy wet weather we had last year.

We also have solar motion lights going up soon, game cameras, and I've also bought locks for every single poultry door on all our poultry housing. I'm not taking any chances with the poultry, they're too valuable on the homestead. Keeping a sharp watch on the cattle, too. I almost bought some turkey poults last week from the big feed store about an hr+ from us. They sold out the next day. Just wow. We'd have had to building another housing unit for the turkeys, just don't have the time right now....but we really love turkey.

I'm just thankful I got the pullets I got today. I kinda wish I'd gotten more. Thankfully, I did get a lot of feed a few weeks ago.

Martinhouse, I owe you a pm, sorry I'm late - lots of med appointments and running around, along with the garden and poultry...hopefully tomorrow.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Thanks all you guys for replying. Glad I'm not the only one hearing what I'm hearing from these things. I just noticed there's another short one from DuByne and I think I'll check it out before I head to bed.

Seeker, it's been less than a year since I got rid of my most recent rabbits. I still have a mountain of their droppings and I'm very aware of how great they are for my gardens. I wouldn't bother with rabbits any more if things were normal, but there are a few of us around here who will be needing pet food and when the canned stuff and the dry stuff are all gone, young rabbits will make dandy pet food, along with the occasional eggs for the fats they contain.

TxGal, you certainly don't have to PM me just because I sent one. Use your time for all those important chores. PMs can wait!
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
DH tried for at least two years to raise rabbits. He lost more babies than he raised. The climate here just doesn't seem condusive to raise rabbits. He gave most of the cages to a young couple that have 6 children. This fellow ended up giving the cages to someone else because he had the same issues that DH had. As for chickens he recently got female chickens from tractor supply and has some more coming from my cousin that put 24 eggs in the incubator. You can never tell how many will actually make it. And he has been working on his brooder room to secure it from varments. We have about 12 hens that are laying well right now but you always have to keep adding to the flock. We give our extra eggs to the young pastor at the church, he has three small children and they all eat eggs. We can only eat so many, although I ordered some pickleing spices to make pickled eggs with some of our extras.

Judy
 

summerthyme

Administrator
_______________
Judy... in the deep South, you almost need an air conditioned building for rabbits. I've read that some people do well by raising them in large outdoor pens, where they can actually dig into the soil to make dens for the babies (colony raising system). Also, deep shade helps. Most who do try raising them in the south end up skipping any breeding for 3-5 of the hottest months... here in the North we used to not breed any to kindle in January through mid March. I haven't considered getting rabbits again for dog food, but I might have to think about it. I'd have to build all new cages, etc... we haven't had them for at least 25 years. We much prefer chicken for ourselves, and a few tame bantam hens that free range ("tame" so I can find their nests and substitute full sized eggs for them to hatch and raise) have worked really well to produce dog food.

Summerthyme
 

Faroe

Un-spun
Yes, walk-in colony pens on the ground. Wire floor, with litter built up so they can and do dig. Deep shade, multiple layers. I hose down the pens every morning in the hottest part of the summer, but I loose at least one bunny every year to heat. No breeding in the summer.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
My sister who lives outside of Fort Hood kept her rabbits in a big ring of fencing around a shade tree and they did fine. There is terrible soil in that part of Texas and that's probably why they never tunneled out. Not sure what kind of shelter she had for them or if she did any breeding as they were just pets. But they were nice and healthy. I think she kept her Guinea pigs right in with them.
 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
Judy... in the deep South, you almost need an air conditioned building for rabbits. I've read that some people do well by raising them in large outdoor pens, where they can actually dig into the soil to make dens for the babies (colony raising system). Also, deep shade helps. Most who do try raising them in the south end up skipping any breeding for 3-5 of the hottest months... here in the North we used to not breed any to kindle in January through mid March. I haven't considered getting rabbits again for dog food, but I might have to think about it. I'd have to build all new cages, etc... we haven't had them for at least 25 years. We much prefer chicken for ourselves, and a few tame bantam hens that free range ("tame" so I can find their nests and substitute full sized eggs for them to hatch and raise) have worked really well to produce dog food.

Summerthyme
We had to have the cages off the ground because of ants, ants would have killed them quicker than the heat. Although the cages were shaded by a roof in kind of a breeze way situation, open on each end. There is no way we could have afforded to keep them in an air conditioned area. I think DH gave up the fight to keep them alive when I refused to eat rabbit meat. I was kind of squimish when I first moved to the country to even eat venison, but it didn't take long for me to appreciate how good it is. I quit referring to it as eating bambi. When DH kills a deer I thank it for its sacrifice to provide food for us.

Judy
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has some new podcasts out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7xaxWUwLdFQ


Vorticies Cavitate at Storm Center as Earth’s Atmosphere Churns (953)

Run time is 7:29

Mesovorticies cavitating withing a extra-tropical cyclone also forming cyclonic lows within a near record low pressure winter storm in the N. Atlantic. Extra-tropical cyclone off west Africa joins the Mesovorticies at each end making a rough figure 8 in the atmosphere. Locust plague USA in 1870, plus snow in Lebanon and record snow in the N. Hemisphere for the fourth year in a row.

===========================


View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UkdgpF6eB-M


Drastically Outside Harmony With Nature Crop Losses Likely (Craig Simpson 1/3)

Run time is 30:46

Craig Simpson from Radiant Creators and David DuByne of ADAPT 2030 discuss preparing your mind, body and spirit as our societies move into the intensifying Grand Solar Minimum with never ending food price rises and the reset of our civilization.

•Wild foraging in the desert
•Time of the Neo-Prepper
•Gardening with the moon cycles
•Magnetic reversals and evolutionary leaps
•Cryptocurrency awareness rising
•Central bank manipulation
•Global debt reset
•Smart contracts
•Smart contracts for grain deliveries
•Yuga cycle of dark and light energies
•Vibrational frequency changes
•War on cash
 

TxGal

Day by day
Melanie posted the below on the Coronavirus thread on the Main, #38,129. I would not be surprised at all if that happened in the US:


Here it comes...got your card ready? I can just imagine what the "Healthy Eating Plate" several similar articles is going to look like...your choice of tofu or bug burgers?...This is in the UK...



www.dailymail.co.uk


Britain SHOULD be braced for food rationing, academic expert warns
Bryce Evans, associate professor of history and politics at Liverpool Hope University, said the UK should be braced for food rationing because relying on the public to exercise restraint 'won't work'.

www.dailymail.co.uk
www.dailymail.co.uk




War-time food rationing will likely come into force 'in a matter of weeks' because relying on public to exercise shopping restraint during lockdown 'won't work', academic expert warns

  • Professor Bryce Evans of Liverpool Hope University issued stark warning today
  • Warned government is not taking crisis seriously enough regarding food supply
  • Is calling on authorities to look at lessons learned from the two World Wars
  • Argues we need a clear, government-led rationing system for essential goods
  • Says it's currently a matter of weeks before things start to become real problem
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?
By HAYLEY RICHARDSON FOR MAILONLINE

PUBLISHED: 20:42, 25 March 2020 | UPDATED: 10:20, 26 March 2020

The UK should be braced for food rationing because relying on the public to exercise shopping restraint simply 'won't work', according to an academic expert.
Bryce Evans, associate professor of history and politics at Liverpool Hope University, said we're not at crisis point yet, and urged people not to panic buy.

But he's also calling on authorities to look at the lessons learned from the First and Second World Wars to combat any potential shortages in the current coronavirus crisis.

He warned history proves that urging people not to be selfish or stockpile is futile - and it's unfair to delegate that task to supermarket workers, too.

The UK should be braced for food rationing because relying on the public to exercise shopping restraint simply 'won't work', according to an academic expert. Pictured: empty shelves at a branch of Waitrose in London last week


+4
The UK should be braced for food rationing because relying on the public to exercise shopping restraint simply 'won't work', according to an academic expert. Pictured: empty shelves at a branch of Waitrose in London last week
Professor Evans added that we could see the formation of a new Ministry of Food to ensure items can be delivered to doors via online shopping and paid for with 'ration coupons'.

And empty school kitchens could even be commandeered to make food en masse, before being delivered via courier, leaning on established supermarket networks.
Environment Secretary pleads to public to stop panic buying

He told FEMAIL: 'There's a risk we're still not taking this crisis seriously enough when it comes to our food supply. There needs to be a big shift in current consumption behaviours, because it's a matter of weeks before things start to become a real problem if we continue in the same vein.

'And I can see rationing on the horizon. Both wars show us that what the government is doing right now - telling people not to panic buy, to voluntarily curtail consumption - just doesn't work, sadly.

Professor Evans said we could see the formation of a new Ministry of Food to ensure items can be delivered to doors via online shopping and paid for with 'ration coupons'. Pictured: empty shelves of beer and cider in Tesco Walkden, north west of Manchester


Professor Evans said we could see the formation of a new Ministry of Food Pto ensure items can be delivered to doors via online shopping and paid for with 'ration coupons'. Pictured: empty shelves of beer and cider in Tesco Walkden, north west of Manchester

'It has to be followed up with a clear, government-led rationing system of essential goods.
'This was previously done in collaboration with retailers and it can be replicated again, accompanied by price controls and greater penalties for the worst racketeers and black marketeers.

Bryce Evans, associate professor of history and politics at Liverpool Hope University


Bryce Evans, associate professor of history and politics at Liverpool Hope University
'Rationing can't be left up to poor old supermarket checkout staff, who have to deal with anger and arguments - the government must step in.
'

The online ration system would also seem likely since we do not want scenes like at the weekend, where hundreds of people descend on a supermarket at the same time, because this increases the risk of transmission greatly.'
Associate Professor Evans, who's written extensively on nutrition and public feeding in times of war, explains how 'established food supply networks for the most needy are already coming under pressure', with food banks closing and donations drying up.

He added: 'The system is under enormous strain and it's going to impact upon the poorest people. If things accelerate as fast as they are doing in Europe, we have a problem.

'Remember that a lot of our food is imported from Europe and beyond. If those networks falter, it has a knock-on effect for us all.'

How supermarkets could revert to online only shopping and policing the aisles to stop panic buying
  • Police: The British Retail Consortium has suggested that retailers could work with the police to protect their staff and customers
  • Shop online: Experts have suggested that stores limit people to shopping online, as the Co-Op, Morrisons and Waitrose hire more delivery drivers
  • WWII Ration cards: Another option is to issue ration cards that get stamped or scanned when you buy items. This would prevent people being able to flout rationing restrictions by simply returning later or going to a different shop on the same day. Dr Andrew Hughes from the ANU College of Business and Economics told Daily Mail Australia: 'We have seen rationing work in Australia recently when supermarkets asked people to show their driving licenses to buy baby formula last year.'
  • Ban on new customers: Ocado has suspended new sign-ups as demand for the online supermarket outstripped its supply ten times.
As the crisis continues, Professor Evans predicts a new Ministry of Food - the type that oversaw rationing in World War II - to oversee a 'national kitchen' food supply system.

He said: 'During both World Wars, we had a Ministry of Food. And you might see the emergence of that again.
'Many schools are now empty. Why not use the empty kitchens in these buildings to cook food, which can then be delivered via courier?

'This was done in wartime through the popular Queen's messenger convoys - vans driven by young women which would drive at high speed and distribute food after bombing raids.

'We could see the UberEats or JustEats model being taken over by the government, to establish an efficient and affordable system of doorstep delivery.

'It's a huge culture shift, and government intervention could represent the end of consumerism as we know it.'

There could also be a shift in the nature of the UK's physical landscape, too - because if food supply networks fail, Britain will have to increase farming production.

Professor Evans said: 'In the UK, we've got six million hectares of land which could be used to produce fruit and veg. But only 168,000 hectares are actually being used for that purpose.

'You'd have to have a scheme of compulsory purchase or requisition to enable us to use this land to produce more food.

'As the coronavirus crisis gets worse over the coming months, we need to be innovative. And the best blueprint for this comes from the wars - particularly the Land Army and Meals on Wheels campaigns.'

As a silver lining to the bleak outlook, Professor Bryce says government-led rationing could actually help to redress the balance when it comes to the gulf in health and nutrition between the poor and the rich.

The graphic above shows the break down of what Britons spent their cash on in the supermarkets


The graphic above shows the break down of what Britons spent their cash on in the supermarkets
Former Waitrose boss backs supermarket item limits on customers

He also suggested a celebrity-driven propaganda campaign could make sure any rationing project doesn't become 'drab and statist'. Instead, food advice would be issued by trusted retail figureheads as well as celebrity chefs.

But the academic has also called on courts to issue the very toughest fines - and even prison sentences - for the worst black market racketeering offenders.

He added: 'In a time of crisis, the black market is not the preserve of lovable rogues - it's deadly serious.

'And I'd suggest prison sentences and hefty fines are appropriate for those found guilty of the most extreme cases of profiteering from coronavirus.

'Again, there's a historical precedent here for the need to be strict. Eventually, you have to act. You can't rely on social shaming to hurt these individuals.'

A government spokesperson told FEMAIL: 'We will do whatever it takes to ensure people have the food and supplies they need. Retailers are continuing to monitor their supply chains and taking all the necessary steps to ensure consumers have the food and supplies they need.

'Supermarkets are already taking action to limit the supply of certain items to make sure shelves are stocked and it is crucial we all respect and adhere to these decisions.'

Share or comment on this article:
Britain should be braced for food rationing, academic expert warns
 

PJM

Contributing Member
Usually, springtime is the season of optimism and hope for a good growing season, but this year it all seems a little overwhelming.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
After catching up with my reading on this thread, I have to go outside and look at my flats of beautiful green bedding plants to get back my enthusiasm for gardening.

Since it's now past bedtime, I think I'll wait until morning this time.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Fa
Yes, walk-in colony pens on the ground. Wire floor, with litter built up so they can and do dig. Deep shade, multiple layers. I hose down the pens every morning in the hottest part of the summer, but I loose at least one bunny every year to heat. No breeding in the summer.

Faroe, do you keep males and females together in the colony all the time? How do you deal with kindling? Nest boxes as per usual? What you are doing sounds like a big chicken tractor with a wire floor. Can you post pics?
 

Faroe

Un-spun
Fa


Faroe, do you keep males and females together in the colony all the time? How do you deal with kindling? Nest boxes as per usual? What you are doing sounds like a big chicken tractor with a wire floor. Can you post pics?
You can do that, but I think it is easier on the females if you separate them. Males can "visit." Not all males will get along with another male, but brothers or father/son pairs can sometimes work well. I keep some solo male pens - a rescue guinea pig can make a good companion for a solo male. My females have usually gotten along with each other just fine. A spare cage or pen is handy to have on hand if you get new rabbits, and you are not sure which matches will work out. It is important that they get along. I have boxes made out of plywood for the nesting. My Flemish Giants are huge, and won't fit a regular rabbit kindling box. I increase the floor space by putting pallets on cinderblocks, so they can hop around on that deck, and dig around underneath.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Adapt 2030 has a new podcast out (not too surprised to see this happening):

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b5i5hZINQig


Garden Center Hoarding Begins, Spring On Hold Europe (954)

Run time is 6:43

We have seen the stores stripped bare of daily essentials and long term food storage, but this has moved to garden centers and items to plant or be able to grow your own food. Winter returns to Europe with 2+ feet of snow and an Arctic blast on the way through the end of the month. Airline traffic declines from 175,000 flights per day to 75,000.
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
You can do that, but I think it is easier on the females if you separate them. Males can "visit." Not all males will get along with another male, but brothers or father/son pairs can sometimes work well. I keep some solo male pens - a rescue guinea pig can make a good companion for a solo male. My females have usually gotten along with each other just fine. A spare cage or pen is handy to have on hand if you get new rabbits, and you are not sure which matches will work out. It is important that they get along. I have boxes made out of plywood for the nesting. My Flemish Giants are huge, and won't fit a regular rabbit kindling box. I increase the floor space by putting pallets on cinderblocks, so they can hop around on that deck, and dig around underneath.

I have Giant Checkers. Thanks for the tips. I grow Russian Comfrey (Symphytum Peregrinum) to supplement their food in the Summer. Bocking #14 seems to be better for making medicinal salve and babits love the Bocking #4 strain. Bocking Comfrey is named for the English village of Bocking, where these Comfrey variants originated. The cultivated strains are non-invasive. There were 21 strains, but all were lost except two. Lots online about this plant.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Since we've been talking about this:


America Stress-Bought All the Baby Chickens

March 28, 2020

in Lifestyle, News

For chicken hatcheries, the weeks leading up to Easter are always the busiest. Spring is in the air for people shaking off long winters spent watching Netflix under a blanket who had hoped to emerge into a world of budding flowers, green grass and baby animals.

While spring might be calling people to congregate outside, health authorities are saying the opposite. Many schools and businesses are closed, and states and cities are implementing “shelter in place” orders to keep cases of the new coronavirus from skyrocketing.

The combination of an enormous rise in unemployment, anxious free time for those not struggling with illness, and financial instability has created a number of strange moments in economics. Here’s another: For the next few weeks, baby chickens are next to impossible to find.

Apparently when times are tough, people want chickens. Chick sales go up during stock market downturns and in presidential election years.

Murray McMurray Hatchery, of Webster City, Iowa, ships day-old poultry through the Postal Service, and is almost completely sold out of chicks for the next four weeks.

“People are panic-buying chickens like they did toilet paper,” said Tom Watkins, the vice president of the company.

Down at your Tractor Supply Company, a national chain of farm stores, long lines snake out the door into the parking lot before the store opens on the morning of a chick delivery. Many feed stores report they are selling out of chicks almost as fast as they can get new orders in.

Some of these buyers are simply replenishing their flocks, having put in orders weeks or months ago. But many people who have bought chicks in the last week are first-timers.

Amy Annelle, 48, is a musician in Austin, Texas, who hadn’t planned on getting chickens until the South by Southwest festival and an upcoming tour were canceled. Suddenly she found herself with plenty of time at home to raise birds, just as eggs and chicken began to run low at her local grocer.

According to the Agriculture Department, last week wholesale egg prices rose more than 50 percent in some parts of the country, because of demand; eggs have been running low if not sold out altogether in many stores in the United States. The egg supply is normal, of course; demand just grew significantly.

Ms. Annelle bought four hens and a rooster a week ago. “I thought I’d get some chicks before everyone panics at once and buys them,” she said. “We also wanted a fun project to keep us busy,” she added, referring to her and her partner.

Though Ms. Annelle cited food security as one of the reasons she wanted to have chickens, she realized that it would be at least five months before her hens are old enough to lay eggs.

She doesn’t know how long the quarantines and business closures will last, but said “it just seems like having a steady food source is a good idea right now.” The chicks have also been comforting in another way. “It’s just very hopeful watching them grow,” Ms. Annelle said.

Dominique Greenwell in Spokane, Wash., bought four chicks on March 23 from a nearby breeder (the feed stores were sold out) after a few days of internet research on how to care for the birds.

The hair salon she works at closed the week before, which has given her a lot of time to obsess over her new charges. “I go in there every 15 minutes to make sure the temperature is OK or to hold them,” Ms. Greenwell, 26, said.

She’s an animal lover with a miniature pig, a bearded dragon, two dogs and a cat already living in the household. “You can’t control the world around you but you can control the love you give to your animals,” she said.

Compared with usual chick sales in March, sales at Hackett Farm Supply in Clinton Corners, N.Y., have nearly doubled. “People are willing to take breeds that aren’t their first choice just to get a flock started now,” said Stephanie Spann, the store manager.

Because of concerns about spreading the new coronavirus, the store is open for only one person at a time. People have to wait in line to select their chicks or do curbside pickup, creating a drive-through where instead of getting a Happy Meal, customers take off with a cardboard box of living animals.

The people at Hackett Farm Supply said they had been inundated with calls from prospective chick raisers asking questions like “What do we do?” “Are the chicks really coming in on schedule?” “What do we need to be prepared?”

“It’s like anxious parents preparing for an infant,” Ms. Spann said.

New chicken owners aren’t always prepared to make great lives for chickens. What seems like a great idea when everyone’s at home with plenty of free time won’t be so appealing if or when life returns to normal.

People making last-minute decisions to raise chickens may not know what they’re getting into, which results in cruelty. In one online chicken forum, a woman asked for help after her new chicks started dying. She didn’t know they needed a heat source. (Chicks can’t regulate their temperature until their feathers grow in, which is why they have to be in a brooder with heat or a mother hen to snuggle up with.)

Even with the closing of physical locations of libraries, there are many e-books available on raising backyard chickens, as well as popular forums like BackYardChickens, so newbies can get answers to their questions.

“People should get a coop or outside area prepared for them because the eight weeks they’re inside goes real quick,” Ms. Spann said. “Just be ready. Have the supplies you need before bringing the chicks home.”

“I didn’t know I was jumping on a bandwagon,” said Erin Scheessele, 42, of Corvallis, Ore., of her decision to start a flock of chickens. Her two sons, Simon, 9, and Peter, 11, had been out of school since March 11. “They’ve been asking for chickens for a while,” Ms. Scheessele said.

She’d been reluctant to commit to chickens as a pet that she knew could live for 10 years. (Chickens lay fewer eggs after two years and go through “henopause” around 5 or 6 years of age, but can live much longer. Owners should be prepared to kill the birds or keep them as a long-term freeloading pet.)

But between school closures in Corvallis and it being the beginning of baby chick season, the timing was perfect. “That’s why it came together,” she said. “We needed something to do.”

She and her sons went to a local feed store to buy a coop intending to bring home a starter flock of chicks on the same day. “But there were no chickens,” Ms. Scheessele said. “It was empty bin after empty bin.”

After days of frantic searching, she found a woman over an hour’s drive away who had some chicks to sell. “They haven’t hatched yet so we’re on hatch watch, which might be one day or eight days from now,” Ms. Scheessele said.

In the meantime she’s been plotting how she can use the chickens as both a fun distraction for her sons and a home schooling aid. Her sons are engrossed in what her husband calls “chick lit”— reading how-to guides for raising backyard chickens.

“Chickens are a great way of tying in biology, animal behavior, math and other subjects,” Ms. Scheessele said. “I had my math-resistant 9-year-old help calculate the perimeter of the coop to figure out how much hardware cloth we had to buy.”

He did it but later that day accused his mother of sneaking in a math lesson, noting, accurately, that Ms. Scheessele could have done the calculations herself. She was unapologetic about her trickery. “I’m really going to try and milk this for every educational drop of value I can get,” she said.

The post America Stress-Bought All the Baby Chickens appeared first on New York Times.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
Interesting article, TxGal.....thanks for posting it!

I have offered my incubator and presumably fertilized eggs to my sister to offer her son who has little girls who would probably LOVE to raise a batch of chicks! Not sure she thinks the same or if she has even passed on the offer to him. The older girl is ten and has taught herself how to keyboard by looking up instrucutions online, and I thinks she does this sort of thing all the time. She would quickly become a chick expert and would probably be able to show her dad how to build a coop and pen, as well.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Everyone who can should start working on their gardens as soon as possible. Everyone who can get/keep chickens, even a pet laying hen or two, probably should. Might want to consider solar security lights for the garden and locks for the chicken housing (pics/graphic at the link):


Don't Look Now But The People Responsible For The World's Food Supply Are Starting To Get Sick

by Tyler Durden
Sun, 03/29/2020 - 07:35

Sanderson Farms, a large poultry manufacturer and Smithfield Foods, the world's largest pork producer, have both reported their first couple of positive cases of coronavirus.

This raises the obvious question: what happens when people critical to the world's food supply start to fall ill?

As of now, there has been no such disruption - but it is beginning to morph into a massive threat, Bloomberg notes, with workers in close quarters preparing and processing food globally. Aside from the obvious threat of food not making it to consumers, things like fruits may also wind up rotting in fields if there aren't enough workers to pick and cultivate them.

Al Stehly, who operates a farm-management business in California’s North San Diego County said: “If we can’t flatten the curve, then that is going to affect farmers and farm laborers -- and then we have to make choices about which crops we harvest and which ones we don’t. We hope no one gets sick. But I would expect some of us are going to get the virus.”

And to clarify, it's not the food itself that causes the threat of the virus. It's the supply chain disruption that the virus can cause with workers.

Sanderson was lucky in the sense that their one worker only worked at a small table by themselves. But other infections in the industry, where workers are closer together, could wreak more havoc. At some beef plants, workers are "elbow to elbow" and despite the employees wearing protective gear, there still remains risk of contagion.

Dave MacLennan, chief executive officer of Cargill Inc., the world’s largest agricultural commodities trader said: “One of our beef plants feeds 22 million people per day, so it’s vital that these plants stay open.”

Thomas Hesse, president of United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 401 said: “There’s underlying tension, there’s fear and there’s anxiety.”

And so, as grocery shelves go empty around the globe, food processing companies have stepped up their sanitary procedures, including more hand washing, spraying down plants and wiping down door knobs. Shifts are becoming more staggered and lunch breaks are now taken alone.

Steve Cahillane, CEO of Kellogg Co., has suggested his company will bring in additional workers, if needed, as part of a "mitigation plan".

Mary Coppola of the United Fresh Produce Association said: “We’re going to see some creative solutions where folks that are being laid off are going to be able to find new opportunities that continue to support the essential critical infrastructure.”

But luring people into the food processing industry may not be as easy as it sounds, especially as the government is mailing people checks specifically to prevent them from going to work. Wages in the industry are generally low and the labor is described as "back-breaking".

While some major producers have been issuing bonuses or increased pay to their workers to let them know they are appreciated, Vermont dairy farmers have implemented other unusual backup plans. In a call through social media, they simply asked for people to come milk cows if farmers start to get sick. They signed up 80 volunteers as standbys.

Kim Mercer of the Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont said: “It started when we got a couple of calls from dairy farmers who were super worried they might get sick and wouldn’t be able to milk their cows, and that would be it -- they’d lose their farms. We now have people everywhere all across the state who are ready to go.”

We're not sure other major food producers will be as lucky...
 

TxGal

Day by day
For those who may be interested, I stumbled across Homesteading Family on You Tube. Great podcasts with great information on all things gardening, livestock, putting food by, etc. Pleasant to watch, excellent info:

 

nomifyle

TB Fanatic
we are picking up up to 24 chicks from my cousin who put eggs in their incubator for us. In addition to 12+ we got from tractor supply a couple of weeks ago. Adding these to our 12 laying hens and one rooster.

Judy
 

TxGal

Day by day
Thanks, Martinhouse!!

As Martinhouse said, Ice Age Farmer has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z_F9Yrq-Jk8


UN WARNS: GLOBAL FOOD SHORTAGES START NOW

Run time is 16:51

The UN has warned of GLOBAL FOOD SHORTAGES starting in the next weeks. This is a final warning to start growing your own food in order to keep your family fed: they are locking up the pantry to take total control. People are reeling, and may be open to new ideas, so PLEASE spread the word NOW to ensure that as many people understand what is going on (and why -- the totalitarian agenda behind these events!), any how to prepare and fight back.
 

Martinhouse

Deceased
TxGal, thanks for posting that. I wish he'd just give us the food, crop and lock-down situation without leaning so hard on the conspiracy stuff. But his podcasts are still the best of them all by far, for me at least, so I will keep listening to him.

So much is going on now, with the present situations, disease, weather, etc., plus a suddenly a good deal of negative personal things for me, that it would be real easy to feel awfully depressed right now. I'm not letting that happen, but it sure is tempting to just turn off the computer for a while and pretend I'm living in my own little secluded, carefree world.

However, too much is happening too quickly for me to even dare to ignore the big wide world, so I guess I'll just have to keep on keeping on and find my joys in the small things that are still happening here in my small world which today just got a whole lot smaller.

I don't have TV or even decent radio reception, so the TB forum is really my only real window on the world. Thank you everyone, for being here!
 

Seeker22

Has No Life - Lives on TB
TxGal, thanks for posting that. I wish he'd just give us the food, crop and lock-down situation without leaning so hard on the conspiracy stuff. But his podcasts are still the best of them all by far, for me at least, so I will keep listening to him.

So much is going on now, with the present situations, disease, weather, etc., plus a suddenly a good deal of negative personal things for me, that it would be real easy to feel awfully depressed right now. I'm not letting that happen, but it sure is tempting to just turn off the computer for a while and pretend I'm living in my own little secluded, carefree world.

However, too much is happening too quickly for me to even dare to ignore the big wide world, so I guess I'll just have to keep on keeping on and find my joys in the small things that are still happening here in my small world which today just got a whole lot smaller.

I don't have TV or even decent radio reception, so the TB forum is really my only real window on the world. Thank you everyone, for being here!

The so called "conspiracy stuff" is welded at the hip with the climate changes. They are using natural processes to further their agenda(s). If you want a real comspiracy and calls of wearing your tinfoil too tight, research who started the Fabian Socialists. And it weren't the Amish.
 

PanBear

Veteran Member
Export curbs and panic buying has put a strain on the global food supply chain, amid the #Covid19 pandemic that has swept the world. Export restrictions may cause global food shortages as pandemic rages
video 1:58 min
View: https://twitter.com/SCMPNews/status/1245244506649309184


(fair use)

Coronavirus may cause global food shortages as panic buying and export curbs hit supply
Amanda Lee in Beijing, Su-Lin Tan and Lilian Cheng
Published: 11:30pm, 30 Mar, 2020

UN Food and Agricultural Organisation says there could be global food shortages in April and May as a result of supply problems caused by the coronavirus

China is heavily dependent on imports for some crops like soybeans, which may be affected by disruptions to global logistics networks

The coronavirus pandemic could seriously disrupt global food supply chains and send prices soaring, especially for those economies with vulnerable supply structures, if major producing countries increase export restrictions, international agencies and food experts have warned.

China is expected to be shielded from severe supply shortages as the country has been relying on its own output of rice and wheat to feed its 1.4 billion people, but its reliance on imports for certain crops, such as soybeans, could send food price soaring and add further misery to domestic consumers.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture (FAO) said last week that it had “already seen signs that pressures due to lockdowns are beginning to impact supply chains, such as the slowdown in the shipping industry. Disruptions, particularly in the area of logistics, could materialise in the coming months.”

The UN Committee on World Food Security sounded an even stronger warning that “disruptions at borders and in supply chains may cause an echo in the food system with potentially disastrous effects”.

In recent weeks, export restrictions have been slapped on staple foods such as rice and wheat as the outbreak spreads around the globe.

“Coupled with the current locust swarm crisis [in Africa and the Middle East] that is affecting food production, it may worsen the global food market, leading to panic buying, export restrictions and disruptions in the supply chain, sending food prices soaring,” Cheng Guoqiang, a professor at the School of Economics and Management of Tongji University in Shanghai, told the state-owned Economic Daily.

“Therefore, if the outbreak cannot be effectively controlled, it may cause a serious world food crisis and directly threaten food security for China and emerging nations.”

If the outbreak cannot be effectively controlled, it may cause a serious world food crisis and directly threaten food security for China and emerging nations
Cheng Guoqiang

Vietnam, the third world’s largest exporter of rice, said on Friday that it planned to stockpile the grain and suspend new export contracts until the end of the month.

Thailand banned shipments of chicken eggs for a week after a domestic supply shortage caused a spike in demand and prices to double.

In Hong Kong, where Thailand and Vietnam account for 80 per cent of rice imports, long queues reappeared outside shops at the weekend as residents scrambled to stock up on essentials.

By Monday, rice had sold out at many large supermarkets and purchasing limits of up to two bags of rice and two boxes of eggs had been imposed at various stores.

Analysts expect further export restrictions, but say food shortages will be more prominent in countries that import staples from just one or two sources.

While images of empty supermarket shelves and huge queues outside stores have been broadcast across the world, the FAO does not anticipate significant shortages if global supply chains are maintained.

Disruptions to food supply could occur during April and May because of the fast spreading outbreak and containment measures, said Maximo Torero Cullen, chief economist at the FAO.

But how severe these will be depends on the development of the Covid-19 pandemic, he said in comments published on the agency’s website.

The key concern for China animal protein production is soybeans, as China soybean usage is mainly supplied by other countries, including Brazil, the US, and Argentina
Pan Chenjun

The spread of the outbreak has accelerated outside China in the past several weeks, especially in North America and Europe, both large food exporters. The disease has infected more than 727,00 and killed more than 34,000 people worldwide.

China should be able to maintain the general security of its food supply. For rice, the main grain in the southern parts of the country, China imported 2.5 million tonnes in 2019 but also exported 2.7 million tonnes, according to the agriculture ministry. The imported amount, in turn, was less than 2 per cent of China’s annual rice consumption of 140 million tonnes.。

For wheat, China imported 3.5 million tonnes last year, which accounted for a mere 2.8 per cent of the nation’s wheat consumption of 124 million tonnes.

For wheat, China imported 3.5 million tonnes last year, which accounted for a mere 2.8 per cent of the nation’s wheat consumption of 124 million tonnes.

But for some crops, like soybeans, the country had “a high degree of dependency on foreign countries”, Cheng said. China has a self-sufficiency rate of less than 20 per cent for soybeans, which are widely used in animal feed, he added.
The world’s most populous country has already been hit by surging prices for imported pork after as much as 60 per cent of the nation’s hog herd died or was culled last year because of African swine fever.

“The key concern for China animal protein production is soybeans, as China soybean usage is mainly supplied by other countries, including Brazil, the US and Argentina,” said Pan Chenjun, senior analyst for animal protein at Rabobank.

“Up to now, shipments of soybeans have been normal, but it’s hard to predict whether there could be disruptions at ports, or to logistics in exporting countries.

“For some specific foods, such as salmon, shrimp, pangasius [shark species], for which China is highly reliant on imports, the supply is currently being impacted by disruptions to logistics in those exporting countries, such as India, Vietnam and Norway.”

Rosa Wang, a Shanghai-based analyst at agricultural data provider JCI China, said some of China’s pork imports from Germany, the United States and South America could be disrupted, adding to the price of pork.

“If they have logistics problems at ports, this may reduce China’s imports [from them],” said Wang, adding that China only imports a relatively small portion of its total supply of pork, the most popular meat for Chinese consumers.

Australia, which is a net food exporter, is already facing difficulty keeping food on store shelves, as panic buying in the face of the pandemic has increased demand, social research house McCrindle said.

Despite a prolonged drought in Australia and a severe bush fire season that lasted six months to February, the country should have sufficient food supplies to see it through the crisis, said Mark McCrindle, principal of the firm.

The problem was not supply, he said, but an inflexible “just in time” distribution process coupled with a sudden spike in demand.

“Australia is geared up for the drought, production is not massively impacted,” McCrindle said. “The biggest problem is in demand, especially in the supermarkets.”

Research conducted by the firm between March 19-23 found that more than four in five Australians changed their behaviour in response to the coronavirus and 6 per cent said they panic bought, which was enough to put supply chains out of balance. About 30 per cent bought more than they usually do, motivated by those who were panic buying.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Global food supplies face serious hit
 

PanBear

Veteran Member
two upcoming asteriods for the month of April

mark your calendar for this asteroid, not as big as the next one
Just one day before Easter, Asteroid 363599 (2004 FG11) will be making its approach to Earth at 88,164 kph on 11 April 2020.
Date of Arrival: 11 April 2020
Just-one-day-before-Easter-Asteroid-363599-2004-FG11-will-be-making-its-approach-to-Earth-at-88164-kph-on-11-April-2020-.jpg


The biggest asteroid to fly past the planet in 2020 will be the massive four-kilometre wide 52768 (1998 OR2) at 31,320 kilometres per hour (kph).
Date of Arrival: 29 April 2020
The-biggest-asteroid-to-fly-past-the-planet-in-2020-will-be-the-massive-four-kilometre-wide-52768-1998-OR2-at-31320-kilometres-per-hour-kph-.jpg


link photo from earthsky.org
asteroid-1998-OR2-trajectory.jpg

Orbit of asteroid (52768) 1998 OR2. It requires 3 years and 8 months to orbit the sun onc. It gets nearly as far from the sun as Jupiter (about 5 times Earth’s distance from the sun). Image via NASA/ JPL.
 

TxGal

Day by day
Ice Age Farmer has a new podcast out:

View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E2nUB_TFL0U


States Ban Sales of Seeds - Meat Packers Closed - Food Shutdown

Run time is 17:53

Even as the UN warns of impending food shortages, states are banning the sale of seeds and garden tools to "help" stop the coronavirus. Meat packers also are shutdown, and ranchers are warning they have a market for neither cattle nor hogs. Start growing your own food now!
 
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