Lots of things. Corn is more expensive because a lot of it is being used to make fuel. So farmers have to spend more to feed their animals. And gas prices are a lot higher so that impacts the cost to get the food from the farm to the store. There's plenty of other factors but these are the first two that come to mind.
Or hunt, of course.
Unless we get a lot of rain (2+ inches) in the next couple weeks in the midwest, expect corn prices to skyrocket which in turn affects everything else.
Our corn crop is in serious trouble right now, due to the drought.
Unless we get a lot of rain (2+ inches) in the next couple weeks in the midwest, expect corn prices to skyrocket which in turn affects everything else.
Our corn crop is in serious trouble right now, due to the drought.
Unfortunately, I think most American are oblivious to the impending food crisis that is coming if conditions don't turn around in the midwest soon!
Unless we get a lot of rain (2+ inches) in the next couple weeks in the midwest, expect corn prices to skyrocket which in turn affects everything else.
Our corn crop is in serious trouble right now, due to the drought.
Cows aren't meant to eat corn! They should eat grass.
Cows aren't meant to eat corn! They should eat grass.
Grass dies in a drought as well - just look at my front yard (and we aren't even drought conditions!)
The fact is that there isn't enough grassland to feed the number of cattle that demand dictates. Whether you agree with it or not - it is what has to be.
UNDATED (WSAU) Hot weather is normally great for growing corn – but a lack of rain is causing problems. Officials say only half of Wisconsin’s corn crop is in good-to-excellent condition. The average height is 40-inches, but that varies – even within the same farm field. And there’s a lot of curling and other signs of stress with the corn.
About a quarter of it is rated poor-to-very-poor, as the ground below it literally thirsts for rain. 62-percent of Wisconsin farm fields are either short or very-short of moisture.
Madison only had about a third-of-an-inch of rain in June, the lowest ever for the month. And until this morning, La Crosse only had a trace of rain since June 21st. Just three-percent of Wisconsin’s soybeans have bloomed, and almost half the crop is rated good-to-excellent. Officials say weeds have become a problem.
Oats are doing well, with two-thirds in good-to-excellent shape. And two-thirds of the second hay crop is in. But experts say farmers will be in trouble if the state doesn’t get some good, soaking rains soon.
Forecasters say southern Wisconsin probably won’t get any rain at least until the weekend. And after this morning, there’s only a slight chance for more showers in the north for the rest of the week. Crandon reported three-point-one inches of rain in a 24-hour period. But heavy deluges like that generally wash off, instead of sinking into the ground.
I have found that ground turkey and chicken is fairly reasonable, I don't buy much of it, but it's less expensive. I rarely use ground beef and mostly use boneless, skinless chicken breast. Dh hasn't complained about meatless meals, yet. I don't buy much in the way of meat any more anyway, and we are lucky that we can shop at the Commissary, where they don't mark up groceries.
Actually, they do, but not by as much. They aren't allowed to sell "at cost", because the local Senators say it hurts the local economy (which it doesn't... spend less at the commissary=spend more in town on stuff, just not groceries) They sell for as little as they can get away with, which is still a massive improvement over the civilian stores, in most cases. The downside is, all those products the gov't buys as "price support" levels are what we get... not much of the really good stuff, and what they do have of the good stuff is NOT discounted... I can get cruelty-free eggs at Whole Foods for less than organic at the commissary... anything like that is comparable to "regular" prices, so it still pays to watch the loss leaders in town. And since walmart doesn't mark food up much, you can usually meet/beat the commissary prices there on certain items.
That said, I shop the commissary and haunt their markdowns section, and even there, the costs ARE going up. Beans that used to be $.99/lb are now $1.16/lb ... yes, it's only 17 cents... but that's also 17 PERCENT! For beans! Beef and pork are also higher than they used to be, but I have good luck finding it on markdown and grinding the beef myself. I haven't noticed a big increase in the chicken prices at the commissary yet, but in town it's definitely gone up.
Honestly, we're trying to build our pantry stash as much as the current house (tiny) allows, and every time I see a conversation like this, I freak out and increase my hoard.See, this is why I'm going to keep rabbits someday... and gotta hook my single sister up with a guy who hunts...
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buy lobster, it's cheap right now!!
Cows aren't meant to eat corn! They should eat grass.
quantitative easing and food stamp recipients don't care how much it costs....
This is why I love Wegmans. I buy their soon to expire meat, come home, and freeze it. Last week, I got 6 lbs of 90/10 ground beef for $1.49/lb. today, I bought beef kabobs, marinated with veggies, for $4/lb and Greek turkey burgers for $2. Everyone tells me Wegmans is expensive, but it's an amazing store and I love it. And, I buy the already prepared meat because it is definitely easier for us with a baby. No one seems to buy this type of meat, so I buy every pack there is... It's still very fresh. For anyone who has ever shopped at a Wegmans, you know how nice they are.![]()