October is the month of plenty of pork, for a long time was the month for hog slaughtering on farms. Usually this month pork prices are the lowest of the year.
I went to two grocery stores today. Sausage was on my shopping list. Walmart (main instigator of the shortages?) has had more foods in stock than I've seen in years but had virtually no sausage. A few packs of patties or links but no rolls of sausage at all.
Went to another regional chain store. They had more but not a lot. only three or four rolls of one brand. And the price was sky high. It was about $3 a roll a couple of weeks ago. Today it was $4.49.
This store always has pork chops for a great price in October. I didn't look at the prices but nothing was on special and I haven't seen any on sale all month.
Higher prices on any meat isn't a shock but why the dearth of sausage in a month when pork is usually more plentiful than any other time of year?
The supply chain is ACTUALLY failing, even globally
Right. That's why Walmart, which usually has a store full of half empty shelves, is now overflowing with food. Except pork.
Tim Poole, who lives about an hour from where I live, the other day was claiming that there's a shortage of pumpkins and there are few in the stores. Walmart had six huge bins of pumpkins outside and two more inside.