I've been thinking about the huge amount of obese people in America compared to films of daily life from 1900-1960. Seems that around 1970 Americans began getting fat for some unknown reason.(hehe) Now, we are headed towards empty grocery stores and nobody growing crops in their own backyard gardens. I imagine that once the food shortages begin those folks who rely upon high carbohydrate diets are gonna suffer, bigly. Once the hunger pangs begin what do you think will happen to the mental stability of an obese person who cannot procure potato chips and a soft drink? I bet they will go ballistic and begin going door to door and threatening their neighbors for a bag of chips.
If the Federal Government begins rolling out soup kitchens I bet these folks will be the first in line, pushing away moms with newborn children.
I feel this has been planned by the elite since 1970. Get the people nice and fattened, relying upon the government for their meals, and at a moments notice yank that rug out from underneath them. They did it to increase the amount of chaos our country will have to endure. Starving people will do crazy things and the elite have known this for a few years. What other plans do they have up their sleeves? Stay frosty frens and begin to stock up on food stuffs. Also a BB gun will come in handy once the bullets run out. Oh, during the Great Depression the deer population plummeted because everybody was hungry and the deer were easy pickin's. Think about food besides deer and squirrels.
What if all that is available during the shortage is the crappy food? What if chips are made but potatoes are not sold retail? What if milk is out but Fanta is still available?
I have a lot of potatoes planted and we are the weird family that gardens all around their properties. Fruit trees planted 6 years ago are finally putting on a little fruit. Lots of peaches but hardly any apples and pears. Fruit bushes mature quickly and offer yields year after year.
Yep to all of that.
Hail the fruit forest. We planted ours fifteen years ago, and our property is famous with the grand-chilldren who forage when they visit.
However, keep in mind that we are in for fifty years of cold, if what Valentina Zharkova says is correct, and I tend to believe her, as she has been studying the sun cycles for all of her career.
So try to plant trees that thrive in colder weather than what you are normally used to. Where peaches do well now, you might find early plums will thrive a decade from now. OR perhaps apples.