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Three Basic Moves to Make Ahead of the Coming Food Shortages

JD recently did an episode of The Late Prepper that addresses three ways Americans can prepare for food shortages.

  • Stockpile: Build up the cupboard and pantry

  • Preserve: Freeze dry or can everything, especially leftovers

  • Produce: Build a garden and get chickens

Here’s the story that inspired it:

Florida’s Oranges, America’s Beef, and Winter Wheat Are Harbingers of Coming Food Shortages

America’s capacity to feed itself is under unprecedented strain. Florida’s orange production has collapsed by 95 percent from its 1996 peak, the national cattle herd has shrunk to its smallest size since 1951 despite a population more than double that of the early postwar years, and severe drought across the Southern Plains is suffocating the wheat crop that supplies much of the nation’s flour. These are not isolated setbacks. They form a pattern of vulnerability that policymakers and the public ignore at their peril.

Once-symbolic industries that helped define American abundance now signal fragility. Florida’s citrus groves, long a source of national pride and economic vitality, face near-total erosion. Ranchers have liquidated herds amid persistent dry conditions and soaring costs. Wheat fields that should yield the staff of life stand parched and stunted. The question is no longer whether food prices will rise, but how sharply and for how long—and whether the underlying productive base can recover before broader consequences set in.

The Florida orange story is particularly stark. What was once an industry producing enough fruit for nearly every American now barely registers on the national plate. Citrus greening, a bacterial infection delivered by an invasive insect, slowly chokes the trees’ vascular systems. By the time symptoms appear, the damage is irreversible. Decades of hurricanes, freezes, and suburban development have accelerated the retreat of groves, but the disease remains the mortal wound. California and imports may fill some gaps, yet the loss of Florida’s historic production capacity cannot be waved away by substitution alone.

Meanwhile, cattle producers confront biology and weather in unforgiving tandem. The nation’s herd has been culled relentlessly since drought scorched pastures and feed costs climbed. Rebuilding takes years—cows must be retained rather than sent to slaughter, and calves must mature. With supplies tight, beef prices have already reached records and show little prospect of meaningful relief. The arrival of the New World screwworm near the border adds another layer of risk; this flesh-eating parasite can devastate herds if it crosses into Texas. Ranchers who have weathered cycles before now face a contraction that coincides with record domestic demand.

Winter wheat tells a parallel tale of environmental pressure. Hard red winter wheat, the high-protein variety essential for bread and everyday flour, depends on timely moisture across the Great Plains. Prolonged drought has left fields in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas in poor condition, with good-to-excellent ratings plunging. Traders have responded by widening premiums for hard red over softer varieties, a market signal that tighter supplies and higher prices for wheat-derived products lie ahead. When the breadbasket struggles, the ripple reaches every grocery aisle and school lunch program.

Compounding these domestic woes is the global fertilizer crunch. Conflict-related disruptions in key shipping corridors have tightened supplies of nitrogen, phosphate, and other inputs at precisely the moment American farmers need them for planting and growth. Surveys indicate most producers anticipate shortfalls, forcing difficult choices between reduced application rates—which lower yields—or higher costs that squeeze margins. Diesel prices, already volatile, threaten to compound the burden for machinery-dependent operations.

These developments expose a deeper tension in modern agriculture. Reliance on just-in-time global supply chains for inputs, combined with environmental and biological pressures that defy quick political fixes, leaves the system brittle. Decades of policy that favored consolidation and export-driven models have not always prioritized resilience at home. When disease, drought, and geopolitical shocks converge, the illusion of endless abundance cracks.

Observers may point to technological advances or alternative sourcing as solutions, and innovation certainly has a role. Yet history reminds us that productive land, healthy livestock, and favorable weather form the irreplaceable foundation. Neglect or mismanagement of that foundation carries consequences that compound over time.

The biblical account in Genesis 41 of seven years of plenty followed by seven of famine underscores the wisdom of stewardship and preparation in the face of uncertainty. Joseph’s counsel to Pharaoh was not panic but prudent storage and foresight during good seasons. In our own day, the prudent course lies in honest assessment of vulnerabilities rather than reflexive optimism that markets or government will simply adjust.

America retains immense agricultural strength—vast acreage, skilled producers, and research capacity unmatched elsewhere. That strength, however, is not self-sustaining. Restoring citrus groves, rebuilding cattle herds, and safeguarding wheat lands will require sustained attention to plant and animal health, water management, input availability, and trade policies that do not undermine domestic capacity.

Ignoring the warning signs in Florida’s empty groves, shrinking pastures, and thirsty wheat fields risks turning temporary hardship into structural scarcity. The stakes extend beyond grocery bills to the stability and self-reliance that have long defined the American experiment.

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