Pastries and China Corn Substitution Frenzy (863)

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Corn is now reaching the realization that things have been suppressed for as long as they can in terms of pricing with millers and grain silos tacking on premiums now farmers are looking for substitutes like pastries, bread and pet food as its cheaper than corn. Add in the devastation of China's corn crop due to Army Worm and 4X pork imports you will see why Chinese investors are in Northern Queensland for cattle ranching as the ICTZ shifts rain patterns on a 400 year cycle.

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#corn #grandsolarminimum #foodprices #climaterevolution #substitutioncrops

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Created & Produced by David DuByne
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I am a small sustainable farmer. In the past I breed raise hundreds of hogs. I no longer raise them because of Dietary issue. However!
I had always raised mine in the woods/Pasture. I would get Spent Grains form Bear and Liquor distilleries as well as Outdated milk from gas stations and stores. There are plenty of food products American comp waste every day that can be used to supplement feed that is not the issue. The issue is the huge Confinment operations are simply NOT sustainable. The hogs breed in these places have had their Nateual instinct and ability to stay warm breed out of them.
The pink confinement pig is more susceptible to Diseases and cannot metabolize their caloric intake as well as the Old Heritage Breeds such as Large Black, Red Waddle, Old Spots and Tamworth.
So they literally made a Pig that will grow out on 5 month but eats two and half times more food to grow.
The entire system of Confinement farming is Totally dependent on Corn in mass.
The answer is this, stop breeding they pale confinement Pigs, get old bloodlines back in. Get the hogs outside in the environment to eat bugs, grasses,
In doing so we save feed cost and we save the water from being destroyed by the pollution these disgusting confinement operation make.

Stella_
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Winter is coming! I got a GoT tshirt that says winter is coming... people think im just a Game of Thrones fan... keep up the good work david!

BadDogHats
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I can recall back years ago in my area farmer folks hauling pickup truck loads of bread from the bakeries in town to take to their pigs, so Im sure it was similar in other places, if they had a big bakery to buy stale bread from. I don't think it is anything new for pigs to get old bread and stuff for feed.
I will say though that back last year I was buying a bag of corn (40 or 50 lbs)for 10.00-11.00 which was kinda crazy since usually it has been around six something for a long time.
Then this year it went back down to about eight something.

I just put corn out for wild birds and animals in cold weather, so Im not buying it every month, but I keep up on prices.

Perhaps last years rise in price may have been related to the flooding back then also, but idk we had surpluses still around here with granaries storing corn in huge piles on concrete lots covered in large tarps. So I never figured out why a bag of corn should have been so high when there seemed like an abundance of it.
This year I can say that we have had some worse crop losses due to the flooding, and corn really took hits in fields that Ive seen traveling around KY, IN and IL.

d.aardent
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Keep up the amazing work. Thanks for helping the world prepare Double D!!!

ericrakoczy
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Keep in mind that nearly all processed food in the U.S. has some form of sugar added...and the culprit of choice is usually CORN based. Expect spikes in nearly all processed foods due to this.

melodyscamman
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Love your video work.
Concise and relevant with all that is dire in this world your work is reassuring

dallasdelay
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Got my winter is coming can't wait to watch it Thank you David for all the great information and hard work you do for us

leosmith
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A local bakery in Seattle has quit making their whole wheat bread because their supplier has run out of the type of wheat they use!

johnelway
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After watching the weather I realized how drastic crop losses would be. I find it more efficient to think for myself

marywright
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I laughed about the ping-pong with China yesterday. They can't afford to get snotty about where they get their food.

solamano
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It is a world wide problem at this time. All can expect shortages and extremely high prices while they gouge everyone for needed basic items.

kathywolf
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Is it possible to show temperature anomalies on the other planets closer to the sun over say ten years? It would help to show that this sun driven cooling process can be seen on the other planets closer to the sun... Just a thought...

wilsan
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Meat has taken a little dive here. 90/10 lean hamburger was down to $2.60 pound from $3.29 pound. But Corbin warned us about this. Some vegetables are a little higher ( celery up from $.99 to $1.28, white onions $.68 pound to $1.19 pound, avocados $.49 to $.89 for small first year and canned goods up 10 to 20 cents per can depending on variety). Don't eat pork and most fish as to contamination, chicken is up and turkey is lower due to off season pricing. Eggs have been down, butter about the same, milk lower and milk products about the same. I found cherries, grapes and other stone fruit slightly higher but bananas haven't changed.

seecanon
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Many local restaurants used to give or sell their waste to local farmers for their pigs on a daily basis. I haven't seen so much of that going on these days. It would seem like a good option for everyone. Of course there are fewer and fewer independent restaurateurs these days who can decide what their options are for themselves. I guess corporate chains find it easier and cheaper to just throw it out and let the cities, townships, and/or refuse and recycling enterprises deal with waste materials? If so, that's too bad.

SwirlsDancing
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Wonder what they are going to feed those cattle when the crops fail due to flooding...

rhodes
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Here in Montreal Quebec...25cents an ear of locally grown corn...small, pale and tasteless...AND, my supermarket kept running out of corn...geez, not enough local corn to meet demand...

antoknee
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what is really going to happen is the animals are going to have to head back to nature for them to be fed. no more wearhouses for animals

bbruce
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i bet bad insects that destroy crops would help to feed the pigs. also most nutrients in vegetables and fruits are found in the peels, there are many fun clever ways to solve many problems. Good luck and peace.

susandoerr
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I travelled through there ( Richmond Hughenden) a couple years back. Plenty of dinosaur bones. Amazing place, well worth a visit.

roberttudor
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I wonder how many watch such as your show, and use it to guide investments.

parrotshootist