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A lot will be said about grain shortages going forward. If you look around you might find a local grain mill. I have at least two nearby.
Buying local grain/flour will increase availability where it's vitally needed and generally help reduce dependence on Russian stocks.
Something to try.

Yeah. Hate being right sometimes. Buy local grain!

"Half of Africa's wheat imports come from Ukraine and Russia, which is also a major fertilizer exporter.
“If you think we’ve got hell on earth now, you just get ready,” Beasley warned. "If we neglect northern Africa, northern Africa’s coming to Europe. If we neglect the Middle East, [the] Middle East is coming to Europe."
"
politico.eu/article/world-food

and Ukr MP Rudik:

@b4cks4w

What? Are you attempting to tell me that the US is somehow "dependent" on Russian WHEAT!?

We're not. At all. We're about as "dependent" on their sorrel leaves or their blinis, okay?

statista.com/statistics/237902

@b4cks4w

Seriously, I have absolutely no idea where this is coming from.

Thanos could snap his finger and make Russia vanish, and if it weren't reported in the news, you wouldn't even notice in five years.

Russian economy: SMALLER THAN TEXAS'.

@mcfate Ukraine exported more wheat than the US, is where it comes from. Uncontrolled rebalancing is happening

igc.int/en/markets/marketinfo-

@b4cks4w

How is it "uncontrollable" when net/net, we export about a dozen times more grain than we import?

@mcfate @b4cks4w
Don't worry about wheat.

"Russia is the largest wheat exporter in the world followed by Canada in the United States."
beef2live.com/story-top-20-lar

@mcfate Other places in the world are (also Ukranian wheat and corn), and the loss of Russian grain will be catastrophic for them.

Small producers generally don't export but I think have decent capacity*. We can both build that capacity and allow the likes of General Mills to redistribute** to say, Africa.

Drop in the bucket, well aware. Something to try.

*I grow a very small amount of grain, not looking to profit just bring awareness

**Will they? Maybe.

@b4cks4w

Okay, I'm lost. No imports of Russian grain are going to impact General Mills' theoretical ability to export to AFRICA, and that's going to affect prices HERE, somehow?

@b4cks4w

As I mentioned, I haven't the slightest idea what you ARE concerned with here.

@mcfate I'll repeat:
Buying local grain/flour will increase availability where it's vitally needed and generally help reduce dependence on Russian stocks.

Sorry if it's not clear. To be direct I concerned about famine, suffering, and unrest in West Asia and Africa.

@b4cks4w

"Local" is "the US", at least in MY locality, which you just said you're not even concerned about, though.

@mcfate I glossed over this:
General Mills is a global company that supplies a lot of the flour consumed worldwide. I'm not picking on them, they're just a big name. They source from all over and distribute all over.
If I instead buy from my local mill (US/European/Asian), it is possible it could benefit, through the graces of megacorps, someone suffering a shortage because their country depends on a now destroyed supply chain.
An example of thinking globally, acting locally.
hth.

@b4cks4w

Sounds more to me like "fantasizing globally, and hoping for the best", but don't let me discourage you.

There's no "local mill" here. There's not "local" ANYTHING here. It's a wasteland.

@mcfate see also the Do what you can with what you got school.

I hear ya, small/local food production lost a lot of actual ground these past few decades. I do financially unsound things to get my hands on small farm products. Ain't for everyone.

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