Egg prices, and impacts you are seeing

I will add that I try to only buy pasture raised eggs. Several years ago my son-in-law who works in Ag explained the different definitions between cage free and pasture or free range.

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YLE has a post about H5N1 flu and the egg shortage:

ā€œan egg factory in Iowa killed 5.3 million chickens over a single case of avian influenza in the flock. This was the largest culling of commercial birds in the U.S.ā€

Went to BJs today. They had eggsā€¦but limit of two packages per customer. They were either 18 or 24 packsā€¦so not an issue for most people. They also had 5 dozen packs of their eggsā€¦maybe for someone doing small commercial baking?

Prices were about $4 a dozen regardless of the brand.

We didnā€™t need any but I checked anyway.

Thanks for bumping this thread.

A few days ago, when I went to the store to buy eggs, most brands were out of stock, except this one:

I never bought this brand before, until now.

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Ha ha. My friends all buy these. Most of my friends have 7-10 children though. They need a lot of eggs.

I dropped into Aldi today to buy milk, and checked their for the generic large white eggs.
4.99/dozen

Our Costco is used by a lot of small restaurants and other businesses. You can tell they arenā€™t shopping for their homes because they use the flatbed trolleys instead of carts and have huge quantities of things like eggs, vinegar, flour, sugar, napkins, condiments, etc. on the trolleys.

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Whatā€™s causing the price of eggs to skyrocket nationwide https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WAwEXā€¦

Wellā€¦ā€¦this happened today in my state soā€¦.:woman_shrugging:

Other coming shortages?

Those chickens should be made into catfood. Just saying. Boiling the heck out of them, feathers and all, will leave no trace of any flu virus. :laughing:

Went to Grocery Outlet yesterday near my home in the SF Bay Area, and the cheapest eggs I saw were $5.99 a dozen. Most eggs were priced around $8.49 a dozen, which is 50 cents more than last week.

I read that articleā€¦they had a million laying hens or morešŸ™„

Interesting list of potential shortages:

Bread
Sunflower/Palm oil
Champagne
Canned beer, canned food, canned pet food (aluminum shortage)
Lettuce
Corn (frozen or canned?)
Oranges/Orange juice
Beef
Olive Oil
Infant Formula

I suppose most years there is some food item that there is a shortage of. But eggs is a pretty basic widely used for many purposes food so itā€™s more keenly felt.

Looking at this listā€¦I can make my own bread and grow lettuce part of the yearā€¦I donā€™t need champagne or beer, we use dry pet food, as long as I can get fresh cornā€¦less beef is ok by meā€¦and infant formula shortage is already a thingā€¦

Guess Iā€™ll stock up on the jugs of olive oil I get at our middle east market! :slight_smile:

Coop now has a sign asking people to purchase only the eggs they need. Still have local eggs at $3.99/dozen. I did see a dry egg substitute at the supermarket on an end aisle but didnā€™t investigate closely.

Gosh, I guess Iā€™ve never really used a dry egg product but I sure hope we donā€™t have to pivot to that! (reminds me of probably what they used in the dorm cafeteria for all those ā€œscrambled eggsā€!!!

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Guess Iā€™ll start to stock up on canned food. Buy extra beef and bread to freeze. I love salads, though, so will miss lettuce if I canā€™t find it. As far as the rest (other than some occasional oranges and olive oil once in a while), no effect on me. I have no babies and no pets.

I buy these (from Costco) for my family of 3 (or 4 when the college kiddo is home). They usually last about a month. We eat a lot of eggs!

I havenā€™t noticed egg shortages in our stores (NJ), and Iā€™ll be honest in that I donā€™t even pay attention to the price. Iā€™m buying them regardless, and in our household eggs are still a very affordable source of protein. Iā€™d happily cut down further on our meat consumption if it came down to needing to save money due to the rising price of eggs.