January 7, 2023

Consumers can take a lot, but when you start raising prices on staples like eggs and milk, a definite din begins to rise from the streets.

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I knew something was up during a pre-Christmas trip to Costco, where a frenzied mob of shoppers were exasperated after being told, “We’re out of eggs.  We won’t have any more until a truck comes in!”

More recently, as I walked down the dairy aisle at my local grocery, a fellow shopper cried out, “I heard about the goose that laid the golden egg, but I thought it was a fairy tale!”  Thus ensued an excited conversation between shoppers and the employee posting the new sign that read “$5.49” for a dozen large eggs.  That’s up from an average national price of $1.72 less than a year ago.

The reason eggs are so pricey appears, at face value, to be simple supply and demand:  “Millions of birds died.  Eggs now cost nearly 50% more.

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It’s true that millions of chickens are being “depopulated” due to a worsening bird flu pandemic, but what’s even worse is that the story behind the egg shortage has taken some disturbing turns.

A recent article in Bay Nature magazine is titled “The Latest Bird Flu Pandemic Is Terrible—and Strange.”

It begins by telling us there are “check stations” across the country where freshly hunted waterfowl are being swabbed for the bird flu.  With swab sticks similar to COVID-19 rapid tests, and costing at least $50 a pop, biologists are swabbing birds’ beaks and butts to monitor the spread of the latest bird flu for the National Wildlife Disease Program, a division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

So far, nearly 58 million birds in 47 states have died since January 2022.  Consisting mostly of chickens and turkeys on commercial farms, most deaths were due to culling to stop the flu’s spread.

The author of the article tells us this particular strain of H5N1 bird flu is called “Gs/GD HPAI” — short for Goose/Guangdong (Gs/GD), a highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI).  (And if you’re wondering, Guangdong province is 609 miles from Wuhan as the crow flies.  However, to be clear, this is an enzootic influenza, not a coronavirus.)

The author continues: