I just tried the link and it worked for me and I tried the link in BL's #2 post copy and the link worked in the copy. Here is another link, try this one.
As America's food sector continues to experience further hits, it could be time to begin concealing some of the food you store.
www.theorganicprepper.com
That link worked.
I'm personally not a what if conspiracy type person that thinks Armageddon is going to happen, but a realist that follows actual trends.
The food issue is one that I've been following. First of all I'm an outdoorsman that can survive in the wild easily. A lot of our diet is what I dragged out of the woods and processed myself.
We "prep" by vacuum sealing veggi's, fish and so on more so for natural disasters than some Armageddon.
The folks in Florida are currently experiencing what we are prepped for.
Here in Oklahoma we experience a lot of ice storms with power being out for days if not weeks at a time.
We spent 9 days without electricity a few years ago. Ran the fireplace, cooked on coleman camp stoves with old time perk coffee pots and skillets. Light supplied by hurricane lamps or coleman lanterns and so on.
We had two families without dads from town come live with us during that time because they knew we could get through it.
We have two freezers with lots of wild game and other foods in them. At night when it went below freezing, we loaded bags of the frozen stuff and took it outside to make sure it stayed frozen, putting it back inside during the day when the temps were above freezing.
We have since invested in a generator that will power our totally electric home that has a starter. I hated pulling that rope at 2am when adding gasoline. Never again.
We have a water well we use for water at home that has a separate electrical feed and is 3/10 mile away from the house. Fortunately I had a powerful inverter that could power up the well and supply water to the house for filling jugs, bathtubs and a quick cold shower I ran off the tractor batteries for about an hour a day.
We did just fine with the kids and some adults considering it an adventure they actually enjoyed.
After 9 days without power, a friend that lives closer to town got power back and loaned us their generator.
We went another three days on that Gen before our power was restored.
Everybody went home and life was good.