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Stockpiling - post lock down

(83 Posts)
kittylester Sun 24-May-20 19:06:11

I didnt stockpile before lockdown but, having been without a delivery slot for a month at the beginning, I make sure I have anything and everything we might need in case we dont get another one!!

I could now supply the whole village but, as i need fresh stuff, like milk, bread and fruit and veg weekly, I keep stocking up.

Anyone else?

Greciangirl Mon 25-May-20 12:01:09

I would love to do an online shop, but still no slots available.
So, with an unreliable daughter and not terribly friendly neighbours, I venture out to the small coop supermarket once a week. We manage to stock up with most things and then there is the small general stores just along the road.

Have many of you ventured out to any shops at all?
Personally, I wouldn’t visit the large supermarkets.

WOODMOUSE49 Mon 25-May-20 12:05:53

Greciangirl

I've just started a thread about my first visit to a large supermarket since lockdown.
It's in CHAT

JaneRn Mon 25-May-20 12:10:29

Missiseff. I think your idea that on-line shopping should be available only to anyone categorised as vulnerable is a little unfair.

I no longer own a car and started having groceries delivered many years ago in anticipation of the days when I would no longer be able to carry even a days shopping, even with the aid of my old lady's shopping trolley, and those days arrived some time ago, although I can still walk for at least an hour every day but not while carrying groceries. What would be your solution?

BusterTank Mon 25-May-20 12:12:11

I'm am making sure I have enough put by for the second wave of corona virus .

Milly Mon 25-May-20 12:15:40

AGGIE I was pleased to read that someone else has a Brexit Box. I felt a bit guilty stocking mine up but now I'm delving into it as online slots are few and far between. Not sure whether I'll bother to replenish it after all this is over tho.

Jillybird Mon 25-May-20 12:19:17

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

dragonfly46 Mon 25-May-20 12:20:02

I should add that I have easy deliveries because I am shielding - the doctor rang the other day to ensure I was staying at home.

Bijou Mon 25-May-20 12:34:52

I had not heard of stockpiling until I read about it on Gransnet.
Ihave always kept a back up of dry goods and certain food items because I live in a village and had to rely on the Dial a bus to the town twenty four miles away once a week where I could get a scooter.
Three years ago whilst having treatment for cancer I started to do on line shopping so now rely on that.

At my age and state of health food and drink are the pleasures left to me.

Puzzler61 Mon 25-May-20 12:52:04

Good post Doodledog. My thoughts too.

AliBeeee Mon 25-May-20 12:55:48

Not stockpiling, but I will be making sure I always have enough to last a couple of weeks. Once “test, track, isolate” starts we could be asked to stay indoors for 2 weeks at any time.

Mollygo Mon 25-May-20 13:15:53

Never managed to get a delivery slot, even though there are enough big supermarkets near us. I’ve used Sainsbury's since the start and Asda once. Lidl is never too crowded.
We have a good small supermarket near us, but the prices make Sainsbury's look cheap!

klerg000 Mon 25-May-20 13:18:32

I already was Brexit stock piling not on everything but curtails items as my DH has ulcerated colitis and can only eat 30 items and 5 of those are crisps. He also has allergies so we try to stick to the same cleaning and washing products too. The only fruit and veg he can eat is Melon so I normally order 13 a week over 3 kinds and with that and at the start was hard to get a delivery was hard but we got these in the end all my stuff is fine these is always something around if I haven't got it I will eat something else

lovebeigecardigans1955 Mon 25-May-20 13:31:42

I always make sure I have 'spares' packed away but not in huge quantities as I haven't the space. I have about ten tins of soup in the kitchen cupboard, 2 '4-pints' of milk in the freezer, at least six toilet rolls, etc. I don't go mad but my intention is not to run out in case I can't get to the shops.
Unforeseen circumstances happen to the best of us and I've had my fair share over the years.

ExD Mon 25-May-20 13:34:11

I grew up during the war and learned to stockpile from my Mother who had a 'Just in Case' shelf stocked with tins. We didn't have a fridge or a freezer. I am full of admiration for how she coped with the meagre rations as I don't ever remember being hungry although I do remember the meals were very 'samey' and dull.
So I still have my just in case cupboard and I get a supermarker delivery once a month, with top ups from the local garage (milk mostly) as needed.
You can manage if you look at a weekly shopping list and triple up (if you want 4 of anything choose 2 different brands.)
If we all shopped less frequently there'd be more slots available.

Saggi Mon 25-May-20 13:36:24

I think it’s actually getting worse ..... on my ‘favourites’ list which I go to first when , and if I get a precious ‘slot’...there are 24 items not available . The first rush being over ,BUT... I think with everybody not back at work , supermarket stores are Beginning to dwindle...and maybe packaging is a problem!!

Bluecat Mon 25-May-20 14:01:20

I have a small stockpile of random goods bought before the lockdown. My husband can't resist a bargain and would therefore buy, for instance, 24 cans of tinned tomatoes if he saw them on offer.

Can't get a delivery slot but have managed click and collect, which our SiL collects. Now DH won't let me buy much of anything, because they are not bargains. He was a store manager for years and has a photographic memory for prices. He insists on doing the online order with me. It is torture.

Tiggersuki Mon 25-May-20 14:09:50

Please do not stockpile, it is so frustrating finding shelves devoid of items, our local supermarket asks people to go there if they physically can as there aren't enough delivery slots and bad enough queuing outside for half an hour, following a one way system and forgetting something on your list then going back to find the shelf empty ( do not want eggs or aubergine here and sometimes no plain yogurt) , queue for another half hour to be served.... come home and wash your hands red raw again...
We got back a few days before the major lockdown having left Australia 2 weeks early to guarantee a flight home to find a nearly empty supermarket on March 19th.... shocking....not as bad since but please please do not stockpile
Have a few long life milks and freezer bread but then manage

sarahellenwhitney Mon 25-May-20 14:39:52

I can never understand any one running out of bread or milk which are freezeable.I also buy butter when its on offer as this too can be frozen. Frozen veg who needs to panic over buying fresh when virtually most veg other than salad items can be frozen.Freezer veg we buy from a SM are frozen within hours of picking far healthier for us than eating fresh! stuff from a SM that may have been gathered days before, not hours.

kittylester Mon 25-May-20 15:46:58

I agree with elegran and others. There is a difference between a store cupboard and stockpiling.

I generally don't stockpile which is what prompted this thread.

I always have a store cupboard. I would hate to get to the end of the mayonnaise and not have another one in the cupboard..

grannie7's is my kind of chap.

CBBL Mon 25-May-20 16:35:30

I have never stockpiled, and always shopped weekly. Since the lockdown, we have regularly run out of various things, particularly fresh vegetables. We live in a small village, with no shops, Pub Church or even a bus service.
As my hubby is "extremely Vulnerable" and also has food allergies and IBS, we had to stop the Government "food parcels" as much of the contents were things we can't eat (we both have Diabetes), but were allocated a Volunteer. She tries to help, but obviously can't select alternatives when something we have listed is unavailable (or she can't find it). Currently, we only have potatoes and carrots in terms of fresh produce. Some weeks, we haven't had bread (once we didn't have potatoes). I don't bake, since neither of us can safely have sugar. I wish I could say that we've lost weight, but sadly we haven't (despite regular "dicky tummies", due to foods we are unused to). Still, we don't have Covid 19! This week, Hubby has been asked to go to the Doctor's (on Thursday) for his regular blood tests, despite being told in his Government letter not to leave the house until Mid June). I'm just going to have him drop me off at the Supermarket, so I can do a Supermarket Shop (my poor eyesight might result in more "not quite what we wanted" items being likely to end up in the trolley!)
We have no large Supermarkets here, just small ones for Aldi, Morrison's and the Co-op). Wish me luck, please!

rosenoir Mon 25-May-20 16:39:23

I have never stockpiled and feel it is so wrong, it creates shortages for those on a tight budget.

Kim19 Mon 25-May-20 17:32:53

This store cupboard examination has been good for me in that I found many items I had forgotten about and have been using them up on a daily basis. Same applies to the freezer where I've had a blitz. All good and larder is almost as tidy as the garden.

glammagran Mon 25-May-20 20:38:13

arosebyanyothername I haven’t been able to get flour since the beginning of March from a supermarket though I did get plain and SR flour some weeks ago at greatly inflated prices from A****n. 2 days ago I registered with Shipton’s Mills who sell dozens of different types of well priced flours in 1kg bags. I was informed there may be along wait until I got a delivery slot. I managed to get one at 5am this morning.

Doodledog Mon 25-May-20 20:59:29

I think that people are talking at cross purposes on this thread.

There is a difference between 'stocking up' and 'stockpiling' as the word has started to be used. Stocking up is having a few extra non-perishables in case you run out, or because they are cheaper to buy by the dozen, whereas stockpiling (as it is used nowadays) is more like 'panic buying', where people buy 100 loo rolls because they have heard that there is, or is going to be a shortage.

The former does not cause shortages, or impact on anyone. It's no different from having 8 jars of jam in the cupboard because you found a large box of strawberries going cheap, or making a massive Christmas cake that you are still eating at Easter - it's good housekeeping.

The latter (particularly when done to excess, such as we saw with hand sanitiser and loo rolls a few weeks ago) will cause blips in the supply chain until shops adjust their orders.

Unless there is an actual shortage of ingredients, or import issues, even that sort of buying doesn't cause long-term shortages, although having to do without essentials such as loo roll for even a day is going to be uncomfortable, and nobody needs 100 packs of the stuff.

What does happen, though, is that the shops buy far more of the basics than usual, as they know they will sell, and as they are the things that get panic bought (pasta, anyone?) so they have to make room on the shelves, and there might be a shortage of quinoa, as the space where it used to be is now taken up by pasta spirals that move faster. It looks like there is a shortage, but it is a stock control issue.

There could well be shortages after Brexit if the traffic queues at customs materialise and fruit and veg rot in the lorries. Similarly, if the Eastern European workers who used to pick soft fruit here aren't doing so, it will rot in the fields and there will be shortages in the shops.

There is little point in individuals buying large quantities though, as obviously they don't keep, so again, the shortages won't be because of stockpiling.

MissAdventure Mon 25-May-20 21:08:13

Yes, you're right.
I'm a stocker upper, never a piler.