Canada’s covid-19 second wave is a humbling moment after a summer of bragging

Yeh, kind of a strange set up that maple syrup reserve. About ten years ago some highly organized thieves stole about 18 million worth of maple syrup from it.

Not that Americans are lying awake at night worrying about a maple syrup embargo but on most years the U.S. is a net exporter of maple syrup. Vermont, Maine, and New York produce a lot of maple syrup. Enough to take care of the American market. But Canada is the big exporter globally, because well, it's Canada.

A barrel of maple syrup (in the summer anyway) was trading at about 2000USD. More in loonies of course. That's high priced crude right theya. The future is precarious though. Lots of invasive stuff doing a serious number on the maple trees along with allegations that climate change is part of the problem. The trees are under a lot of new stress and it is showing bigtime.


I imagine Canadians in lockdowns and work at home situations have been eating way more pancakes or maple cookies (shit is really good) than normal putting a huge strain on the maple syrup supply. Demand has spiked over a very short period of time but you cannot increase the speed or quantity of maple syrup coming out of trees. therefore you get a huge imbalance of demand of syrup versus supply. Same thing happens with any product during COVID...

that being said... how fucking serious is it that a government not only maintains a strategic reserve but then feels it is necessary to release some of it to appease the poor consumer who is being deprived their regular supply of maple syrup for so long....

I would have started hoarding that stuff in my basement like toilet paper....
 
that being said... how fucking serious is it that a government not only maintains a strategic reserve but then feels it is necessary to release some of it to appease the poor consumer who is being deprived their regular supply of maple syrup for so long....
Have you tasted the stuff? It's a matter of national security!
 
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I imagine Canadians in lockdowns and work at home situations have been eating way more pancakes or maple cookies (shit is really good) than normal putting a huge strain on the maple syrup supply. Demand has spiked over a very short period of time but you cannot increase the speed or quantity of maple syrup coming out of trees. therefore you get a huge imbalance of demand of syrup versus supply. Same thing happens with any product during COVID...

that being said... how fucking serious is it that a government not only maintains a strategic reserve but then feels it is necessary to release some of it to appease the poor consumer who is being deprived their regular supply of maple syrup for so long....

I would have started hoarding that stuff in my basement like toilet paper....

I did not get past the first sentence before getting hungry.
 
I imagine Canadians in lockdowns and work at home situations have been eating way more pancakes or maple cookies (shit is really good) than normal putting a huge strain on the maple syrup supply. Demand has spiked over a very short period of time but you cannot increase the speed or quantity of maple syrup coming out of trees. therefore you get a huge imbalance of demand of syrup versus supply. Same thing happens with any product during COVID...

Although demand can get quirky and spikey when there are shortages of anything, in the chicken and egg scenario, with maple syrup it was iniatally set in motion by supply problems. ie. if we/they had the same amount of maple syrup produced this year as last things would be pretty much okay.

Just as a little recap, maple syrup production is highly, highly dependant on how the weather goes in the spring. Ideally. you have a long cool spring where the sap flows at an orderly and predictable rate based on the number of trees you have tapped. This happens of course when the sap flows up into the tree so that it can bud and leaf out. What is not good is when you have a very warm spring where the sap-flowing period is very short and then it is over. That is what happened last spring, and it was a mini-disaster and there is no way to make up lost ground until next spring- when you might get lucky and have a normal season, or if syrup makers want to hedge on that they can tap more trees- which is risky too if they go back to a normal spring and the price is not there to get return on their investment.

Some of that selling out of the reserve is just basic "buy-low-sell-highism" too. They can get a pretty penny for it now, and probably next year's weather will be normal or statistically has a good chance, and then they will replenish with next year's supply. It is not exactly a government run reserve, it is a government-backed reserve run by a trade association. And they are not opposed to making a few bucks along the way. There is a reason why they are referred to as the "OPEC of Maple Syrup."

Methinks.
 
Although demand can get quirky and spikey when there are shortages of anything, in the chicken and egg scenario, with maple syrup it was iniatally set in motion by supply problems. ie. if we/they had the same amount of maple syrup produced this year as last things would be pretty much okay.

Just as a little recap, maple syrup production is highly, highly dependant on how the weather goes in the spring. Ideally. you have a long cool spring where the sap flows at an orderly and predictable rate based on the number of trees you have tapped. This happens of course when the sap flows up into the tree so that it can bud and leaf out. What is not good is when you have a very warm spring where the sap-flowing period is very short and then it is over. That is what happened last spring, and it was a mini-disaster and there is no way to make up lost ground until next spring- when you might get lucky and have a normal season, or if syrup makers want to hedge on that they can tap more trees- which is risky too if they go back to a normal spring and the price is not there to get return on their investment.

Some of that selling out of the reserve is just basic "buy-low-sell-highism" too. They can get a pretty penny for it now, and probably next year's weather will be normal or statistically has a good chance, and then they will replenish with next year's supply. It is not exactly a government run reserve, it is a government-backed reserve run by a trade association. And they are not opposed to making a few bucks along the way. There is a reason why they are referred to as the "OPEC of Maple Syrup."

Methinks.

Fascinating.
 
Although demand can get quirky and spikey when there are shortages of anything, in the chicken and egg scenario, with maple syrup it was iniatally set in motion by supply problems. ie. if we/they had the same amount of maple syrup produced this year as last things would be pretty much okay.

Just as a little recap, maple syrup production is highly, highly dependant on how the weather goes in the spring. Ideally. you have a long cool spring where the sap flows at an orderly and predictable rate based on the number of trees you have tapped. This happens of course when the sap flows up into the tree so that it can bud and leaf out. What is not good is when you have a very warm spring where the sap-flowing period is very short and then it is over. That is what happened last spring, and it was a mini-disaster and there is no way to make up lost ground until next spring- when you might get lucky and have a normal season, or if syrup makers want to hedge on that they can tap more trees- which is risky too if they go back to a normal spring and the price is not there to get return on their investment.

Some of that selling out of the reserve is just basic "buy-low-sell-highism" too. They can get a pretty penny for it now, and probably next year's weather will be normal or statistically has a good chance, and then they will replenish with next year's supply. It is not exactly a government run reserve, it is a government-backed reserve run by a trade association. And they are not opposed to making a few bucks along the way. There is a reason why they are referred to as the "OPEC of Maple Syrup."

Methinks.


5vz0pg.jpg
 
Not that we actually really care about Canada, but because Nine Ender was bragging a few months ago, I thought this would be fun to post.

upload_2021-12-20_8-20-41.png


Let's see if I can bait him to take me off ignore for the 9th (10th?) time so he can get a word in. :)
 
Not that we actually really care about Canada, but because Nine Ender was bragging a few months ago, I thought this would be fun to post.

View attachment 273863

Let's see if I can bait him to take me off ignore for the 9th (10th?) time so he can get a word in. :)

You live in Florida where Covid deaths are four times the rate in Canada. Are you not aware that keeping people alive is a good thing ? What is your message look at this chart it makes killing 2000 people unnecessarily out of every million people in Florida all worthwhile ? Fuck that stop being fucking ignorant.
 
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