as the coronavirus continues to threaten meat supply chains across the country.
But hunting is nothing new for Henry and Lakeisha Woodard, a Mississippi couple who have been hunting together for 12 years. They said 75% of the meat their family eats comes from animals they catch themselves, including wild turkey and deer., where they document their hunting exploits, has 12,000 followers and counting as more people turn to the sport.
"We were like Noah preaching the flood, but now it's like everyone is trying to come into the ark," Henry Woodard told Business Insider Today. "And people are looking at us like, 'Wow, you know, we should have listened to them, they were right all along. We need these skills to survive.'" "It's really not all about us," Lakeisha Woodard said. "But what we're doing, we're trying to show people our way of life, and hopefully we may inspire someone."As the coronavirus threatens food supply chains around the country, America is seeing a renewed interest in hunting.But for Mississippi residents Henry and Lakeisha Woodard, hunting and growing their own food as been a lifestyle for 12 years running. And now, their skills have become even more vital.
Shelves reserved for Perdue chicken lie empty at a ShopRite supermarket on April 24, 2020 in Plainview, New York."There's a skill set than me and Lakeisha have acquired that just gives us the confidence knowing that regardless of how bad it may get, that we'll be able to survive," Henry said.Interest in hunting has spiked in the US since the pandemic broke out.
Fucking black people.
I hope they will be hunted down soon
senseless hobbies, trophy hunting must be banned.
Why? They could read a book.
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