Having just ponderously typed out a reply with one finger, with a sleeping puppy in the other arm, it then vanished

. So, to try again.
Did any of you see the emergency food parcels which were handed out to people who were shielding or unable to leave their houses at the beginning of the pandemic? I remember there being pre-sliced white bread, baked beans, sweet biscuits, no veg, tinned meat? not sure, but basically not suitable for older and unwell people suffering from constipation, diabetes and cancers, ie those who were told to shield for the sake of their lives. It looked inedible to me. My point is however, that we couldn't just wander into any shop of our choice and pick and choose what we wanted to eat, food local to us, wholemeal bread, fruit and vegetables - we couldn't leave our homes

. So many of us who were shielding were delighted when supermarkets such as Tesco, Sainsbury's and Morrisons scaled up their Click and Collect schemes and prioritised those who were shielding for deliveries and collection slots. I was in the wonderful position of having the facilities to grow my own food - vegetables, eggs and meat - but sadly not bread flour and yeast, which became very hard to source. So those supermarkets became lifesavers.
However, we are now a year and more on and we might as well still be in the worst of the emergency, going by the short use-by dates, out of date and unavailable food sent, or not sent. (I have complained to Sainsbury's head office and been flannelled with 'we are so sorry you are disappointed. It won't happen again'. Well, it's still happening.
We now have the Delta variant causing a third wave but the proposed lifting of all restrictions. That means to me and most of those still shielding (we've been told we no longer need to! Oh no?) that we still have to use click and collect, so if produce local to us is unavailable when we order it then it's a case of 'tough, you'll have what we send and be grateful'. Again though I am in the lucky position of being able to grow a lot of my own food, but I feel doubly concerned for those who don't have that option, for whatever reason. We need to be in our best possible state of health to fight the Covid-19 virus, in addition to being vaccinated, so what we eat is vitally (in the true meaning of the word) important.
Please spare a thought for those who would love to 'buy Scottish' but simply don't have that luxury.