If you lived in an area where the Dust Bowl was happening, as a person in the 1930s, you would go through the hardest time of your life. Due to low crop prices and high machinery costs, non-profitable lands were put into production, causing crops to not be high quality. This caused farmers to stop soil conservation practices and not maintain the soil properly. There were also unusually high temperatures which damaged crops and made them hard to grow. All these events led up to the destructive Dust Bowl. Farmers lost thousands and even millions of dollars in crops and had lots of their cattle killed because of the Dust Bowl. The soil quality was affected horribly, soil prices decreased even more, and the United States sank deeper into the …show more content…
People were socializing about the Dust Bowl all over America. Because of the horrid natural disaster, “Thousands of families were forced to leave because of the Dust Bowl at the height of the Great Depression in the early and mid-1930s. Many of these displaced people undertook the long trek to California,” (EB 3). Since so many farmers lost their crops and most of the soil was damaged, most people believed that their best choice after the Dust Bowl was to move to a new area. Hundreds and thousands of people took a long journey to other states (mostly California). The news of the Dust Bowl spread very quickly and many people were devastated and tried helping those who needed it. The USA lost millions and billions of dollars because of the Dust Bowl. The dust bowl was one of the worst droughts and “cost Americans around $50 billion in agricultural losses—staple crops including soy, corn and wheat have all been devastated—as well as forest fire destruction and other financial casualties,” (Lynn 2). Farmers lost billions of dollars in profit because of the events of the Dust Bowl. The soil was horrible and crops wouldn’t grow. The Great Depression decreased crop prices from $2 per bushel to 40 cents, and to make matters worse the Dust Bowl damaged most of the soil which crops could have grown on. This caused crop prices to decrease and for farmers to struggle even more. The