Yes, it is and very scary.
It sounds like your area is hit by this way differently than my immediate area is.
There was a major run on stuff here at first, and while there are still periodic shortages of food items (soups and TP continue to fly off the shelves as fast as they are stocked), I've not had the problem getting fresh produce it seems that you have. This rather surprises me in my rural area. The stuff has a finite shelf-life, but
so far there's been no problem keeping it on hand (just spotty outages.) I can stock up on everything else, but I still need a salad and fruit every day (fresh asparagus & broccoli are a bonus.) Absent them, I'd double/triple up on vitamins, understanding that it's a poor substitute for staying nourished.
On a minor upside, I believe that new cases in the county where that infected CVS is have diminished over the past few days. This pretty much tracks with the nationwide trend. Let's hope for all of us that it continues.
It's tough to not let this worry us. I watch news broadcasts from a rural western county so as to not get the city-hype, and while they've only had 16 cases (and no deaths) there, the entire news broadcast is about this virus. Every_Single_Story. Sixteen residents out of nearly 80,000. I turn it off and watch something else. It's not really informative, anyway.
I have no advice for you or for any of us except to take reasonable precautions and stay in touch with friends, both locally and virtually. Talking about it does not make it go away, but for me, being in my own head is not a "Safe Space." Never has been.
ps: Love the parakeet. Someone else here has a cockatiel. When I was married years ago we had a cockatiel, 2 parakeets, a Mexican Red Head and a Blue Front Amazon. And a dog. And a cat. And my aquariums.