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    You are at:Home»Uncategorized»Farm game for optimal land use, says minister
    Uncategorized

    Farm game for optimal land use, says minister

    Grocott's MailBy Grocott's MailJuly 1, 2014No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Newly-appointed Minister of Tourism Derek Hanekom has called game farming on marginal land a “no-brainer” in terms of optimal land use.

    Newly-appointed Minister of Tourism Derek Hanekom has called game farming on marginal land a “no-brainer” in terms of optimal land use.

    Game farming helped promote tourism into the Sundays River Valley and other areas where the environment and land was not suited to intensive livestock farming, Hanekom said while speaking at the opening of this year's Absa Kirkwood Wildsfees.

    He called on the game farming industry to “collectively do more to change perceptions about the sector. Game farming is by far the best land use option in many parts of the country,” he said. One of the arguments against game farming is that it impacts on food security.

    Well-managed game farms produced more protein per hectare than cattle or sheep because the variety of game utilised different types of vegetation, he said. Game farming – or mixed game and stock farming – also sustained more jobs than traditional stock farming because of the tourism element.

    The additional jobs created by tourism also contributed to food security. People with jobs do not suffer from the same food shortages as those who are unemployed, Hanekom said.

    He said, sustainable land use and the growth of the tourism industry also go hand in hand with heritage tourism, a sector with big potential in the Eastern Cape. Plans for a heritage route through the Zuurberg in the Sundays River Valley are being formulated, Hanekom said.

    The heritage tourism could be developed around the natural beauty of the area – which is being preserved in part by sustainable game farming.

    Community-driven events such as the Absa Kirkwood Wildsfees are also contributing to the growth of tourism, he said. The festival has grown into one of the biggest in the country. It is also a festival with a social conscience. Money is ploughed back into the community by the non-profit Kirkwood Wildlife Festival company, he said.

    The annual Absa Kirkwood Wildsfees is being hosted in the Eastern Cape’s Sundays River Valley from Friday 27 June to Sunday 29 June. For more information go to wildsfees.co.za

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