Thursday, November 21
Rainwater harvesting has changed the game for small-scale rural farmers. Photo: Amanzi for Food

At the heart of health and well-being is food security and agriculture, according to South Africa’s National Development Plan, could create nearly a million jobs by 2030, with small-scale farming playing a big role.

Meanwhile, it’s hit home in the Eastern Cape that long-term drought is a reality, and of the nine provinces, ours recorded the highest increase in unemployment (3.8 percentage points) according to Stats SA’s latest report.

Looking for ways to increase food production through more efficient and effective use of water is the mission of a group of researchers from Rhodes University’s Environmental Learning Institute, led by PhD researcher Tich Pesanayi.

Also read: Greywater – your secret source

“A reliable supply of good quality water is essential to growing food. ‘Water is life’. As the user of 62% of South Africa’s available water, agriculture has a major responsibility to ensure the most efficient use of this most precious of resources,” AFF say on their website amanziforfood.co.za

The rural areas the Amanzi for Food team works in are hardest hit by the drought and they and the communities they work with have had to be extraordinarily resourceful when it comes to harvesting and conserving rainwater. As a result, they have valuable lessons for urban home-owners and tenants who want to grow food for subsistence or selling in their gardens or yards.

Pesanayi said the resources they offer include their short course to train trainers to work with small scale farmers (see below) in partnership with dedicated agricultural educators based at Fort Cox Agricultural College, the University of Fort Hare and Lovedale College and agricultural extension offices, as well as the local economic development directorates of municipalities.

Their main tool for learning and teaching, though is the productive demonstration sites where people can sign up for NQ5 and 6 qualifications, accredited by Rhodes. Participants are selected on the basis of their likelihood to share what they learn and expand the community’s skills base.

They operate within learning networks. “We learn from each other,” Pesanayi says.

One of the networks is based in Lloyd VIllage, where they work in a co-operative garden run by 23 people, 18 of whom are women, and Pesanayi used this as an example of the kind of problem-solving that happens.

The Imvotho Bubomi group found that drought had shortened their growing season, with less rain coming later and later.

Read: How to harvest rainwater at home

“Rainfall was their only source of water,” Pesanayi said. “Without it they could do nothing.”

With the help of a tractor from UFH the group built a farm dam, 10m in diameter and 1.5m deep, as well as furrows in the land to divert rainwater.

Small dams have made all the difference to small-scale farmers working with Amanzi for Food. Photos: Amanzi for Food


Other techniques used to conserve water include tied ridges – a way of creating little pools of water; mulching and deep-contour design of planting areas.
“In June 2015 the winter rains came and the dam filled up. The farmers could water their crops and they extended the growing season,” said Pesanayi. “There was a drought, but they still harvested vegetables.”

“A lot of the changes are really simple, and cost nothing, but they make a huge difference,” Pesanayi said.

An important task for the team from Amanzi for Food, as researchers (“it’s research, not development work that we’re doing”) is to make material developed by the Water Research Commission accessible to communities that need it. Material available for free on the WRC website includes rainwater harvesting, biogas generation, aquaculture, growing traditional leafy vegetables and greywater harvesting.

If you’d like to learn more about cost-efficient and water efficient ways of growing food in tough conditions, you can apply for the next round of training (details below).

Is this kind of information relevant for people living in Grahamstown?

“Definitely,” says Pesanayi. “We know that Grahamstown is struggling with water, so these harvesting and conservation techniques are essential for people growing food in their yards.

“The market is opening up for small-scale growers on homestead plots. Growing food in Grahamstown can sustain families and also provide an income.”

He feels schools could do more to develop food gardens, teaching learners to produce their own food.

“We’d like to invite more people to team up with the Centre in supporting food gardens in Grahamstown,” he said. “If we don’t grow food at home, our children will never learn and that important part of our culture will be lost.”

Learn to harvest and conserve scarce water

A section of the communal garden at Linomtha Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Market, supported by Umthathi. Photo: Sue Maclennan

The Rhodes University Environmental Learning Research Centre is offering a free course on rainwater harvesting and water conservation for people training small-scale farmers and subsistence gardeners. While the course is free, attendance at all three contact sessions on 2-3 November 2017 and 8-9 February and 3-4 May 2018 is required.

“Increasing water scarcity in South Africa is proving a major challenge to smallholder farmers and household food producers,” said the course organisers. “Rainwater Harvesting and Conservation (RWH&C) practices can contribute to meeting this challenge.”

The Amanzi for Food Training of Trainers (ToT) course will focus on 16 different rainwater harvesting and conservation practices for small scale farming and household food production developed by the Water Research Commission. It will also focus on grey water harvesting, and on how the practices can be used for supporting freshwater aquaculture and biogas generation.

People interested in participating should email Nqabisa Booi at n.booi@ru.ac.za
or call 046 603 8390.

 

Your garden – your little farm…

Members of Umthathi’s Linomtha Fresh Vegetable Market earlier this year. The Rhodes University Environmental Learning Centre is running a course for trainers on how to harvest rainwater and how to conserve supplies. Photo: Sue Maclennan

The South African government believes that the key to food security lies in investing in smallholder agriculture and have committed to pumping R5.5 billion of the national budget to support 435 000 subsistence and smallholder farmers over the next three years. The government has also committed itself to expand the 200 000 smallholder producers who sell their produce to 500 000 smallholders by 2020.]

In fact, according to South Africa’s development blueprint, the National Development Plan, agriculture is a significant sector in the South African economy and has the potential to create close to one million new jobs by 2030. Smallholder farmers are expected to play a significant role in this, both in terms of poverty alleviation and rural development for South Africa’s rural economies and moreover contribute to the sustainability of food supply. The key to this is to get smallholder farmers to become commercially viable by creating return on investment which can be invested to grow their farming practices.

It is also important to note that agriculture contributed 33.6% to the GDP growth of 2.5% in the second quarter, helping the economy to emerge from a technical recession, following GDP contractions over two consecutive quarters earlier this year.

Excerpt from: Transforming the agricultural sector by unlocking the potential of smallholder farmers by Dr Klaus Eckstein, CEO and country divisional head of the Crop Science Division for Bayer Southern Africa. Full text here: http://bit.ly/GrocSMallholder

Sue Maclennan

Local journalism

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