Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

Commercial Farmers' Union of Zimbabwe

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Conservation: Answer to farming woes

Conservation: Answer to farming woes

http://www.thestandard.co.zw

January 20, 2013 in Environment, Opinion

It would seem efforts by the government and other stakeholders to make 
available inputs in a desperate bid to boost the agricultural sector in the 
country have all but gone to waste.

Column by Chipo Masara

With the exception of the tobacco industry which has been on an upward 
trend, there has been very little productivity, leaving millions of people 
in Zimbabwe in dire need of food assistance.

What boggles many is how in just over a decade, Zimbabwe has gone from being 
a major food exporter to being a country dependent on hand-outs to alleviate 
its people’s hunger.

It is continually becoming clear that simply providing agricultural inputs 
will not be enough to ensure food security in the country. What is clearly 
required to revive agriculture, which is clearly the panacea to acquiring a 
food security status, is a proper turn-around strategy.

Many factors have played a part in seeing the agricultural sector crumble, 
some factors being natural and beyond the farmers’ control, while some, the 
farmers have brought on themselves.

It is now undeniable that the climate has indeed been changing, which has 
given much credence to the climate change and global warming phenomenon. In 
what many scientists believe to be the culmination of the phenomenon, there 
has been a major shift in the country’s rainfall patterns, something that 
has left many farmers unsure as to when exactly to start planting.

When the rains finally come, they are often followed by long dry periods 
characterised by intense heat, which has in most instances ravaged the 
crops, making replanting a necessity. And then there are times, as is 
presently happening in most areas, when the rainfall is too abundant and 
damages the crops in the end.

The Herald of Wednesday 16 January had a story entitled “Wet spell triggers 
widespread leaching” which talked about how “low-lying areas are now so 
waterlogged that crops such as maize and cotton are suffering from stunted 
growth.”

Ecological balance has been upset

The wanton cutting down of trees by some so-called farmers has upset the 
ecological balance that once existed, destroying wildlife habitat and 
leaving the country facing serious deforestation. So, in a nutshell, years 
of inappropriate agricultural practices have had an adverse impact on 
agriculture.

It has resulted in land degradation and decline in soil fertility, pollution 
of water and air, and loss of wildlife, among other woes.

Many conservationists believe it is time more efforts were put, not so much 
in gathering inputs (as these would still come to waste if present 
conditions still prevail), but in helping farmers adapt to new farming 
practices that have been proven to work, even under the country’s current 
climatic conditions.

Time to adopt sustainable farming methods in Zim

Besides natural disasters that have rendered farming a mammoth task, most 
farmers have not made matters any easier on themselves. Most of them, mainly 
owing to clear ignorance, have not been practising good farming methods.

They have for some time employed tactics that they believed minimised 
operating costs, like slash and burn, which have degraded the soil, making 
it infertile and as a result yielding very little. The overdependence on 
pesticides and other chemicals has only served to tire the soils even 
further.

The adoption of conservation farming by every farmer is long overdue.

Conservation farming has been described as “any system or practice which 
aims to conserve soil and water by using surface cover (mulch) to minimise 
run-off and erosion and improve the conditions for plant establishment and 
growth”.

Conservation farming is a system that is designed to use the mulch cover to 
reduce soil erosion and land degradation, reduce soil temperatures and 
conserve moisture for plant growth, increase organic matter levels and 
improve soil structure and fertility.

This is meant to achieve viable and sustainable productivity.

It also includes components and practices such as zero tillage, 
agro-forestry, alley cropping, integrated pest management, organic farming, 
crop and pasture rotation and contour farming, among many others.

For those with a profound interest in farming and would want to know more 
about conservation farming, there will be a follow-up article next week that 
simplifies the different components of this type of farming, describing in 
detail what it involves.

Zimbabwe has the potential to not only revive the agricultural sector and 
ensure food security for its entire people, but to once again become the 
bread basket of southern Africa, and beyond.

What is required is for farmers to realise that it is no longer 
business-as-usual and that with a change in strategy, they can make the 
present conditions work for them.

It is time to adopt sustainable farming practices.

For feedback email, [email protected]

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