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Insects: Know Your Friends From Your Foes
Hannelene Badenhorst, a PhD candidate in entomology at the University of the Free State, explains the value of differentiating beneficial insects and other arthropods from harmful ones before resorting to blanket chemical control. Lloyd Phillips reports.
Watch Out For Epididymitis
This sexually transmitted disease could be the reason your lamb crop is smaller than expected. Roelof Bezuidenhout offers advice on prevention.
Running Veld-Adapted Dohne Merinos Since 1945
The Blaine family near Kei Road in the Eastern Cape began breeding Merinos in the 1880s, and by the 1940s had established the Ross Dohne stud. This became a foundation stud in the Dohne Research Station’s breeding project near Stutterheim. Tom Blaine spoke to Mike Burgess about their determination to adhere to the ‘original true intention’ of the Dohne Merino.
No-Till Expertise From Argentina
Several Argentinian implements were showcased at a recent farmers’ day that focused on no-till and conservation farming. Pieter Dempsey reports.
Nitrogen And Green Beans
Getting the application rate right.
Getting Down To Business With Geese Farming
Anton and Sharon Kock’s Ember Down goose down and feather business has been built on ethical farming practices, attention to detail and meticulous management.
Legal Evictions: Landowners Need To Know Their Rights
Media reports and public debate often simplify and blur the sensitive issue of evictions. Typically, evictions are seen solely from the perspective of the landowner or from that of landless people, and there is a failure to distinguish between lawful and unlawful evictions. Annelize Crosby, policy head for land affairs at Agri SA, explains the various perspectives and the relevant laws.
Adelaide's Desperate Struggle To Survive The Drought
The drought in the district of Adelaide in the Eastern Cape has paralysed production on farms and left many residents of the town without water for months.
Don't Ignore These Aspects Of The Land Panel Report
Dr. Tinashe Kapuya, Value Chains lead at the Bureau for Food and Agricultural Policy, takes a closer look at the report produced by the Presidential Advisory Panel on Land Reform and Agriculture to highlight some of the suggestions that have received little public attention.
Breeding A Million-dollar Bird
Pigeon breeding and racing remains a popular pursuit, with some fanciers aiming for the ultimate goal of turning their hobby into a career. Sabrina Dean visited brothers Daniel and Justin King of Kingslea Lofts in Bloemfontein to find out more about the demands, and thrills, of the sport.
Improve Fertiliser Placement With Strip-tillage – And Maximise Yield
According to Michael Petersen, lead agronomist at US-based Orthman Manufacturing, the main pillars of success for strip-tillage are vertical tillage, residue management, seedbed preparation and fertiliser placement. Stehan Cloete explains the technical aspects of these factors.
A Grass-based Approach To Beef Stud Farming
The Arwin Farms Bonsmara Stud, founded in 1982 in the Dordrecht district of the Eastern Cape, is run entirely off the veld. Mike Burgess visited Johan and Michael-John Greyling to find out more about their grass-based beef genetics, and the lessons they learnt along the way.
Planting A Bean Crop
Before planting beans, arrange for a soil analysis. This will enable you to address soil fertility correctly. Each component should be topped up if necessary, after which you can apply nitrogen as required.
‘High-End' Properties Not The Target Of Expropriation - Mahlati
About 60% of South Africans do not have tenure of their land, and according to Dr Vuyo Mahlati, president of the African Farmers’ Association of South Africa (AFASA), radical correction steps need to include expropriation without compensation. Donwald Pressly reports.
The Long, Hard Road To Profiting From Potatoes
In 1998, at the age of 45, Frans Vlok left his job as head of Kynoch fertiliser services in the Western Cape to pursue his lifelong dream of farming full-time. He was joined in the business eight years later by his daughter, Monique Vlok, who told Glenneis Kriel of their struggle to succeed.
The Farmer's Role In The Quest For Sustainability
The concept of sustainable development is straightforward: the future should be a better, healthier place than the present. Farmers have a major part to play in forging this future.
The Basics Of The Persian Breed
This indigenous fat-rumped meat breed does well in arid semi-desert, savanna bushveld and coastal spekboom veld. The lambs mature early.
Plant Nutrition: Part 1
Managing plant nutrition is crucial to successful hydroponic production. In this issue, we discuss the macro-elements nitrogen, potassium and phosphorus, and their interaction with one another.
How To Deal With Desertion From Work
The operation of a business can be severely disrupted when an employee is absent without leave. This in turn can hit the company’s bottom line.
Gold For John Deere
John Deere was awarded the only gold medal in the DLG/Agritechnica 2019 Innovation Awards for its eAutoPowr transmission and intelligent e8WD system for the 8R Series large tractors.
Breeding Fuss-Free Sheep
The changing climate and rising input costs are forcing farmers to find innovative ways to remain economically viable. Hugo Wiehahn, owner of Hugo Wiehahn en Seuns Mutton Merino stud near Caledon, spoke to Glenneis Kriel about how his livestock have helped him achieve this goal.
Analysing SA's Trade In Live Plants
The value output generated by trade in live plants has not increased at a similar rate to that of the horticulture sector as a whole. Yet this remains a subsector with much growth potential.
Cold-Pressed Sunflower Oil: A Hot New Product
Vergezocht Plant Oils is the first factory in Africa to produce cold-pressed, high-oleic sunflower oil. Sabrina Dean visited the plant in Bloemfontein in the Free State to find out more about Vergezocht’s business plan, which is built around using a niche sunflower cultivar to produce a high-demand product in a world moving towards healthier lifestyles.
Biodiversity: A Valuable Ally For The Farmer
Caring for the indigenous vegetation on a farm not only helps protect plant species from extinction, but benefits the production of crops in several crucial ways. Glenneis Kriel spoke to Cape Nature botanist Rupert Koopman and Stellenbosch University researcher Rhoda Malgas.
'Africa Needs Its Own Agro-ecology Revolution'
An eco-agriculture or agroecology model such as that adopted in India and parts of Asia and Africa could play a major role in improving South African farmers’ incomes by reducing input costs and improving farm productivity and sustainability.
A Bomber Pilot's Supreme Sacrifice For His Comrades
World War II pilot Edwin Swales received a posthumous Victoria Cross for saving the lives of his crew. Graham Jooste tells the moving story of this South African hero.
Strict Selection Criteria Are Vital To Boerperd Breeding
This popular indigenous breed is a hardy and muscular all-rounder that excels in many equestrian sports.
New Holland Debuts Orchard And Vineyard Tractor
During the second annual Nampo Cape 2019 event, which was held in Bredasdorp in the Western Cape from 4 to 6 September, New Holland presented a number of new products, such as the TD3.50F tractor for orchards and vineyards.
Green Beans: History And Varieties
Green beans originated in what is now Central America and Mexico and have been grown in the latter for at least 7 000 years. In time, farmers began differentiating between varieties more suitable to be eaten green, as a whole pod, and those better enjoyed as dry beans, such as haricots, which are used today for baked beans and sugar beans. Green beans and the various dry beans are all members of the same species, Phaseolus vulgaris, and can be crossed with each other.
Reduce Heat Stress In Poultry With Vitamin C Supplementation
High environmental temperature is the most common stressor of chickens in South Africa.