試す 金 - 無料
Stable mango yields: timing is everything
Farmer's Weekly
|February 26, 2021
Achieving yield stability over many years is the golden standard in mango farming. But this is easier said than done: success requires a keen understanding of the demands of mango trees and excellent management. Award-winning mango producer Johann du Preez spoke to Lindi Botha about the science of tree manipulation
“Any crop can be seen as ‘easy’ or ‘difficult’ to cultivate, depending on how you manage it and your yield expectations. This is especially true of mangoes,” says Johann du Preez, general manager of Bavaria Fruit Estates in Hoedspruit, Limpopo.
“You can leave mangoes to follow their own natural cycle with minimal interference, and still get a crop. But with profit margins being so narrow, it’s crucial to get the best crop and a consistent yield. This is why I constantly try to improve the crop.”
Du Preez, who has over 30 years’ experience as a mango farmer, emphasises the need to produce a consistent harvest, rather than a bumper harvest one year, but with inevitably smaller fruit, and a small harvest with larger fruit the following season. This is a particular problem with the mango, which is an alternate-bearing tree.

“Inconsistency makes marketing fruit more difficult. Markets want to know what they’re getting and where it fits into their marketing plan. So it’s better to get a similar yield and the same-sized fruit year after year.”
Du Preez walks the talk: in an industry where yields have fluctuated dramatically from one year to the next, he has achieved approximately 27t/ ha consistently over the past four years. He is also the winner of the South African Mango Growers’ Association’s coveted Golden Mango Award in 2018 for his contribution to mango research.

CAREFUL MANIPULATION
このストーリーは、Farmer's Weekly の February 26, 2021 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Farmer's Weekly からのその他のストーリー
Farmer's Weekly
Tropical avo smoothie
Escape to the tropics with this luxurious, creamy, and vibrant smoothie! Blending rich avocado and sweet mango with zesty lime, fragrant mint, and a punch of tangy granadilla, this recipe transforms into a nutrient-packed and silky-smooth treat.
1 min
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
THE HITCHING POST
I am a 60-year-old white woman who loves camping, animals, the outdoors and watching sport.
2 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
The enduring legacy of Tiyo Soga
In the 1850s, Tiyo Soga, a Xhosa man, became the first ordained black South African minister. But as Mike Burgess writes, his legacy would also be determined by his all-round intellectual abilities honed by a solid Scottish education.
4 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Isuzu D-Max shows single cabs can be comfortable companions
Bakkie manufacturers don't give single cabs to the media due to them generally being regarded as workhorses without the bells and whistles from fancier double cabs. The Citizen's Charl Bosch was gobsmacked when a single cab arrived for a three-month stay.
2 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
South Africa eyes home-grown rice as ARC expands research efforts
South Africa is taking bold steps toward reducing its dependence on rice imports by exploring the viability of home-grown upland rice. Through a major research drive led by the Agricultural Research Council's Small Grain division, scientists and industry partners are testing rice varieties capable of thriving in South Africa's diverse soils and increasingly water-scarce climate. Anelisa Gusha reports.
3 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Spanish tortilla
Bring the authentic flavours of Spain to your table with this robust and satisfying Spanish tortilla.
1 min
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
New year brings marvellous new titles
Patricia McCracken, like many of us, has settled back into the grind of the new year and picked up a diverse selection of books ranging from travel, to fiction, to non-fiction and a delightful local children's adventure.
2 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Nitrogen 'switch' unlocks greener crops
A ground-breaking discovery by molecular biology professors Kasper Røjkjær Andersen and Simona Radutoiu at Aarhus University in Denmark offers a significant step toward developing self-fertilising grain crops, potentially revolutionising agriculture to be greener and more climate-friendly.
1 min
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
Sweet prospects: the current state of litchi production in South Africa
Bram Snijder, agricultural consultant and chairperson of the South African Litchi Growers' Association, spoke to Octavia Avesca Spandiel about the litchi industry embracing new opportunities, tackling challenges, implementing innovation, and reaching markets both locally and internationally.
6 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Farmer's Weekly
How AFGRI uses technology to unlock farm finance from asset to market
As modern farming becomes more capital-intensive and digitally driven, AFGRI is reinventing agricultural finance by linking technology directly to lending decisions.
5 mins
January 16-23, 2026
Translate
Change font size
