Farmers’ Kraal with Erastus Ngaruka – Rainy season and livestock diseases 

Farmers’ Kraal with Erastus Ngaruka – Rainy season and livestock diseases 

A good rainy season should be considered to start at the anticipated time. 

It should be well distributed throughout the season and ultimately rehydrate the soil, refill water sources and revegetate the rangeland.  

However, recent rainfall activities have been conspicuously erratic. 

Their effects are a huge concern to farmers. Although rainfall brings relief to farmers, it is also associated with several adverse conditions that affect the farm environment, livestock and crops. 

The conditions include lightning strikes, floods, mud traps, as well as pests and disease outbreaks. 

These conditions pose a significant threat to livestock health, nutrition and general well-being, consequently compromising their productive performance and survival. 

Therefore, farmers need to be wary of rainfall-induced threats and find ways to mitigate the consequences. 

Pests have been a common threat in Namibia, including outbreaks of armyworms in recent years in the northern regions. 

In addition, the locust outbreak in the southern regions had devastating effects on productivity and livelihoods. 

Crop farmers lost their yields to worms, and livestock farmers in the south lost grazable materials (grass) to locusts.

Frequent diseases

Moreover, livestock diseases during rainfall are highly prevalent. 

The common ones that farmers should look out for include footrot, sweating sickness, gall sickness and lumpy skin disease. 

Footrot is a bacterial infection of the hoof, characterised by lameness and a smelly wound on the hoof.  

The predisposing factors include dampness or wet soils. 

Footrot can be prevented by keeping animals out of damp kraals or surfaces. 

The treatments include cleaning and disinfecting the wound, using footbaths (e.g., copper sulphate solution) at kraals, and injecting with common antibiotics (e.g., Disulfox, Terramycin) when necessary.

Furthermore, with the prevailing moist environment, the tick population is on the rise. Thus, the prevalence of tick-borne diseases, such as sweating sickness and gall sickness, should be expected. 

Precautions 

Everyone on the farm or handling animals should always take precautions and seek immediate assistance from health professionals for tick bites. 

Another disease that has gained prevalence during the rainy season in the country is Lumpy Skin Disease (LSD). 

Outbreaks have already occurred in parts of the Otjozondjupa and Omaheke regions. 

LSD is a viral disease affecting cattle, transmitted by biting insects such as flies, ticks and mosquitoes. 

The predisposing factor is a wet environment, which promotes the proliferation of insect populations. 

Animals are vulnerable because they often loaf around waterholes or ponds. 

Such areas are the breeding grounds for insects such as mosquitoes and flies. 

LSD is preventable, with an annual vaccine that is readily available at veterinary medicine shops.  

It is advisable to incorporate LSD vaccination into the farm’s health programme. 

Conventionally, the best time to vaccinate is before or at the onset of the rainy season (September-November), given the varied conditions across farming areas. 

An outbreak of this disease negatively affects the farming economy, as quarantine measures are implemented, such as restricting cattle movement and marketing. 

Farmers should keep their farming environments clean and safe for themselves and their animals.

Farmers should furthermore always observe and report abnormal livestock conditions or behaviours to the nearest veterinary office or livestock health experts.

Lastly, farmers should note that each rainfall season is unique in terms of commencement, distribution, intensity and associated risks. 

Thus, they need to adopt appropriate management strategies to circumvent possible adverse conditions.

*Erastus Ngaruka is Agribank’s technical advisor on livestock and rangeland.