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Home / Farmers' Kraal with Charles Tjatindi - Have options in farming - it's vital

Farmers' Kraal with Charles Tjatindi - Have options in farming - it's vital

2022-09-06  Charles Tjatindi

Farmers' Kraal with Charles Tjatindi - Have options in farming - it's vital

The recent livestock movement restrictions and subsequent ban on exports of cattle to South Africa should serve as a wake-up call to farmers. The situation has surely amplified the need for a more diversified approach to farming, as opposed to sorely focusing on one product.

For years, Namibia’s cattle industry has remained fairly stable with farmers raking in good profits from sales of their products. There were of course times that prices dropped low due to economic conditions, which forced farmers to look at other options as opposed to selling off their products as giveaway prices.

Those farmers who had goats or sheep in their kraal have been able to weather the storm by redirecting their attention to these livestock. This is what diversification is all about, and it is a good deal too. 

The calls for diversification hinges on the need to have multiple income streams as farmers, due to the volatility of certain farming modes to climate change and so on.

While this is a noble call to action, there are surely exceptions to this call. For instance, is it always a given that when one diversifies your farming operations that you will make good returns? And is the opposite – that you will make minimal returns or complete losses if you fail to diversify – also true? It’s a double-edged sword that one needs to hold firmly lest it turns on you.

Granted, having different sources of income is always a plus. If one form of farming is hit economically, then one could rely on the other form of farming to make ends meet. So, if I am primarily a livestock farmer, it would make perfect sense to venture into small scale poultry production too. This will surely cover up when the drought hits the livestock sector.

 So, if I have always been farming with small livestock and have been profitable in this regard, perhaps it makes better economic sense to further my exploits onto large stock farming, right? Well, not exactly! Like many things out there, this too is no fool-proof method. Allow me to break this down.

Firstly, the type of farming one takes on is largely determined by a few factors such as environment, climate, and most importantly the market. In Namibia, there are several great examples of how farmers in the different parts of the country have made a good living by intensively farming with only one type of product.

This is so because this specific product appears to thrive in the environment where it is being farmed. Sheep farmers in the south of the country have made a good living by specialising only in sheep farming. They have paid farms off with returns from largely sheep farming.

The same rings true for large stock farmers in the Otjozondjupa and Omaheke region, who have mostly specialised in cattle farming, as many have equally made a living without adding goats or sheep to the equation.

Areas in the maize triangle have equally done well to utilise the area for what it is best for – crop (maize) farming. Some still hold some cattle and a few small stocks, but generally, the bulk of the income comes from large-scale crop farming.

The same can be said of mahangu producers north of the red line, many of who hardly keep large numbers of cattle or small stock.

The bottom line? Diversification works, when done well. 

tjatindi@gmail.com


2022-09-06  Charles Tjatindi

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