The Herald (South Africa)

Cacadu fruit farmer brings home national prize

Cacadu fruit farmer brings home national Female Entreprene­ur of the Year accolade – and top exporter prize

- By Thozi kaManyisan­a

They export to the Middle East, Far East and Europe and also serve the local market, with an income of R9.5-million.

THE Eastern Cape province reclaimed the overall national Female Entreprene­ur of the Year Award (FEA) at the Department of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries (DAFF) awards ceremony held in Polokwane recently.

The DAFF FEA awards commence at district level, then move to provincial level and culminate in the national awards.

The initiative was conceptual­ised to encourage and increase the participat­ion of women, youth and people living with disabiliti­es in the agricultur­e, forestry and fisheries sectors.

The awards initiative is aimed at rewarding the efforts and contributi­on of women, youth and people with disabiliti­es in matters of food security, job creation, economic growth and poverty alleviatio­n.

The FEA is a joint venture between DAFF, provinces and key stakeholde­rs in the agricultur­e, forestry and fisheries sectors.

The awards include an overall winner and the following nine category winners: best female worker, best subsistenc­e producer, top entreprene­ur: smallholde­r, top entreprene­ur: processing, top entreprene­ur: commercial, top entreprene­ur: export markets and two ministeria­l awards for young and disabled female entreprene­urs in the sectors.

After the Eastern Cape lost the award won by citrus farmer Ms Ivy Nokwanele Mzamo in 2014 to Ms Julia Shungube from Mpumalanga in 2015, Ms Velicia Janse of Oudrift Trufe Farm in Cacadu brought back the coveted prize to the province.

Prior to being announced the overall winner, Ms Janse had defended the national Best Entreprene­ur Award in the export markets category which was won by a citrus farmer, Buyiswa Ndyenga, in 2015. Ms Janse exported 71.98% of apples and 80.2% of pears from the 2 551.4 tons they harvested this year.

They export to the Middle East, Far East and Europe and also serve the local market, with an income of R9.5-million.

Ms Janse was also the province’s FEA overall winner at the award ceremony, held in Port Elizabeth.

Ms Janse was not the only winner from the province at the ceremony in Polokwane. Ms Philisa Fadana from Woodberry, Komga, who won best entreprene­ur award in the smallholde­r category at the FEA provincial ceremony and was the overall winner for the Amathole District Municipali­ty, received the Minister’s Award for Disabled Entreprene­urs.

Ms Fadana, who is blind, defended the Minister’s Award prize, which was won by Avryl Cox from Qumbu in 2015.

Ms Fadana’s 256ha farm has 144 Bonsmara and Brahman, 249 sheep, 38 geese, 92 free range chickens, 59 goats and 14 pigs. She has six poultry structures with the capacity of keeping up to 3 000 broiler chickens each and an orchard with mangos, strawberri­es, pawpaws, lemons, macadamia and hazel nuts, bananas, oranges and custard apples.

The province came back from the competitio­n with a whopping R890 000 worth of prizes.

Ms Janse received a combined prize of R790 000 – R250 000 for the export category, R500 000 for the overall prize and R40 000 worth of fertiliser. Ms Fadana received a prize of R100 000.

In terms of FEA guidelines, winners are expected to utilise 80% of the prize money towards capacity and enterprise developmen­t for the sustainabi­lity of their businesses.

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 ??  ?? HANDS ON: Velicia Janse, owner of Oudrif Trufe Farm, helps box apples
HANDS ON: Velicia Janse, owner of Oudrif Trufe Farm, helps box apples
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