The Star Early Edition

Fall armyworms wreak devastatio­n on small farmers

Once-thriving crops have been decimated

- ILANIT CHERNICK

FOR DECADES, Frans Mashabango­pe and his twin sister Elisa Masemola have farmed and lived next door to one another in Ga-Sekgopo village in Greater Letaba, Limpopo.

The siblings have been farmers for more than 50 years, selling their crops to the community, passing traders and tourists, as well as trading bags full of mealies for maize at a company nearby. But this all changed a few months ago when the fall armyworm began to viciously attack and ravage their crops.

The fall armyworm is a major issue that many within this rural farming community are dealing with daily.

Aside from mealies, Masemola also grows guavas, pawpaws, samp, naartjies and mangoes in her garden, but since the armyworms have arrived, nothing has grown.

“There’s not even mopane worms in the trees, it’s like these big green worms have eaten them too,” she said.

For the 70-year-old twins, farming has always been their main source of income. They used to farm together on the mountainsi­de next to the village, but as they got older, it became harder to climb up the mountain every day and both decided to rather plant and sell their produce from their gardens at home.

“I feed a family of five, including grandchild­ren. This is how we’ve lived for so many years, growing mealies, peeling them and trading what we harvest for mealie meal. This is the only thing we know; what are we supposed to do now?” Mashabango­pe asked.

“This creature has come out of nowhere and eaten through my beautiful crops. I don’t sleep well at night because I can’t stop thinking about how I will feed my family,” he said.

“I worry about what will happen to them if I can’t look after them, they depend on me,” Mashabango­pe added.

In front of The Star team, the elderly man began opening and shredding some of his mealie stalks in search of the worm to show us.

At the same time, Mashabango­pe’s daughter Agostina walked out of their small home to bring her father water. Holding a silver jug, she stood nearby and watched him carefully until he finally found two fall armyworms feasting on a stalk where mealies should have been growing. He picked them up and showed them to his daughter, holding them in the palm of his hand.

For Agostina, this was the first time she had seen the pest up close, and she wasn’t shy to show her disgust.

“This is it? This little worm is the thing that has caused so many problems for us?” she asked.

Her father placed them on the ground and crushed them with his shoe, determined to put an end to at least some of the creatures responsibl­e for the destructio­n.

Many of the stalks and leaves had signs that the fall armyworm had attacked, leaving holes and marks on the leaves and inside the stalks.

Talking in Sepedi, the siblings recalled how this time last year, the crops in their gardens had grown well.

“By this time of the year there should be a sweet smell of fruit in the air, because the mangoes and the pawpaws are ripe, but this year there is nothing, it’s all bare,” Masemola said, pointing to the various trees in her garden which hadn’t borne any fruit.

“Any fruit that has grown this season was completely rotten,” she said, reaching out and plucking what looked like a pawpaw growing on the tree.

She opened it to reveal that it was rotten right through, with the seeds a sickly shade of grey instead of pitch black, which signifies whether the fruit is healthy.

“Look, you can’t eat this, it’s supposed to be ripe and edible by now, but this will make you sick if you have it,” Masemola said as she dropped it on the ground.

“A lot of the food we grow and sell here feeds the community, and usually our streets are filled with bakkies of people from all over coming to buy our fruits and vegetables. Now there’s nothing and no one, because we don’t have food to sell. There’s not even money to buy bread,” she said.

For Masemola, life hasn’t been easy. In 2006, all three of her sons died in a horrific car accident, leaving her to fend for herself financiall­y, and the armyworms have compounded the difficulti­es she has been facing since her sons died.

“I have no income now, I have a small pension but it doesn’t pay for much; it pays the electricit­y, burial society and other expenses,” she said, adding that all she wanted was for her crops to start growing well again.

Mashabango­pe said he first realised something was wrong in his mealie garden at the beginning of last month when he noticed that the mealies weren’t growing as they usually did.

“I check on my garden every day to see how my maize is growing. I started to notice that the kernels weren’t growing as they usually do. Something was eating them because they weren’t growing at all and they should have been doing well by then,” he said.

He took a closer look and spotted the greenish worm feeding on the maize kernel and noticed the same worms on most of his crops.

“We need something to help us get rid of this problem. This has been a huge setback for me and my family. I have to ration the mealie meal I have left from the last time I traded because it’s so expensive to buy it in the shops,” he explained.

The twins said they wanted the government to visit Ga-Sekgopo and other areas affected so that officials could understand the severity of the problem.

“They need to see what is happening here and help us. We can’t carry on like this, we have families and a community to look after,” Masemola said.

“It feels like the end of the world, the only thing we can do now is pray that this infestatio­n will end,” Mashabango­pe concluded. @Lanc_02

 ??  ?? CRISIS: Twins Frans Mashabango­pe and Elisa Masemola, who having been farming together since they were young, have been affected by the fall armyworm plague, which has ravaged their maize and other crops.
CRISIS: Twins Frans Mashabango­pe and Elisa Masemola, who having been farming together since they were young, have been affected by the fall armyworm plague, which has ravaged their maize and other crops.
 ??  ?? RAPACIOUS: The fall armyworm is a major issue for many farmers. Small rural farmers have to deal with this pest daily.
RAPACIOUS: The fall armyworm is a major issue for many farmers. Small rural farmers have to deal with this pest daily.
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