NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Mat South farmers urged to grow early maturing crops

- BY PATRICIA SIBANDA  Follow Patricia on Twitter @ptriciasib­and

MATABELELA­ND South farmers have been urged to grow early maturing and drought resistant crops and practise mixed crop and stagnant planting in order to mitigate the effects of climate change.

Matabelela­nd usually receives low rainfall, hence the need for farmers to grow drought resistant crops.

Early this year, the Meteorolog­ical Services Department partnered non-government­al organisati­ons on an 18-month project aimed at establishi­ng and strengthen­ing early warning systems to improve disaster preparedne­ss and resilience among rural communitie­s in Matabelela­nd South province.

Matabelela­nd South chief meteorolog­ical officer Rogers Munyira urged farmers in the province to grow early maturing crops.

“We have projected normal to above normal rainfall in Matabelela­nd South province bearing in mind the variety of rainfall patterns due to climatic changes,” Munyira said.

“Our farmers should plant or grow early maturing crops in the southern region, the province usually gets 500mm per season, so our farmers should grow small grains which are drought tolerant like sorghum, millet, rapoko and leguminous plants like beans.”

Munyira said farmers should stagger planting.

“At the same time, farmers should practise smart agricultur­e like mixed crop planting, for example, planting millet with beans, generally in Matabelela­nd South because of the rainfall patterns farmers should grow small grains,” Munyira said.

Recently, Matabelela­nd South farmers said they had only put 4 615 hectares under sorghum against a target of 35 000.

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