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Lack
of animal feed is destroying the dairy industry in Zimbabwe
Channel4
September 09, 2008
View article
on the Channel4 website
Dairy farmers in Zimbabwe
are having to let their cattle starve, writes Helen, our Zimbabwe
blogger.
"The calves cry
when I walk past their pens," Sandra told me this week as she
made frantic arrangements to try and keep her dairy cows and calves
alive. Sandra is one of the few dairy farmers left in the country
and tells of a desperate situation facing livestock farmers and
their animals.
"We ran out of dairy
meal three months ago," Sandra said. Stockfeed suppliers have
no maize and no soya beans - the two main ingredients of animal
feed. As food supplies for people have dropped to crisis levels,
what reserves there were have been diverted for human use, leaving
animals emaciated, starving or being slaughtered for meat.
The lack of animal feed
couldn't come at a worse time of year. It's the dry season and we
haven't had a drop of rain for five months. What grazing is left
is dry, brown and at its least nutritious.
Exacerbating the situation
are countless uncontrolled fires which are devouring the country
every day. Smoke and ash fill the sky from dawn to dusk as wild
fires sweep across the vast landscape of farms that were seized
by the government leaving black, barren dust bowls in their wake.
In the three months that
Sandra's been unable to get dairy feed, milk production on her farm
has dropped from 1800 litres to 250 litres a day. Sandra ordered
and paid for cotton seed cake from one of the hundreds of door to
door black market dealers who run the country. That was the last
she saw of them, or her money.
These smooth-talking
wheeler-dealers can source anything, and keep the country ticking
over. They trade on the black market in anything that's in short
supply, from fuel and foreign currency to bank notes and food -
particularly flour, sugar and cooking oil. They call themselves
"entrepreneurs", and if you aren't prepared to take the
risk and buy from them, you go without.
Sandra has lost 14 of
her dairy cows to starvation in the past three months. She has lost
count of how many calves have died in the same period of time. She
is selling others that are losing condition to butchers, and putting
all her time and effort into saving the stronger cows.
"It is truly the
worst time ever," she said. "We've had two calves born
in the last two days, and I just look at them and think: Oh hell,
another two mouths to feed. And the calves are heifers too, usually
a time to rejoice."
Sandra has resorted to
scouring the bush for feed to keep her cows alive. She sends her
employees out far and wide looking for acacia trees and they sweep
up the dry, brown pods and bring them home in empty grain sacks.
The pods are chopped up in a mill along with grass, pea-hay and
dry maize stalks
(locally known as mashanga), and on this Sandra is keeping her remaining
dairy cows alive.
The impact of the imminent
collapse of Zimbabwe's dairy industry is already being felt across
the country. Milk is non existent or in extremely short supply in
supermarkets everywhere - even in small farming towns. What milk
there is increases in price at least once every week, and mostly
it is raw, unpasteurised and sold direct from dairies to customers
who bring their own containers.
In the last month milk
sellers have started charging in US dollars as those dairy farmers
who can afford to, have no choice but to importing their own stock
feed from South Africa or killing off their herds.
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