Rural women continue to play their part in ensuring food security

She started growing few vegetables on a one hectare plot in 2007, and after expanding the production area to five hectares, she is today feeding the communities with quality cabbage, spinach, carrots, onions, beetroot, tomatoes, green pepper, chillies and sweet potatoes. Mrs Mirriam Nchoe from Phitshane, a village outside Mahikeng in the Ngaka Modiri Molema District, says she took a stance to be a provider of nutritious food after realising that the rate of unemployment was high and that the standard of living among her fellow villagers was low.

Without any formal training on vegetable production, Mrs Nchoe relied on the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development’s Agricultural Extension Officers for guidance, and she says this has helped her. She adds that the identification of crops suitable for the soil type in her area as the first step performed by the department, paved the way for her to be amongst the best and well-known vegetable producers in the District.

“While local communities and those from the neighbouring villages were initially my targeted market, I have managed to make a way into the retailers’ market, as I am now selling my produce at Mafikeng Spar and Boxer Supermarket. I am also a regular seller at the periodic Mahikeng Farmers Market where I am able to establish contact with potential clients,” explains Mrs Nchoe.

As a way of giving back to the community that supports her, Mrs Nchoe often donates vegetable packs to the local pre-school where each child takes a pack home, at the pensions’ pay-point, and at the local clinic.

The Department of Agriculture and Rural Development has provided her with a water tank and a net fence to protect her crops from birds and bad weather. Key to her future plans is to have an irrigation system that will cover the whole garden and to employ more labourers, especially women and youth. She is currently working with two local women.

“As the world is commemorating October as Food Security month, it is through women such as Mrs Nchoe that the vision of increasing the understanding of problems and solutions in the drive to end hunger will be better achieved”, said MEC for Agriculture and Rural Development in the North West, Ms Desbo Mohono, who called on other women, youth and people with disabilities to also become part of the solutions of ending hunger and unemployment.

The national commemoration of the annual World Food Day will this year be hosted by the North West province on Wednesday, 16 October at the Mmabatho Stadium.

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