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Agronomic practices for the low rainfall regions of Zimbabwe

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posted on 2024-09-06, 06:22 authored by Phibeon Nyamudeza
Despite the lack of technical support, peasants in the low- rainfall regions have been growing crops for ages. The major crop has been sorghum. Although sorghum is widely recognized as well adapted to semi-arid environments, it fails completely in some years. In most years the yields are very low under the present farming system. The best way to produce crops in this region is by irrigation (and indeed the south east lowveld has the biggest portion of NR5 under large and small scale irrigation schemes). But the high cost of setting up irrigation schemes means that the production of crops by small scale farmers will continue to depend on rain-fed production. This means that success in cropping depends on using agronomic techniques which conserve or use water sparingly to enable the crop to survive under the low rainfall conditions and to go through the long dry spells common in these areas.

A position paper on the importance of irrigation based agriculture to some of the low-rainfall and arid rural areas of Zimbabwe.

Funding

Special thanks are due to the Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education (NUFFIC), The Hague, for providing financial support towards the hosting of the workshop upon which this book is based. NUFFIC also met part of the publication costs.

History

Publisher

University of Zimbabwe (UZ) Publications

Citation

Nyamudeza, P. (1999) Agronomic practices for the low rainfall regions of Zimbabwe. In: Manzungu, E., Senzanje, A. and van der Zaag, P. (eds.) Water for agriculture in Zimbabwe: policy and management options for the smallholder sector, pp. 49-63. Harare: UZ.

IDS Item Types

Book chapter

Copyright holder

University of Zimbabwe (UZ)

Country

Zimbabwe.

Language

en

Identifier ISBN

0-908307-63-2

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    University of Zimbabwe Social Sciences Research

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