posted on 2024-09-06, 05:39authored byMarc Andreinia
In Zimbabwe bani irrigation is a largely unacknowledged small-holder irrigation type. "Banis" (swamps) may be described as any flat, grass- covered depression at the head of streams within the tropics which lacks a definite channel (except perhaps in their lower parts), and which is essentially saturated (Boast, 1990).
The bani irrigation systems typically constructed by communal farmers are composed of small fenced plots. The gardens are usually placed adjacent to one another, often sharing common fences (except in areas where the banis are, as yet, lightly exploited). Pumps are very infrequently used. Water is piped from springs, diverted in small channels from streams, or lifted with buckets from shallow hand-dug wells. Gardeners grow maize, rice, and a variety of horticultural crops, to market or for home consumption.
A research paper on irrigation in Zimbabwe's swamp- lands (bani irrigation) as an alternative agricultural water source. Proceedings of two workshops held in Harare and Juliasdale, Zimbabwe, 3 - 6 August, 1993.
History
Publisher
Irrigation Perfomance In Zimbabwe Project (IPZP), University of Zimbabwe, (UZ)
Citation
Andreinia, M. (1994) Bani irrigation: an alternative water use. In: Rukuni M., Sventisen, M., Meinzen-Dick, R. with Makombe, G. (eds.) Irrigation Performance in Zimbabwe. Harare: UZ/AGRITEX/IFPRI Irrigation Performance in Zimbabwe Research Project, pp. 89-109.
IDS Item Types
Book chapter
Copyright holder
University of Zimbabwe (UZ), Faculty of Agriculture.