Marikana North West

BBL PARTICIPANT: Anna Kgaretswe, Majakangeng, Marinkana, NorthWest

In a Nutshell

Through her participation in SocioTech’s Broad-Based Livelihoods (BBL) strategies to stimulate personal economic activity, Anna Kgaretswe from Majakaneng has acquired agricultural skills and applied this knowledge to create a successful food gardening business, and add value to her produce through home agro-processing.

She has conscientiously saved in order to finance agricultural equipment. She is reaping rewards through her work, and an inspiration to her son, who is already planning to build on her legacy.

She says…

Anna Kagaretswe

I first met Jabu from SocioTech in 2019. Through him I learnt in the BBL MyFood course about developing my soil and growing God’s way – organically, without chemicals. I have found this method to be very successful. I don’t often get pests but if I do, I get rid of them using aloe juice and Sunlight bar soap. I grow the aloes at the end of each row of vegetables so I am always prepared but the only problem I have at the moment is with Red Spider.

Once my SocioTech tunnel went up there was no stopping me. The garden has gone from strength to strength. I started with that one tunnel and then last year I won an award and the prize was more netting so I used it to put up a second tunnel.

I love my work but I don’t want to sound as if I am only interested in myself because that is not the case. I am part of a community that supports each other. One of the things I like about SocioTech is that it teaches us to think and act, remembering that as a community we need more and more people to be successful. Through the PhindaPhinda programme I have helped to train 16 people. It is satisfying to see their growth.

"Growth starts here and can spread outward."

Meeting Charles and doing the BBL MyFuture course with him was like a gift from God. Charles taught me to budget and save. This JoJo tank that you see here in my garden and the borehole are both the result of that saving. The borehole cost R27 000 and I saved for it. BBL MyFuture is the reason I always have water.

If you budget, anything is possible. It is not only the JoJo and the borehole. My child is in grade 11 at a school in Mahikeng and all his books and uniform have come from those savings. I have taught him all about the BBL MyFuture way and its just our culture now. We are a BBL MyFuture family.

He knows that if you have no job you must make one for yourself. He says that he wants to farm when he leaves school. Not here. His dream is to have much more space than would be possible here. I am planning to extend with chickens and also to develop the land on the other side of the road but his plans are much more extensive than that. I tell him to think of this place as the beginning. Growth starts here and can spread outward.

People Know me now and they come to me. Business is good.

My garden is seasonal but at the moment I have lettuce, strawberries, tomatoes, green peppers, chilis and spinach. When I first started I used to hustle and go door to door with my vegetables but people know me now and they come to me. Business is good. They come because my prices are good and my quality is high. I charge R5 for a lettuce which is much less that in the supermarkets. The cost of living is so high right now and the people in this area are poor, so you have to keep your prices competitive. My vegetables don’t taste like the ones in Shoprite and they last long – even if you don’t have a fridge they keep fresh for a long time. I think it is because I don’t use chemicals.

I believe that farming God’s way makes crops healthier. People want that now especially since COVID. I am interested in the medicinal power of plants. I am experimenting with growing ginger and garlic. If they grow well my plan is to make teas and ointments with the juice. There are so many people with skin problems in Majakaneng – growths, boils and sores -  that I think people would buy those treatments to help them heal.

 

 

Anna Kgaretswe

Once you have a garden cooking becomes a pleasure. I grow thyme and put it into my tomato and onion gravy with a little green pepper. That is so delicious. I love my beetroot chakalaka too. At the moment the beetroots are few and mostly buried under the green peppers but later in the year it will be their turn to be the star of the show. I make a strawberry and banana juice using fruit from my beds and the banana tree. People come from all over Majakaneng to buy that juice.

I am always planning for the future but sometimes it is important to stop for a moment and reflect. If I look back, I almost can’t believe that it is only 4 years since I started with SocioTech. I used to struggle to put food on the table now everything is just wow!

 

I used to struggle to put food on the table now everything is just wow!

Anna Kgaretswe