कोशिश गोल्ड - मुक्त
Brahman breeder crafts progeny for future performance
Farmer's Weekly
|August 15-22, 2025
Miles Dicke operates his Miles2Go Brahman Stud from Idlewild farm in the Kei Mouth area of the Eastern Cape. He spoke to Sabrina Dean about how he is using technology to improve the breed.
-
Miles Dicke is a third-generation cattleman, having grown up in the family farming business in the Limpopo bushveld. He now runs his stud component, as well as a commercial cow and calf segment and an ox backgrounding system, in Kei Mouth in the Eastern Cape. There is ample rainfall and a temperate frost-free climate that facilitates two breeding seasons per year.
He first left the farm in Limpopo to study agriculture at the University of the Free State in the mid 90s, and after completing his B Agric degree in 1997, he took a 'gap year' with a difference.
The trend in those days, he remembers, was for youngsters to go to places like London, England, where they would work in security or some type of services industry. Dicke instead took his gap year on cattle ranches in Texas in the US.
"My father had organised a type of internship for me. This was a time before cell phones, so I arrived there with no idea who I was meeting or where I was going." He began working at a Brahman ranch and settled in well. He ended up staying in the US for two years, during which time he gained experience on three different ranches.
This phase was an important part of cementing the breed he had grown up with as the breed of choice for his future endeavours.
"I had grown up with Brahmans, so I knew them. It was already an easy sell, so to speak... but it [my time in Texas] really made me realise how unique the cattle are and how Brahmans, or Zebu types, define the beef industry in the world."
He says Zebu-type cattle are the most prolific in the world, with some of the core traits that set them apart including adaptability, disease resistance and heat tolerance.
"That is what has made them what they are," says Dicke.
TRADING THE BUSHVELD FOR THE COAST
यह कहानी Farmer's Weekly के August 15-22, 2025 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
Farmer's Weekly से और कहानियाँ
Farmer's Weekly
Pastry delights and cupcakes
The versatility of pastry in baking and cooking is best flaunted by two vastly different recipes appealing to the sweet and savoury tooth, while a novel way to bake those Christmas-themed cupcakes will also go down well.
4 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Specialised spider-hunting wasps
Wasps are apex predators of the insect world and have developed many survival strategies. One group of wasps focuses on hunting spiders to provide a source of food for their larval offspring
2 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
From bulls to boardrooms: farming part-time as a professional
Maintaining a farm requires time, resources, and commitment. Farming part-time while being fully employed elsewhere can seem daunting and risky. Although it certainly presents unique challenges, it is feasible for some. Koot Klopper and Herman van Heerden spoke to Henning Naudé about how excellent time management and the delegation of resources, as part-time farmers, successfully keep their farms productive.
5 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Holy Shiitake: mastering the science of gourmet fungi
Mushroom production is inherently the practice of expanding mycelium. But since wanted and unwanted fungi flourish under the same circumstances, a mushroom farmer's biggest challenge is ensuring the right fungi prevails. Lindi Botha reports on Rory Brooks' learning curve.
9 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
No more 'secret' price hikes?
'Secret' electricity price hikes in South Africa have been curbed in a game-changing court ruling, explains Felix Dube, lecturer in the Department of Law at the University of Venda.
4 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
The cutworm scourge, and how to control it
The dominant cutworm, Agrotis segetum, is causing renewed, costly damage to South African maize, soya bean, and sunflower.
5 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Legislative gap requires a rethink on biosecurity controls
Since the dawn of democracy, the agriculture sector has cemented its place as one of the essential and trusted pillars for economic growth, job creation, and foreign earnings in South Africa.
2 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
From kitchen experiments to a thriving meat empire
What started as an after-hours kitchen project in the Truter household has grown into the fully fledged meat empire Deli-Co. Brothers Pieter and Hendri Truter told Glenneis Kriel how they turned a local favourite into a multigenerational family business.
7 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Brushing up on your 'cow speak'
Experienced stockman and cattle judge Willie de Jager spoke to Sabrina Dean about some of the basics of reading cattle behaviour and how best to handle these animals.
8 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Corporate day job fuels farming dream
Marius Smit lives in the middle of Gauteng in Centurion and spends his workdays in the fast-paced high-stress corporate sector as a group forensic head for Discovery.
5 mins
December 5-12, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
