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An Innovative Mobile Macadamia Dehusker

Farmer's Weekly

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December 04, 2020

When Fairview Farm was using a static Macadamia Dehusker, KwaZulu-Natal macadamia farmer Robert Carlton-Shields estimated that his pickers each lost about two hours’ productivity a day during the harvest season. He set about remedying this, and his subsequent collaboration with an engineering company has resulted in a mobile macadamia dehusker that saves time and money. Lloyd Phillips reports.

- Lloyd Phillips

An Innovative Mobile Macadamia Dehusker

Robert Carlton-Shields bought Fairview Farm as a going concern in 2011, but it took about six years and approximately R700 000/ha in orchard re-establishment and management costs before he finally reaped a viable harvest from his 10ha of macadamia trees. Given this investment in money and time, he set about improving the cost-efficiency of his operation wherever he could.

According to Carlton-Shields, macadamia production is one of the fastest-expanding agriculture industries in KwaZulu-Natal (KZN).

This is confirmed by industry organisation Macadamias South Africa, which states that more than 2 000ha of macadamia orchards were established in the province in 2019 alone.

Carlton-Shields currently has 26 500 14-year- old trees, mostly of the Beaumont variety.

CONTAINING COSTS

Due to high input costs, he cannot afford any inefficiency in the harvesting process. In addition, the farm is situated in the Oribi Gorge area, where erratic local climatic conditions cause different parts of the orchards to flower and produce nuts at different times during the harvesting season, which runs from April to November. This means that each tree has to be visited three to four times in a season by pickers.

“Our 40 or so seasonal pickers use their pick sticks to knock ripe nuts from trees, which are about 6m tall,” he says. The pickers then collect the fallen nuts into 20kg bags in the 9m-wide rows between the trees. The average annual harvest is about 4,5t/ha of nut-in-shell.

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History's most famous musket

The Brown Bess musket was the standard issue firearm for British forces from 1722 to 1838. As Mike Burgess writes, this much-loved weapon contributed significantly to the consolidation of the British Empire that by 1922 was in control of a quarter of the earth's surface.

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Muddy soil can cause lameness due to footrot

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The role of family farmers in sub- Saharan Africa

As part of the United Nations' recognition of family farming as a vital component of the global agricultural landscape, the decade between 2019 to 1928 was declared the Decade for Family Farming globally. Annelie Coleman compiled this report.

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