A stubborn dry stretch is frying fields in Manicaland Province, and farmers are staring at shrinking harvests right when crops needed steady moisture the most.
Manicaland fields buckle under the heat
Manicaland fields buckle under the heat
- Manicaland Province farmers say the rain has vanished for weeks.
- Temperatures have battered maize and tobacco, leaving leaves droopy.
- Several communities fear shrinking income and thinner food stores.
- Many smallholders rely entirely on rainfall, which has stalled.
- Vegetative fields are struggling without steady moisture.
- Tasselling maize demands heavy water to form solid cobs.
- Flowering crops are hitting a wall under scorching weather.
- Yields could slide further if showers keep dodging farms.
- Skumbuzo Todhlana leads the Middle Sabi Farmers Association.
- According to Todhlana, the last decent rain fell weeks ago.
- ZESA cut electricity over unpaid bills, crippling irrigation schemes.
- Save River water sits nearby, yet pumps stay silent.
- Edward Dune heads the Tobacco Farmers Union Trust.
- Dune says dryland tobacco is maturing oddly under stress.
- Leaf quality may dip if the heat keeps cooking the fields.
- Finger millet and rapoko are holding up better.