• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Lifestyle
Limpopo farmer Aldrin Lawrence (second from the right) was announced as Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. He is pictured with André du Toit, Nomvula Xaba, Potatoes SA chief executive Willie Jacobs, JF van der Merwe and Rodney Mbuyazi. Photo: Deon van Zyl/Twitter

Farming ain’t ‘pap and vleis,’ says Potatoes SA awardee

18th February 2022
Dr Peter Oberem (right), the founder of Afrivet Southern Africa, with Ronan Smith, Bimeda’s chief executive for the Africa, Middle East and Asia Pacific division. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Bimeda’s Afrivet takeover ‘to strengthen animal health offering’

17th August 2022
Agriculture, land reform and rural development minister Thoko Didiza has placed a 21-day ban on the movement of cattle across South Africa due to foot-and-mouth disease (FMD) outbreaks. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

SA battles 116 FMD outbreaks amid 21-day cattle ban

16th August 2022
ADVERTISEMENT
Illegal sand mining poses a threat to many ecosystems, human safety and agricultural practises. Photo: Pixabay

Will the world run out of sand?

16th August 2022
Organic certification is a long, but rewarding process. Photo: Supplied/Food for Mzansi

How to get the ball rolling on organic certification

16th August 2022
This #SoilSista’s poultry farm puts quality first

This #SoilSista’s poultry farm puts quality first

16th August 2022
Prof. Theo Venter gives his take on the ruling party’s recent policy conference and what it means going forward. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Fixing agri challenges: ‘ANC no longer has a choice’

16th August 2022
The Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, Ms. Thoko Didiza, MP has taken the decision to suspend all movement of cattle in the whole country. The Ministers decision is aimed at halting the continued spread of Foot and Mouth Disease in the country. It also means that cattle may not be moved from one property to another for any reason for a period of 21 days reviewable weekly. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

FMD battle: Govt prohibits movement of all cattle

16th August 2022
Justin Platt, founder and CEO of Zylem and RegenZ argues that instead of basing management decisions on a purely rational and cognitive approach, farmers need to harness (and trust) their unique intuition. Photo: Supply/AdobeStock

Farmers, trust your intuition and go with your gut

16th August 2022
Leanne Gammage and Jackson Andrew, co-founders of Masterstock Cape Wild Food. Masterstock Cape Wild Food is a speciality salt brand focused on regenerative agriculture. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Agripreneur 101: Regeneration at the heart of this salt company

16th August 2022

R350 grant puts sisters on agri path to success

15th August 2022
The uMngeni Municipality in KwaZulu-Natal is supporting local farmers through a new agricultural unit that has been established in the municipality. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farmer support: KZN municipality leads the way

15th August 2022
Farmers in the south-western parts of the country can expect a slightly drier than usual spring. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

ICYMI: Below-normal winter rainfall to continue

15th August 2022
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
11 GLOBAL MEDIA AWARDS
Wednesday, August 17, 2022
Food For Mzansi
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
    • All
    • AgriCareers
    • Entrepreneurs
    • Farmers
    • Groundbreakers
    • Innovators
    • Inspiration
    • It Takes a Village
    • Mentors
    • Movers and Shakers
    • Partnerships
    Leanne Gammage and Jackson Andrew, co-founders of Masterstock Cape Wild Food. Masterstock Cape Wild Food is a speciality salt brand focused on regenerative agriculture. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Agripreneur 101: Regeneration at the heart of this salt company

    R350 grant puts sisters on agri path to success

    The uMngeni Municipality in KwaZulu-Natal is supporting local farmers through a new agricultural unit that has been established in the municipality. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Farmer support: KZN municipality leads the way

    This drone is collecting data which farmers can then access on the yield management platform. Photo: Supplied/Aerobotics

    How the Internet of Things is transforming agri

    His life took a turn for the worst when he ended up in jail for dealing in drugs, but Thembinkosi Matika turned his life around and now helps others through his Legacy Farming Project. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Drug dealer turned farmer ploughs back

    Christo Van der Rheede is the executive director of Agri SA. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Former music teacher leads agri’s greatest symphony

    Agripreneur 101: Creating a beauty brand

    Agripreneur 101: Creating a beauty brand

    Claire and Martin Joubert have sacrificed and struggled to become top breeders of Ankole cattle in South Africa. But giving up was never an option, because they wanted to offer only the very best Ankole genetics in the country. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

    Farming couple lives and breathes Ankole cattle

    Tackling climate change, one tree at a time

  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought
No Result
View All Result
Food For Mzansi

Farming ain’t ‘pap and vleis,’ says Potatoes SA awardee

From the Limpopo farming town of Buysdorp to being announced as Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. This is the inspirational story of Aldrin Lawrence who won the prestigious award last night

by Noluthando Ngcakani
18th February 2022
in Farmers
Reading Time: 6 mins read
A A
Limpopo farmer Aldrin Lawrence (second from the right) was announced as Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. He is pictured with André du Toit, Nomvula Xaba, Potatoes SA chief executive Willie Jacobs, JF van der Merwe and Rodney Mbuyazi. Photo: Deon van Zyl/Twitter

Limpopo farmer Aldrin Lawrence (second from the right) was announced as Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. He is pictured with André du Toit, Nomvula Xaba, Potatoes SA chief executive Willie Jacobs, JF van der Merwe and Rodney Mbuyazi. Photo: Deon van Zyl/Twitter

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

From the Limpopo farming town of Buysdorp to being announced as Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. This is the inspirational story of Aldrin Lawrence, a descendent of French Huguenot Coenraad de Buys, after which Buysdorp was named.

Lawrence is descended from this legendary renegade of a founding father, who left the confines of what was then the Cape Colony in the early 19th century to roam the hinterland. The three sons he would later have with his Khoi or San mistress started what is now the Buysdorp community.

The De Buys inheritance sits on 11 000-hectares of land where his family has farmed since the Voortrekker migration of 1836.

Through an intricately developed system, the De Buys family has formed a trust through which descendants can lease land to venture into their own farming endeavours.

“You can apply for a piece of land to farm, build a house which the committee will approve and give to you. If you farm and you feel like that which you have been given is too small, then you apply again. They will come and evaluate and see if it is necessary and then you can apply for a farming plot,” he says.

Lawrence has created his own 30-hectare mixed farming enterprise, producing livestock, broiler chickens and vegetable crops including potatoes and soybeans.

Having survived economic hardship, political turbulence and the worst recorded drought in the last 100 years, he says farming is an emotional rollercoaster. But with it comes the infinite “possibility of hope”.

“One moment it’s up with hope, then down with worry and stress. We can’t give up,” he declares.

“The secret to getting out of the dark depression is to stop looking down at the ground and rather look up. Look people in their eyes, look at problems head on. ‘Look up to the hills, that is where your help comes from!’ Psalm 121. That is where my strength comes from.”

‘We can’t give up, the possibility of hope makes it impossible to give up.’

On his farm he produces broiler chickens that he supplies to the local Spar and butcheries in Louis Trichardt. His produce is also sold at markets in Pretoria, Johannesburg and the Free State. “Our markets are largely dependent on where we can get a better offer for our produce,” he says.

It is hard to ignore the call to farm when your great-great-great-great grandfather was a renegade on the frontier, says Aldrin Lawrence, Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi
It is hard to ignore the call to farm when your great-great-great-great grandfather was a renegade on the frontier, says Aldrin Lawrence, Potatoes SA’s Enterprise Development Farmer for 2022. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farming is generational

The De Buys ancestor, Coenraad, was known as a notorious Cape colonial frontiersman, with enormous self-confidence. He is also said to have allegedly fathered 315 children.

With farmlands spanning 11 000 hectares in the foothills of the Soutpansberg, the town of Buysdorp was named for the De Buys patriarch.

Here dwells a community of a few thousand of his descendants who have managed to develop structures and autonomous procedures of local government for the preservation of their lineage.

‘Something can always go wrong. You must decide there and then whether you are going to crumble in defeat or stand up and do it again.’

Theirs is a complex history of interaction and intermarriage with surrounding tribes of Pedi and Tswana people, which manifests in their own indigenous identity tied to their land.

Lawrence explains that it all begins with the first ancestor – Elizabeth.

In history books, not much is said about the mysterious woman, who is speculated to be of Khoi, San, or Xhosa descent, who fled the Cape colony with Coenraad, who was then married to someone else, Lawrence clarifies.

“She moved here with him, after he left his wife and children in the Cape, they later had three children of their own.”

The three sons of Elizabeth and Coenraad would become his first successors on the De Buys lands, paving the way for Buysdorp.

“Those three brothers also married local black women and they started families – when the Voortrekkers came, they were the first to greet them. They assisted them with their translation skills as they were able to speak the local languages.

“They helped them communicate with all the chiefs in the area, they were useful guides. Eventually they got sick and tired of moving up and down and then they went to Pretoria to Paul Kruger to actually ask for a land of their own. Paul Kruger gave them this farm,” he explains.

Farming is not ‘pap en vleis’

There are many challenges that affect a small-scale farmer, Lawrence says. For farming you must have a passion, you must not think about the money.

Award-winning farmer Aldrin Lawrence was featured on “For the love of the land”, the popular eTV and VIA television show hosted by Food For Mzansi co-founder Ivor Price and Piet Potgieter from VKB. Photo: Food For Mzansi
Award-winning farmer Aldrin Lawrence was featured on “For the love of the land”, the popular eTV and VIA television show hosted by Food For Mzansi co-founder Ivor Price and Piet Potgieter from VKB. Photo: Food For Mzansi

“I always see people, if they think about taking the career they always estimate how much they will be paid for it. But in farming you really have to have a love and feeling for it.”

‘When you deal with nature, you always have to be on your knees.’

As a small-scale producer his challenge is often the quantities he is able to produce. These, he says, are often not enough to meet the demands of his clientele.

“I sometimes cannot fill a whole truck. Logistical challenges are also many,” he says.

“With markets also, if you don’t have a relationship with market agents and if you are not a regular supplier of any produce the market agents don’t know you, so when you send your things to the market then they’ll just sell it at whatever cost,” he says.

It is imperative to form bonds across the production value chain.

“It’s your brand, you have to know people, even your consumers that buy from the market. They need assurance when they buy your product, they should know that you always sell top quality produce.”

Passion and love for the industry always come first. “You can plant, and something could go wrong, and you don’t get an income from the yield. You must decide there and then whether you are going to crumble in defeat or stand up and do it again.”

Fundamentally, farming is an act of biology, says Lawrence. “The essence of agriculture begins with the conversion of solar energy through photosynthesis,” he says.

But at its root Lawrence believes a deeper meaning lies. It is a much more spiritually charged endeavour than what science posits.

“When you deal with nature, you always have to be on your knees,” he laughs and then adds, “to pray. You do not have control. In the field, that is where you realise that you are totally dependent on God.”

ALSO READ: Tired of waiting on land, Andile takes to the skies

Get Stories of Change: Inspirational stories from the people that feed Mzansi.

Tags: LimpopoPotatoes SAsmall-scale farmers
Share196Tweet123Send
Previous Post

Farmers seek action on ‘water scarcity time bomb’

Next Post

Recipe: City Mom’s one-pot chicken and rice

Noluthando Ngcakani

Noluthando Ngcakani

With roots in the Northern Cape, this Kimberley Diamond has had a passion for telling human interest stories since she could speak her first words. A foodie by heart, she began her journalistic career as an intern at the SABC where she discovered her love for telling agricultural, community and nature related stories. Not a stranger to a challenge Ngcakani will go above and beyond to tell your truth.

Related Posts

Illegal sand mining poses a threat to many ecosystems, human safety and agricultural practises. Photo: Pixabay

Will the world run out of sand?

by Lucinda Dordley
16th August 2022
0

Will we ever run out of sand? Experts think it is unlikely, but illegal and irresponsible mining of the resource...

The uMngeni Municipality in KwaZulu-Natal is supporting local farmers through a new agricultural unit that has been established in the municipality. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farmer support: KZN municipality leads the way

by Tiisetso Manoko
15th August 2022
0

Farmers in the rural community of Howick are set to benefit from a first-of-its-kind agricultural unit that has been established...

The value of South Africa’s informal farming sector is understated, experts say, and many farmers say that they prefer trading to this segment of the economy. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

New farmer? Informal markets ‘the way to go’

by Tiisetso Manoko
10th August 2022
0

Apart from the 40 000 commercial farmers in Mzansi, hundreds of thousands of smallholders contribute to the economy too. Many...

Khuliso Madima helps run her family business, Rembander Agribusiness, a subtropical farm in Limpopo where the family grows litchis and mangoes, and also does crop farming. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Farming is this #SoilSista’s family business

by Nicole Ludolph
2nd August 2022
0

Khuliso Madima helps run her family business, Rembander Agribusiness, a subtropical farm in Limpopo where the family grows litchis and...

Next Post
When it comes to making dinner tonight, keep it simple with just one pot and minimise on the clean-up afterwards. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Recipe: City Mom’s one-pot chicken and rice

Organic certification is a long, but rewarding process. Photo: Supplied/Food for Mzansi
Farmer's Inside Track

How to get the ball rolling on organic certification

by Nicole Ludolph
16th August 2022
0

FARMER'S INSIDE TRACK: Organic certification poses a challenge to many South African farmers who go that route. Alan Rosenberg, chairperson...

Read more
This #SoilSista’s poultry farm puts quality first

This #SoilSista’s poultry farm puts quality first

16th August 2022
Prof. Theo Venter gives his take on the ruling party’s recent policy conference and what it means going forward. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

Fixing agri challenges: ‘ANC no longer has a choice’

16th August 2022
The Minister of Agriculture, Land Reform and Rural Development, Ms. Thoko Didiza, MP has taken the decision to suspend all movement of cattle in the whole country. The Ministers decision is aimed at halting the continued spread of Foot and Mouth Disease in the country. It also means that cattle may not be moved from one property to another for any reason for a period of 21 days reviewable weekly. Photo: Supplied/Food For Mzansi

FMD battle: Govt prohibits movement of all cattle

16th August 2022
Justin Platt, founder and CEO of Zylem and RegenZ argues that instead of basing management decisions on a purely rational and cognitive approach, farmers need to harness (and trust) their unique intuition. Photo: Supply/AdobeStock

Farmers, trust your intuition and go with your gut

16th August 2022

Fixing agri challenges: ‘ANC no longer has a choice’

How to get the ball rolling on organic certification

Bumper harvest for Mzansi’s olive growers

Fruit farm shows there’s power in transformation

Beat the winter blues with yummy butter chicken

Former music teacher leads agri’s greatest symphony

THE NEW FACE OF SOUTH AFRICAN AGRICULTURE

With 12 global awards in the first three years of its existence, Food For Mzansi is much more than an agriculture publication. It is a movement, unashamedly saluting the unsung heroes of South African agriculture. We believe in the power of agriculture to promote nation building and social cohesion by telling stories that are often overlooked by broader society.

Bimeda’s Afrivet takeover ‘to strengthen animal health offering’

SA battles 116 FMD outbreaks amid 21-day cattle ban

Will the world run out of sand?

How to get the ball rolling on organic certification

This #SoilSista’s poultry farm puts quality first

Fixing agri challenges: ‘ANC no longer has a choice’

  • Our Story
  • Contact Us
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright

Contact us
Office: +27 21 879 1824
News: info@foodformzansi.co.za
Advertising: sales@foodformzansi.co.za

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Changemakers
  • Lifestyle
  • Farmer’s Inside Track
  • Food for Thought

Copyright © 2021 Food for Mzansi

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.