Gauteng Smallholder October 2017 | Page 19

GAME It’s not a straightforward thing W hen driving round the plots in Gauteng one occasionally notices that some smallholders have game, rather than livestock, on their land. However, there are a number of factors to be considered before one invests Grazing type, space and animal behavioural characteristics all play a role in game-farming ... and make it unlikely that it is possible to farm game legally on a smallholding in wildlife on a smallholding. Game animals are farmed for the purposes of meat, skin and horn off-take (trophies) and tourist viewing. They can also be kept for breeding purposes. Every species has specific requirements regarding the provi- sion of refuge, feeding and social activities by the specific habitat. So the question of whether to keep game should be accompa- nied by a question as to the nature of your terrain: have you got There are estimated to be 18,6 million head dense bush, or of game on more than 20 million ha of agricultural land in SA (Grain SA) savanna woodland, sweet or less sweet grass, rocky outcrops and undulat- ing terrain, plains, marshlands and drainage lines, or open surface water? Each species prefers its combination of these habitats. And, is your forage both adequate in terms of the quality and quantity and vegetation