Gauteng Smallholder October 2017 | Page 8

NEWS Ad website takes us to a new level A stute readers looking for bargains in this edition will notice that there are no longer any classified advertisements. That's because, with effect from September, all classified advertisements submitted, whether by post, fax, email or SMS, have been uploaded to our new website, the SA Small Farmers' Online Exchange, sasfox.co.za. This has two immediate benefits for advertisers. Firstly, ads submitted are uploaded and displayed as soon as they are received, meaning the seller can get rid of the advertised goods faster, without waiting for the magazine to be published and read. And, secondly, the sasfox site draws a national, rather than province-wide, viewership, meaning many more people will see the advertisement. Readers who have limited access to electronic media may continue to submit classified advertisements by themselves. This process is quick, confidential, and free of charge. The sasfox site has been designed by ourselves ~ smallholders with less-than- perfect internet access ~ to be everything a rural dweller needs in a website. The site is deliberately spartan and free of bells 'n whistles, so that it is fast to load, easy to use, and as frugal with data usage as it can be. We expect sasfox to grow into a major information hand or post, and these will exchange for the rural be uploaded to the relevant community countrywide. category on the sasfox site by Apart from the usual classified our staff. advertisements section for Readers who have access to a new and used equipment etc, computer, however, need no the classified section incorpo- rates a category where longer submit their ads to us growers of fruit and vegeta- for uploading, but can do so bles can exchange, buy and themselves, simply by registering as users on the site, sell their produce … a sort of and typing in their ads Continued on page 8 BIRD FLU F rom page 5 “The continued cooperation of the public and the poultry industry in the timeous 6 www.sasmallholder.co.za reporting of sick and dying birds to State Veterinary Services is vital for the effectiveness of disease control measures instituted. DAFF therefore thanks the public and the poultry industry for their support in this regard.” Fearing a shortage of poultry for consumption as a result of the culling and quarantine measures, the poultry industry is seeking to import fertile eggs to re-grow the national flock and measures to make this possible, in safety, are being considered by the department.