Gauteng Smallholder September 2015 | Page 3

GAUTENG COMMENT, by Pete Bower MAGAZINE HOW TO MAKE YOUR PLOT PROFITABLE Vol 16 No 9 September 2015 PUBLISHED BY Bowford Publications (Pty) Ltd Established 1985 (Reg No 2004/019727/07) PO Box 14648, Bredell 1623 Tel: 011 979-5088 or 076 176-7392 Fax: 086 602-3882 e-mail: [email protected] website: www.sasmallholder.co.za facebook.com/gautengsmallholder PUBLISHER & EDITOR Pete Bower RESEARCH EDITOR Vanessa Bower GRAPHIC DESIGN Michelle Urquhart ADVERTISEMENT SALES Call 011 979-5088 ADVERTISING RATES (All Rates Full Colour, incl VAT) Full Page - R6800 Half Page - R4200 Quarter P - R2340 1/8 page - R1240 Smaller sizes: R95 per col cm (Minimum size - 4 col cm) (Black only: colour rate less 40%) Booking discounts (Payment lumpsum in advance) 3 insertions - less 10% 6 insertions - less 15% (other payment and discount options are available) Circulation Area More than 19 000 copies distributed free through outlets in the Agricultural Smallholding settlements of Gauteng and adjoining provinces. Also available by mail and online. By Mail To receive the Smallholder by mail send us a supply of stamped, selfaddressed A4 envelopes. Or, subscribe for only R210 per year. See coupon in this edition. Online http://www.sasmallholder.co.za Copyright Title and contents protected by copyright. No part of this publication may be reproduced or stored in any form whatsoever without the prior written permission of the publisher. Disclaimer While every care is taken to ensure the accuracy of the information in this journal, neither the Editor nor the Publisher can be held responsible for damages or consequences of any errors or omissions. The Publisher does not stand warranty for the performance of any article or service mentioned in this journal, whether in an advertisement or elsewhere. FRONT COVER . for sale under Clivias being grown nursery conditions. Learn how you can make money from these favourites on page 12 Self-sufficiency F rom the sanctimonious democratic pedestal of the New South Africa it is perhaps a bit perverse to look back on the Seventies and Eighties with any great fondness but, in one respect at least, the hard-hitting sanctions era had an unintended beneficial consequence for South Africa: it made us self-sufficient in many respects. Uneconomical, yes, but selfsufficient nonetheless. There can be no doubt that the sanctions years produced a burst of technological innovation in South African industry. Take our arms industry: cut off from purchases of armaments, aircraft and many other components that the rest of the world thought might have a military application, scientists and engineers rolled up their sleeves throughout South Africa and developed what was needed to keep the military supplied and effective. Armoured cars, military lorries, cannon, helicopters and much more rolled off production lines in their hundreds, often uneconomically, it must be said, but usually ideally-suited to the rigours of African bush warfare. But civil life, and commerce and industry, also gained by the growth of a much more diverse manufacturing sector necessitated by the sanctions era. Because there was a threat that South African heavy transport might be denied engines for its vehicles, a large engine manufacturing plant was set up in a depressed area of the Western Cape named Atlantis, from where thousands of engines, built to only two standardised designs, powered every heavy vehicle imaginable, usually quite reliably, if not in the most modern fuel efficient manner and, because of their ubiquity, with generally readily-available spares. The beneficial effect of such employment on the community of Atlantis was well-recorded, with many families having been lifted out of grinding poverty to something resembling a decent middle-class lifestyle. At that stage, South Africa also had a fledgling ship building industry, with quite sophisticated small ships being built at Durban, and luxury yachts at Cape Town. Only the latter remains, shipbuilding at Durban having been successfully killed off by high steel prices, high labour costs and a lack of government support. At one time South Africa was the worldwide centre of a highly sophisticated stainless steel tank container manufacturing industry, which not only used South Africandeveloped stainless steel in large quantities but which employed hundreds of highlyqualified specialist welders, not to mention ultrasonic weld inspectors and other highly trained personnel. Cheap Far East manufacture and a lack of government support saw that industry collapse locally. South Africa's leadership iin the field of narrow-gauge railway engineering was widely acknowledged. Spoornet's world-class Koedoespoort workshops and heavy engineering companies such as Guestro Wheels and Union Carriage & Wagon in Nigel built and maintained hundreds of locomotives, carriages and wagons. Now we can't even buy locos from overseas without getting the height specifications wrong. Much has been written about the collapse of the clothing and textile industry. Nowadays underpants and socks come from China or India, jeans and shirts from Mauritius and Madagascar. And don't ask too many questions about the child labour or slave wages with which they were produced. Last month I ordered a new pair of spectacles. They took a month to arrive because, I was told, South Africa no longer has a glass-spectacle lens manufacturing industry, this work now being outsourced to a factory in Germany. Even in the field of foodstuffs surprisingl 䁱