Gauteng Smallholder Gauteng Smallholder August 2017 | Page 7
MAILBAG
Networking: How we did it in the 60s
S
ir ~ Apropos of having
a contact network for
marketing produce, we
fruit farmers who packed our
own apples and pears in the
1960s and 70s had a similar
system. I think it was set up
by the Deciduous Fruit Board
(DFB).
The problem was that as early
as mid-winter we had to
estimate the size of the crop
by judging the number of
Sandton CBDs
little green birds
Sir ~ I was interested to read
about the little green birds in
your latest edition. A few
weeks ago I noticed a flock of
them in the Sandton CBD in
Katherine St and assumed they
were just someone's escaped
cage birds. Seems as though
they're travelling further afield.
Juanita Orpen
Midvaal
fruit-bearing buds on the
trees. On the basis of the
estimates, the DFB booked
shipping space, including the
days on which the ships had
to be berthed alongside the
pre-cooling chambers to load
the cargo.
If we under-delivered the
quantity of cases we had
booked, we were penalised.
We could also not deliver
more than our quota that we
had booked. Meantime, the
fruit was getting ripe on the
trees…
So a system was set up by
which farmers could swap
quota. If I was going to be
short of my weekly quota,
you could take it up to cover
your over-production that
week.
The contact was a lady, I
think a farmer's wife. She
maintained a list of all
producers, their estimates of
their crops, and what their
Deciduous fruit exports in the 60s and 70s: Blue Star Line’s refrigerated revised weekly requirements
ship Rockhampton Star leaves Cape Town laden with a cargo of apples
and pears, co-ordinated by a farmer’s wife and her telephone.
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