Former miner finds success with conservation farming – African Farming


Award-winning cattle and crop farmer Solomon Masango farms in the rolling hills of the Carolina district of Mpumalanga. Producing maize, soya beans and dry beans in a conservation-farming, rotation system, his cattle help to further optimised profits. And while his impressive farming business has seen him rake in the farming awards, the road from being a mineworker to a top farmer hasn’t always been easy. Today the struggle to secure land that he can call his own, and where he can build his farming business to its true potential, still continues for this inspiring farmer. 

In 2000 Solomon Masango presented his future wife’s family with seven cows to pay her lobola. The family accepted four cows as part payment but wanted cash for the remaining portion of Maria’s lobola. Once the cash was paid, Solomon kept the three cows the family rejected and these animals formed the small, but solid, cornerstone of his farming business.

In 2015, a decade and a half later, Solomon was selected as the 2015 Grain SA/ABSA/John Deere Financial New Era Commercial Farmer of the Year. He farms 1 500ha, on three farms, with 600ha under grain and the remainder used for grazing. He owns a paid-up fleet of tractors, planters and harvesters and runs 300 crossbred cows, 11 Bonsmara bulls and two Boran bulls, 120 goats and a few sheep. 

Good lessons learnt young

Solomon says his path to success was not an easy one and came with a generous quota of blood, sweat and tears. His father died before he was born, and he was raised by his mother. He left school in Grade 7 and moved to Pretoria to find work so that he could help his mother.

In the Jacaranda city he worked in garden services and did other odd jobs. But Solomon – a man with drive and ambition – was on the move and with the help of a client, who became his sponsor, he got his matric. After matric Solomon registered with the University of South Africa for an accounting degree, which he did not finish due to a lack of funds. “I wanted to become a chartered accountant, but I dropped out in my second year because of money problems,” recalls Solomon.

In 1995, he landed a job as a truck driver for Benicon Opencast Mining, a company providing mining services, including drilling, mining, cutting, blasting, crushing and rehabilitation. A few months into the job Solomon approached the company’s management and asked if he could study. They obliged by putting him through a blasting course. 

Once he completed the course, Solomon was promoted and worked as a blaster for several years. “With a better income my life started to improve,” he says. But there was a fire burning in Solomon’s heart and he studied further until he got a blasting engineer’s qualification.

In 1999, Benicon retrenched some of its workers and Solomon was moved to an associate company, African Explosive Limited, which serviced De Beers’ diamond mining operation in Musina. There he specialised in blasting, from the design and planning stages through to execution. In 2003 he was promoted again and moved to Rustenburg, blasting in various mines for platinum, chrome and steel.

Then, in 2004 things went sour for him with the company. “I was overlooked for a more senior post in Tanzania with better perks and salary. They chose a white junior employee who didn’t have the qualifications and experience I had for that post,” he recalls. “I was so upset that I decided to leave.”

In November 2004 he resigned. Although company management asked him to reconsider Solomon was no longer interested in staying on.

Going solo

It would have been easy enough, given his experience and qualifications, to find another job, but Solomon decided he’d rather start his own business. “There was no guarantee that what had happened to me once, would not happen again,” he explains. 

He worked in the taxi industry for a short while, but the industry did not feel “right” for him, so he sold some of his taxis and bought buses to start a school transport business. 

Meanwhile, Solomon’s herd of cattle had grown from three cows to 45. “I had moved them from home and was grazing them on rented land on a farm near Breyten,” recalls Solomon. “After some thought, I decided to move into farming fulltime and I quit the transport business.” By 2009 his cattle numbers had increased to 60 cows. 

Taking a brave step, he sold off all his buses and bought a second-hand tractor. His plan was to plant a few hectares for cattle feed and to make some bales. In the same year his community’s restitution claim was successful and six farms in the Moedig area were returned to the community.

Solomon leased communal land and moved all his cattle to Moedig, where he planted a 50ha block of maize using his second-hand tractor. “I started with 50ha on the farm and worked my tractor two shifts to get the planting done. I had just hired my first employee who worked the day shifts while I worked the night shifts,” laughs Solomon.

The timing was right and after a good season, he made enough money to buy a second tractor. The following season, he increased his planted acreage to 100ha. At this time he was introduced to Afgri who gave him production credit and put him in touch with his mentor, Nick Basson.

Always eager to learn, Solomon began to attend farming courses, including those offered by Grain SA. In 2015 Solomon was named the Grain SA/ABSA/John Deere Financial New Era Commercial Farmer of the Year and won a John Deere tractor as a prize.

“Instead of bringing joy, the tractor became a source of new problems. Members of the CPA (community property association) laid claim to the tractor on the grounds that as it was their farm, the tractor belonged to the community,” says Solomon. The argument progressed to a stage that the community kicked him off the portion he rented.



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