Bertrams Inner City Farm - A Bambanani Food and Herb Cooperative Project

Bertrams Inner City Farm - A Bambanani Food and Herb Cooperative Project Our organic vegetable garden is in the heart of Jozi and we sell our produce to the Community, Retail Stores, Small Businesses and directly to the public.
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Growing sweet potatoes in soil bags can be a rewarding way to harvest a bountiful crop. Here are some secrets to success...
21/07/2024

Growing sweet potatoes in soil bags can be a rewarding way to harvest a bountiful crop. Here are some secrets to successfully growing them:

1. Choosing the Right Variety: Select sweet potato varieties suited to your climate and desired taste. Some popular varieties include Beauregard, Georgia Jet, and Covington.

2. Preparing Soil Bags: Use large, sturdy bags (around 20-30 gallons) with drainage holes. Fill them with a well-draining potting mix that is loose and fertile. Sweet potatoes prefer loose soil to grow large tubers.

3. Starting Slips: Sweet potatoes are typically grown from slips (small rooted shoots). You can purchase slips from nurseries or create your own by sprouting sweet potatoes in water until they develop roots. Plant each slip in a soil bag, burying it shallowly with the roots down and the leaves above the soil.

4. Watering: Sweet potatoes need consistent moisture but should not be waterlogged. Water when the top inch of soil feels dry, especially during hot weather. Ensure proper drainage to prevent rotting.

5. **Fertilizing**: Sweet potatoes are heavy feeders. Fertilize initially with a balanced fertilizer at planting time. Throughout the growing season, supplement with additional fertilizer high in potassium to encourage tuber development.

6. **Sunlight**: Place the soil bags in a location that receives full sunlight (at least 6-8 hours a day). Sweet potatoes thrive in warm soil temperatures, ideally between 70-85°F (21-29°C).

7. Managing Growth: As the vines grow, they can be trained to sprawl across the ground or trellised upwards. Regularly prune excess foliage to promote tuber growth.

8. Harvesting: Sweet potatoes are typically ready for harvest 3-4 months after planting, once the vines start to yellow and die back. Carefully dig up the tubers, being cautious not to damage them. Cure the harvested sweet potatoes in a warm, humid place for about 1-2 weeks to improve their flavor and storage life.

9. Pest and Disease Control: Keep an eye out for pests like aphids and diseases such as fungal infections. Use organic pesticides or fungicides if necessary, and practice good garden hygiene.

10. Storage: After curing, store sweet potatoes in a cool, dry place (around 55-60°F or 13-16°C) with good ventilation. They can last several months if stored properly.

By following these tips, you can enjoy a successful harvest of sweet potatoes grown in soil bags, ensuring a supply of delicious tubers for months to come.

Here are 20 vegetables and herbs you can grow indoors using parts of the produce you would throw away and this can save ...
29/06/2024

Here are 20 vegetables and herbs you can grow indoors using parts of the produce you would throw away and this can save you a pretty penny the next time you go grocery shopping.

Romaine Lettuce
Similar to celery, keep the base of your romaine lettuce in a bowl with a ½ inch of warm water. Leave it to sit in direct sunlight, and in a week or two, your lettuce stem will produce fresh, new lettuce leaves for all your great salads. Transplant your lettuce to soil to continue growing. They should be full grown in three to four weeks. This process works for Bok Choy as well.

Garlic Sprouts
Are those tentacles?! Nope, those long green things growing out your garlic are green shoots. You can put them in a little water, under a lot of sunlight and grow a bunch of garlic sprouts. They are milder in taste than garlic cloves and are great in salads, pasta and as a garnish.

Carrots
Place chopped off carrot tops in a container filled with a bit of water. Pretty soon, they will begin to sprout delicious greens from the top that are a nice addition to meals. Using a deeper contain and more water, use toothpicks to keep carrots halfway in the water and wait for them to root. Once they root, you can plant them in your garden for a continuous supply!

Turnip
Like carrots, cut off turnip tops and leave them in a shallow container with water until they begin growing roots. This can take a couple of weeks. Once they’ve sprouted, plant them outside the same way you would your carrots!

Sweet potato
Unlike most vegetables, sweet potatoes aren’t started by seed but by slips (or shoots). Clean and cut a sweet potato in half, then place it half in/half out of a jar full of water using toothpicks. Over a few days, your sweet potato will begin to sprout slips at which point you remove them and place them in water to grow roots. You should have rooted slips with the week. Next, plant them in loose, well-drained soil and water every day in the first week, and then every other day (or as needed) the following weeks.

Ginger
With ginger you already have, look for pieces that already have little things growing out of them. With that piece, cut off the parts that look like they’re about to start what’s called a “rhizome” because they’re the key to growing new ginger plants. Growing this food takes minimal effort but does require the right conditions. Warm, slightly humid places like kitchens are perfect. Plant the piece of ginger about 3-5 inches in the soil with its rhizome pointing upwards. Water it regularly. It’s a labor of love and can take up to ten months before you get a sufficient amount of ginger, but its health benefits are more than worth it.

Pineapple
This will definitely take a few years but if you’ve got the time and right climate, why not try? Take a pineapple and cut the flowery “crown” off about an inch below the leaves. Trim around the bottom until you see little brownish bumps (these are the root buds). Before planting, dehydrate the pineapple crown to prevent rotting too soon. Now, with your prepped pineapple cutting, place it in a shallow container of warm water. When the cutting begins to root, replant it into a container with soil and be sure to water once a week. If possible, keep it in a bright, warm place with as much direct sunlight as possible.

Rosemary
Like other herbs, you can regrow rosemary from 5-6 inch cuttings. Place them in water and within a few weeks, there should be enough that have rooted and not rotted. In a 4″ pot filled with damp potting soil, make a 3″ hole with a pen or pencil and place the rosemary cutting gently into it. Because this herb is so delicate, only water it when the soil starts feeling dry. Keep it direct sunlight for 6-8 hours per day because it needs light to flourish. If the soil isn’t dry yet, giving them a quick mist is also okay.

Potatoes
When growing potatoes, you need ones with ‘eyes’ (or slips) growing on it. When you’ve got a potato with a lot of eyes, cut it into 2 inch squares with each piece having a couple of eyes. Leave them out in room temperature for a couple of days to let them dry out to help prevent rotting. In a deep pot, place the cubes 8″ deep with the eyes facing upwards and cover it with another 4″ of soil. As more roots begin to grow, continuously add more soil and keep modestly watered. In as little as 70 days, you should have quite a few potatoes!

Tomatoes
You can regrow new tomato plants that can reach up to 8” feet. Ease the tomato plant out of its pot, trim the low leaves, and place it in a hole, fill it with soil, and do not compress it much.

Celery
To grow this healthy snack at home, cut off the base of the celery and leave it in a bowl with a little bit of warm water. Keep the bowl in direct sunlight, and in a week, your celery base will start to grow leaves. Transplant the celery in soil and watch it grow!

Cabbage
Don’t throw away the bottom of your cabbage head just yet. Just like celery, leave it in a container with an inch or two of water in a well-lit area and wait. Over time, it will start to regrow with no planting required.

Mint
To grow mint, get a clipping and plant it 3″ deep in a 5-8″ pot of damp soil. Make sure your mint plant is in a slightly humid, sun-exposed room (the kitchen is ideal). Every few days, to allow for the plant to grow evenly, rotate the pot. Within a few weeks, your mint plant should begin to flourish and be ready to be plucked for delicious dishes and drinks.

Lemon
To grow a lemon tree at home, you will need an organic lemon with non-germinating seeds, nutrient-rich potting soil, a planting pot that’s 6″ wide and 6″ deep, a seedling pot that’s 24″ wide and 12″ deep, and a sunny growing location (possibly with a grow lamp).

Mushrooms
Mushrooms can be regrown from spores in the comfort of our home.

Peppers
You can grow a number of hot peppers from the seeds that are leftover. Just collect the seeds from your habaneros, jalapenos or any other peppers that you have on hand. Plant them in potting soil and keep in direct sunlight unless it is warm outside and then you can just plant them in your garden area. Peppers grow relatively fast and don’t require a lot of care. Once you get a new crop, just save some of the seeds for replanting again.

Spring Onions / Salad Onions
You can regrow spring onions in as little as five days. Simply leave at least an inch attached to the roots of your left over spring onions, put them in a small glass of water, topping up the water if it evaporates.

Basil
Got some basil clippings lying around? If they have at least four-inch stems, gather them up and put them in a glass of water under direct sunlight. When the stems grow two inches long, you can put them in some soil in a pot and grow your very own basil plant. No more basil shopping for you!

Onions
Unlike the other foods on this list, onions have to go directly in the soil to grow. Take the bottom end of the onion and plant it in a pot or directly in the soil outside. If it’s potted, water it when needed. The more of a bottom you leave on the onion, the better. At three weeks, the onion will develop roots. By the fourth week. It will sprout leaves.

Photo creds: Simple Bites

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26/05/2024

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23/09/2023

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23/09/2023

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Meet Matome Sewapa from Bolobedu, Limpopo he is fruit and veg street vendor who sells produce from his own garden 🙂🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿...
26/07/2023

Meet Matome Sewapa from Bolobedu, Limpopo he is fruit and veg street vendor who sells produce from his own garden 🙂🇿🇦🇿🇦🇿🇦

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22/07/2023

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22/07/2023

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backyard goals

While waiting for a fertile land, use plant pots to grow your vegetables such as spinach, cabbages, carrots, onions. 🥬🥕🧅...
22/07/2023

While waiting for a fertile land, use plant pots to grow your vegetables such as spinach, cabbages, carrots, onions. 🥬🥕🧅

Happy   daddies 💚
18/06/2023

Happy daddies 💚

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01/06/2023

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What a bright and beautiful looking salad ! Love having fun with different compilations of food 🍅 🥑 🌼 🥒

Another vegetable business idea you can start in your community is to sell Ready Chopped Veggies like this one below. 🥬🥕...
01/05/2023

Another vegetable business idea you can start in your community is to sell Ready Chopped Veggies like this one below. 🥬🥕🥔

Many families are either lazy or too busy with the task of chopping veggies the whole day, especially on Sundays.

So your ready chopped veggies are going to save them time and energy of peeling and chopping veggies.

In fact you will be providing convenient to them.

Most Magnificent Trees in the World ❤️
28/04/2023

Most Magnificent Trees in the World ❤️

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27/04/2023

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The beekeeper forgot to insert the frames in the hive in which the bees collect the honey. The hardworking insects then ...
23/04/2023

The beekeeper forgot to insert the frames in the hive in which the bees collect the honey. The hardworking insects then built their own architecture from the honeycomb so that the air can flow freely and maintain a stable temperature🐝

via Creative Gardening

 ♿ does not mean inability❤️💪🏼Meet Sibusiso Mogale👦🏽 a South African🇿🇦 farmer from Mpumalanga 📍❤️ .He produces chickens🐓...
08/04/2023

♿ does not mean inability❤️💪🏼

Meet Sibusiso Mogale👦🏽 a South African🇿🇦 farmer from Mpumalanga 📍❤️ .He produces chickens🐓 and organic vegetables 🌽

Sibusiso was born without hands and he was rejected by schools🏤 because of his condition 💔.He didn't let that stop him from fulfilling his dreams😊🏆

Today he is his own boss and he employed a lot of people ❤️🙏
His story always remind us not to give up in our dreams 🤞🏻

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25/03/2023

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I’m beginning to recognise that real happiness isn’t something large and looming on the horizon ahead but something smal...
18/02/2023

I’m beginning to recognise that real happiness isn’t something large and looming on the horizon ahead but something small, numerous and already here. The smile of someone you love. A decent breakfast. The warm sunset. Your little everyday joys all lined up in a row. —Beau Taplin

artwork by instagram.com/maelyschay

From garden to plate... 💚
28/01/2023

From garden to plate... 💚

My name is Sihle Maseko (29). I am a farmer 🧑🏾‍🌾 🥬 🌽 from Burnshill Location, Keiskammahoek (Qoboqobo). I have a diploma...
02/01/2023

My name is Sihle Maseko (29). I am a farmer 🧑🏾‍🌾 🥬 🌽 from Burnshill Location, Keiskammahoek (Qoboqobo). I have a diploma in Agricultural Management 📜 👨🏾‍🎓, which I obtained in 2019 at NMU (George Campus 🏫). I started farming in 2020, helping my uncle on his 2 ha, then went solo in 2021. Now I am farming on a 10-hectare plot, growing green mealies (SC 701–5 ha) 🌽🌽🌽 and 45 000 cabbages (staggered at 15K monthly intervals)🥬🥬.

What inspired me to get into farming?

We are living in very difficult times where the chances of getting employed are scarce🥹. Even after completing my studies, I applied for jobs countless times in both the government and private sectors, and I got rejected so many times. Yes, it was stressful at times 😩, but then I remembered that there is enough land at home (the challenge was startup capital 💰) to afford an irrigation system.

I also had no background in farming because I never had any interest in being a primary producer🧑🏾‍🌾; I only wanted to be a forensic pathologist. I then tried to raise funds 💰and started on 1 ha with green mealies 🌽, then grew from there.

To young bloods, I want to say, "Get up!" Utyulube, make it happen🫶🏽; no one is going to do it for you; take the risks; go get that loan; do something to get started. Fukuza marn! There is no miracle bhuti, nothing will work unless you do. I did taxis mna and borrowed money from banks with no luck, but I made sure ukuba ndiyaqala🔥💯.

Currently, I am selling about 10–15 thousand cabbages 🥬🥬🥬 every month since July 2022 to both the formal and informal markets.

My contact details are as follows:
📞 : 0785652098;
📧 : [email protected];
Sihle Maseko on Facebook;
Siphosihle Maseko on LinkedIn.

Credit Agriculture and Young

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27/12/2022

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A twin zucchini! The flowers must have fused. This is only the second time I have ever had this happen.

Backyard farming is no longer a choice for us, but an economic necessity. Every yard must have a backyard farm.
30/11/2022

Backyard farming is no longer a choice for us, but an economic necessity. Every yard must have a backyard farm.

From selling fish and chips to running two farming enterprises, meet Njabulo Mbokane 🤩With only one breadwinner in her f...
30/11/2022

From selling fish and chips to running two farming enterprises, meet Njabulo Mbokane 🤩

With only one breadwinner in her family, the 25-year-old had no idea what her future would hold, but she never gave up.

Njabulo now runs a farm in Mpumalanga and employs full-time and seasonal staff. Together they produce about 100 tons of maize, among other produce.

Congrats girl!

Photo: Black Capitalist (Facebook)

Address

46 Bertrams Road, Bertrams
Johannesburg

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00
Saturday 09:00 - 17:00
Sunday 09:00 - 17:00

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