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Africa's small-scale farmers make up of all farms in the agriculture sector. In South Africa, there are about , predominantly Black and the eastern summer rainfall region of the country.

A small-scale farmer produces food for their family on land that is generally smaller than five hectares. Small-scale farmers sell their excess produce but have limited access to resources, technology and big markets.

Africa's small-scale when there's a drought because these farmers rely on rainwater. South Africa has been affected by over the years. However, 2015 stands out as the driest period on record since 1904, with drought affecting , including small-scale farmers.

As droughts induced by climate change increase, South Africa's small-scale farmers need to adapt to the changed farming environment so that they can continue to produce food.

investigated how small-scale farmers, particularly women, were using to adapt to drought. Indigenous knowledge systems are by people who live closely with nature. They include ways of organizing and classifying the world, practical observations about the local environment, and methods for managing resources responsibly. The terms indigenous knowledge and systems are used interchangeably.

We studied small-scale farmers in the Umkhanyakude District Municipality of South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province. This is one of the in the province, with an : 4.2 percentage points higher than the .

Nearly all () of the in the district live rurally, social security grants, remittances from family members working elsewhere and small-scale agriculture to survive.

The Umkhanyakude District Municipality is also managed collectively by 18 traditional authorities under the , a organization that has been criticized for keeping male domination of the land alive and infringing on .

As geographers who research and Indigenous knowledge systems, we asked 384 small-scale farmers (61% of them women) to tell us how they were adapting to drought.

We found that farming practices based on Indigenous knowledge had built this community's resilience to drought, especially when led by women. , soil regeneration and were some of the practices.

However, these practices are often overlooked in mainstream climate adaptation policies and interventions, which are driven by mostly non-indigenous stakeholders, based on western technical and legal solutions. Indigenous knowledge was by colonisers during colonial times, a practice that persists in the patriarchal and capitalist systems that currently operate in our world.

Our research found that integrating Indigenous knowledge systems into formal climate adaptation frameworks will help small-scale farmers adapt to global warming and extreme weather. This could lead to sustainable ways of creating long term food security and gender equity.

The devastating impact of drought

The women small-scale farmers we interviewed reflected on the droughts they had experienced over the past 39 years (between 1983 and 2022):

The smell of decaying livestock tainted the atmosphere. Moreover, salt began to crystallize in the river. We used this salt both for cooking and sold some it.

Droughts meant that it was a struggle to grow enough to feed their families and there was nothing to sell:

I lost three hectares of maize, nothing was growing, and even our livestock were perishing. Normally, we do not need to purchase feed for our livestock, but we had to.

Even the hand-dug wells dried up, and some farmers had to stop farming altogether:

We had no food. While goats managed to survive by relying on trees for sustenance, our cattle were not as fortunate and died.

How farmers adapted

Various practices helped them survive:

Finding different supplies of water: The farmers found ways to harvest rainwater. Collectively, they excavated hand dug communal wells and stored as much water as possible. They recycled the water they used at home and if they could afford it, drilled boreholes.

Conserving the moisture in the soil: This included hand plowing, fallowing and tree planting. Women farmers used more organic waste on the soil—such as mulch and manure from cattle, chickens and goats, and crop residues. They also placed perforated plastic, used diapers and cardboard on the soil to retain soil moisture.

Planting different crops that can survive drought: Sweet potatoes, spinach, onions, taro, sugarcane and cotton were planted instead of water-intensive crops like cabbage, onion and tomatoes.

Homemade ways of getting rid of pests: The women farmers used wood ash, flour and homemade plant concoctions as well as the (pencil cactus), which repels moles. They also manually removed caterpillars and applied water mixed with menstrual blood on vegetables to repel pests.

How women farmers carry the burden of climate change

Our research found that female-headed and for the changing climate. For example, small-scale farmers had to look for other work. But female-headed and low-income households had few options for other work and women couldn't leave home. They often had to do risky jobs like selling unlicensed alcohol, marijuana and fuel.

During the droughts, women farmers also had an increased workload from needing to carry water from wells in buckets to water the crops.

Male small-scale farmers were less restricted by domestic duties. They had more time and space to find other work during the drought, our research found. Women small-scale farmers have inadequate access to formal markets, financial services and formal employment.

Indigenous knowledge systems must be recognized

Indigenous knowledge draws on knowledge that has been built up over hundreds of years about actions that are useful in a specific local area. It is therefore very useful for communities who have to adapt to a changing climate. On the other hand, , such as relief schemes, are often rolled out without understanding of the local knowledge or social identities in a specific area. This needs to change if small-scale farmers must cope with more intense and more frequent droughts.

The government, climate financiers and aid institutions must also move away from gender-neutral policies that maintain the status quo and impose additional burdens on women.

We call for the unsilencing, legitimization and integration of Indigenous knowledge systems in both informal and formal adaptation programs. This will empower to preserve and transfer Indigenous knowledge and promote resilient agricultural practices. It will disrupt entrenched power dynamics and empower farmers.

Provided by The Conversation