Rain harvesting gives hope amid dry spells

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 25 February 2026
📘 Source: MWNation

Under a blazing sun, maize fields in Kasoni Village west of Malawi’s capital city, Lilongwe, remain green despite dry spells. Group village head Kasoni, a farmer leading eight villages, established swales, stone contour bunds and soak pits to harvest rainwater in readiness for dry spells that once scorched surrounding fields. The facilities conserve soil moisture by trapping running rainwater to soak into the ground for crop health instead of carrying fertile topsoil into Bua River.

“It’s pathetic that we were complaining about hunger when scanty rainwater was just flowing downhill, washing away fertile soils and crops,” says Kasoni. Concurring, maize grower Collette Binwell says the communal rain harvesting facility helped to save her crop from recent dry spells. “I hope to get a good harvest despite the dry spell,” she says.

Binwell long endured chronic hunger due to dry spells, flooding and barren soils. “For once, I am assured of a good harvest despite the prevailing dry spells,’ she states. The rural community established the land and water conservation facilities two years ago under the guidance of government officials.

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Ministry of Agriculture director of land resources conservation McPherson Nthara says such simple strategies help farmers harvest more from their small plots amid climate change. “Parts of the country have experienced dry spells for over the past two weeks, but these rain harvesting technologies help crops withstand the water stress,” he says. The initiatives include the Sustainable Agriculture Production Programme (Sapp) and the Climate-Smart Enhanced Public Works Programme.

Nthara states: “The land conservation initiatives have reached about 75 percent of four to six million farming households across the country. “There are still areas we need to reach, but government cannot do it alone. We need partners to scale up these efforts to reduce land degradation, enhance climate resilience and minimise disasters such as floods.”

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📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by MWNation • February 25, 2026

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