
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Growing up in a farming family in Zimbabwe, scientist Emmanuel Chakwizira talks to Kadambari Raghukumar about the differences in crop culture literally, and his work here in Canterbury.
"The biggest shock coming here was seeing forage brassica fed to animals. It's for human consumption where I come from, all of a sudden you come here and see a paddock full growing for animals" laughs Emmanuel Chakwizira.
When you come from Zimbabwe to Canterbury and are a crop scientist, culture shock could look a little different.
Emmanuel Chakwizira is a scientist at Lincoln's Plant and Food Research where he works with forging crops.
FOLLOW Voices on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Radio Public and iHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
He grew up in Harare and comes from a farming family himself. Although he didn't exactly take up the family business, he somewhat chose to walk a similar path after studying agriculture science in Harare.
"There we mainly grow maize, it's a staple food. Legumes and peanuts for crop rotation. "
"Farming in Zimbabwe is very different. One of the main things is scale. Here most crops are grown for fodder so it's intensive, there we grow for human consumption."
Listen to this Voices episode on Emmanuel's story, his experiences as a scientist working with crops in Zimbabwe all the way to Canterbury.
FOLLOW Voices on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Radio Public and iHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Summer is a peak time for his work, when the forage brassica and forage rape plants reach their peak growth. His research is centred largely around foraging crops and their uptake of nitrogen.
It's important work especially as regulations around nitrate leaching in New Zealand are tightening up.
Researching the best ways to reduce leaching and still have high yielding agriculture is at the centre of scientists work, like Emmanuel.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
5
11 ratings
Growing up in a farming family in Zimbabwe, scientist Emmanuel Chakwizira talks to Kadambari Raghukumar about the differences in crop culture literally, and his work here in Canterbury.
"The biggest shock coming here was seeing forage brassica fed to animals. It's for human consumption where I come from, all of a sudden you come here and see a paddock full growing for animals" laughs Emmanuel Chakwizira.
When you come from Zimbabwe to Canterbury and are a crop scientist, culture shock could look a little different.
Emmanuel Chakwizira is a scientist at Lincoln's Plant and Food Research where he works with forging crops.
FOLLOW Voices on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Radio Public and iHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
He grew up in Harare and comes from a farming family himself. Although he didn't exactly take up the family business, he somewhat chose to walk a similar path after studying agriculture science in Harare.
"There we mainly grow maize, it's a staple food. Legumes and peanuts for crop rotation. "
"Farming in Zimbabwe is very different. One of the main things is scale. Here most crops are grown for fodder so it's intensive, there we grow for human consumption."
Listen to this Voices episode on Emmanuel's story, his experiences as a scientist working with crops in Zimbabwe all the way to Canterbury.
FOLLOW Voices on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Radio Public and iHeart Radio or wherever you listen to your podcasts.
Summer is a peak time for his work, when the forage brassica and forage rape plants reach their peak growth. His research is centred largely around foraging crops and their uptake of nitrogen.
It's important work especially as regulations around nitrate leaching in New Zealand are tightening up.
Researching the best ways to reduce leaching and still have high yielding agriculture is at the centre of scientists work, like Emmanuel.
Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details
61 Listeners
90,802 Listeners
29 Listeners
26,147 Listeners
25 Listeners
2 Listeners
1 Listeners
1 Listeners
110,865 Listeners
28 Listeners
1 Listeners
41 Listeners
102 Listeners
20 Listeners
964 Listeners
7 Listeners
55 Listeners
6,211 Listeners
2 Listeners
7 Listeners
988 Listeners
3 Listeners
0 Listeners
29 Listeners
2 Listeners
13 Listeners
0 Listeners
3 Listeners
3 Listeners
0 Listeners
4 Listeners
0 Listeners
3,086 Listeners
0 Listeners