Farming dream realized after 50 years

Farming dream realized after 50 years Londekile
Written by Allison Cooper

Samson Mahlaba (73) worked as a farm labourer for 50 years before realising his dream of becoming a commercial farmer five years ago.

Mahlaba was a child when he first started working as a labourer on the 300-hectare Hoekieplaas farm in Reitz in the Free State. He never went to school and grew up with his brothers, as his parents passed away when he was six.

Even though he has no formal agriculture training, Mahlaba knew that if he had a farm of his own, his experience would ensure his success.

In Mahlaba’s early years, there were not many black farmers and, for them, owning or leasing land was not often heard of.

Unlike many people he knew who relocated to Gauteng for better opportunities, Mahlaba didn’t follow them or give up on his dream. Instead, he kept wondering whether, one day, the nation and the agricultural sector would value his contribution as a black agriculturist.Free State farmer Samson Mahlaba (right) with TV presenter Ivor Price. Image supplied by: Food For Mzanzi.

“I always dreamt of becoming a farmer because I loved the farm. The farming bug bit and I was hooked, still am, and I remain passionate about the farm,” he says.

Thanks to his long-standing relationship with Coenraad Fick, the owner of the farm and Mahlaba’s mentor, his dream came true in 2015 when Fick retired.

Mahlaba started working for Fick’s father in 1969, when Fick was nine.

After retiring, Fick helped Mahlaba transition from a farm worker to a farmer and he now has a long-standing lease agreement for Hoekieplaas, where he farms cattle, mielies and soybeans with his twin grandsons Karabo and Kamohelo.

As a mentor himself, Mahlaba has taught his grandsons everything he knows about farming.

“The story of the farm is a very long yet heart-warming one, a story which makes me very happy. I worked for very long and I laboured on the farm, to get to where I am today.

“Fick is a good man, and his guidance has helped me as a black commercial farmer a lot. I enjoy farming very much,” he says.

Fick’s mentorship of Mahlaba forms part of agricultural enterprise VKB Group’s programme for developing agriculture, which assists up-and-coming farmers by providing them with knowledge and expertise and exposing them to new technologies.

Mahlaba's inspirational journey has made it to the small screen. He was the first farmer to be featured on For the love of the land, a new TV show produced by Food.

For Mzansi and the VKB Group.

Rural development