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The Conversation
The Conversation
International · 2 hrs ago
78◉ Centre
Climate change is threatening sheep farmers in South Africa’s Drakensberg – how they’re adapting
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Quality 78/100
Partisan intensity 25/100
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◉ Centre ✓ Fair headline

South African sheep farmers in the Drakensberg region are adapting to climate change impacts including droughts and seasonal weather variability, with particular focus on small-scale communal farming practices.

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Climate change is threatening sheep farmers in South Africa’s Drakensberg – how they’re adapting
In the rugged and mountainous Drakensberg grasslands of South Africa’s Eastern Cape province, farmers rear sheep for food, cultural practices and financial security. The steep slopes, cold winters, frost and seasonal droughts shape everyday farming life. In contrast to commercial farms with large fenced properties and hundreds of animals, families in the area’s communal villages typically own small flocks of around 10 to 50 sheep. The animals are usually kept overnight in simple kraals (enclos
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