Lesotho has fertile land, strong hands, and flowing water. What it lacks is data. In 2025, farming without facts is no longer an option. Whether you grow cabbage in Mahobong or raise chickens in Mafeteng, you need data to survive. Without it, every season is a gamble.
Why Data Matters to a Small Farmer
Data does not mean technology you cannot afford. It means writing things down. A cabbage farmer who records planting dates, seed numbers, and harvest volumes can tell what works. A poultry farmer who tracks feed usage and egg output knows when something is wrong. In Kenya, farmers who kept simple records improved yields by 30 percent.

Source: Lesotho Tribune
The High Cost of Guesswork
Many Basotho farmers plant what their neighbors plant. They do not know how much profit they make, or what their break-even price is. So they sell below cost and do not even realise it. Without data, even a good harvest can bring a loss.

Source: Lesotho Tribune
Where Lesotho Stands Now
There is no real-time national crop database. Districts do not share production figures. The Ministry of Agriculture operates with delayed stats. Meanwhile, farmers make decisions based on hope, not facts.
What Needs to Happen
Every farmer should start with a notebook or phone log. Track planting dates, how much you spent, how much you harvested, and what you earned. The government should give SMS-based weather updates and link subsidies to productivity. Input programs must reward good data, not political lists.
Farmers Must Lead the Change
This is not just about government. Farmers must take control. You would not run a shop without knowing your sales and stock. Farming is no different. When you know your numbers, you make better choices. And you are more likely to get a loan, a market, or support.
Conclusion
Data is not a luxury. It is the difference between survival and success. Lesotho cannot keep farming like it is 1980. The time to act is now. Record. Track. Plan. Grow with facts.
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