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In Zimbabwe, wild mushroom trade supplements family incomes

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A group of women run to meet a passing truck on the Harare to Bulawayo highway.
They are hoping to entice the drivers into buying the fruits of their harvest - colourful wild
mushrooms.
It's rainy season and fungi appear from the damp soil.
Rich in protein, antioxidants and fibre, wild mushrooms are a revered delicacy and income earner
in Zimbabwe, where food and formal jobs are scarce for many.
Locals walk into the bush to collect them to supplement their income.
But they must do it under the cover of darkness to avoid the landowners who would not welcome
their presence, explains mushroom picker Diana Chiwara :
"This is the bush where wepick mushrooms, we wake up early morning around past 3 am
and walk deep into this bush. We can't come late in the day because it’s restricted to be in
this place. The owners of this place don't always allow people tocome and pick
mushrooms here. So wecome early andwill behiding from them, so that by the time
it’slunch time we are already leaving.”
Her pre-dawn trip to the forest marks just the beginning of a day-long process.
From the bush, Chiwara heads to a busy highway.
Using a knife and water, she cleans the mushrooms before joining the stiff competition of other
mushroom sellers hoping to attract passing motorists.
There are thousands of varieties of mushrooms.
Some are perfectly safe to eat such as portobello, shitake and the common button mushroom
found in supermarkets.
But many wild mushrooms can cause stomach upset or allergic reactions, or may even be fatally
poisonous.
It is very difficult to tell edible and poisonous mushrooms apart.
It requires expert knowledge and training to learn which ones are safe to eat.
Those without training should not attempt to pick mushrooms for human consumption of any sort.
Here the expert knowledge and training is passed down through the generations, typically from
mother to daughter.
Today, Polite Mugobo is heading out to collect mushrooms with her husband and son.
She says it's not a task for the faint hearted : “Sometimes we meet thugs and they steal
everything from us. Sometimes the farm owners chase us from their land. So we try to do
this while hiding, it’s tough. We also have to be careful so that we don’t get attacked by
dangerous wild animals.”
The family team comb through the morning dew for shoot-ups under trees and dried leaves.
Once they have enough, they clean their bounty and arrange it in bowls to sell.
“We sell this mushroom for US$1 a bowl like this during the rainy season. Our customers
regularly stop on highway to buy mushrooms. On a good day or during the weekend we
go home with about US $20 - $15 each,” says Mugobo.
Women such as Mugobo are dominant players in Zimbabwe's mushroom trade, says Wonder
Ngezimana, an assoc iate professor of horticulture at the Marondera University of Agricultural
Science and Technology.
“Predominantly women have been gatherers and they normally go with their daughters.
They transfer the indigenous knowledge from one generation to the other,” he says .
About one in four women who forage for wild mushrooms are often accompanied by their
daughters, according to research carried out by Ngezimana and colleagues at the university in
2021. In “just few cases” — 1.4% — mothers were accompanied by a boy child.
“Mothers were better knowledgeable of wild edible mushrooms compared to their
counterparts - fathers,” noted the researchers.
The researchers interviewed close to 100 people and observed mushroom collection in Binga, a
district in western Zimbabwe where growing Zimbabwe's staple food, maize, is largely unviable
due to droughts and poor land quality.
Many families in the Binga, which is over 8 hours driving from Harare, are too poor to afford basic
food and other items.
So mushroom season is important for the families.
On average, each family made just over $100 a month from selling wild mushrooms, in addition
to relying on the fungi for their own household food consumption, according to the research.
In large part due to harsh weather conditions, about a quarter of Zimbabwe's 15 million people
are food insecure, meaning that they’re not sure where their next meal will come from, according
to aid agencies.
Zimbabwe has one of the world's highest rates of food inflation at 264%, according to the
International Monetary Fund.
Police routinely warn people of the hazards of consuming wild mushrooms.
In January, three girls in one family died after eating poisonous wild mushrooms. Such reports
filter through each season.
A few years ago 10 family members died after consuming poisonous mushrooms.
To promote safe mushroom consumption and year-round income generation, the government is
promoting small-scale commercial production of certain types such as oyster mushrooms.
But it appears the wild ones remain the most popular
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