LifestylePREMIUM

Any time is a good time for an all-season mushroom dish

Young agriculture graduate Charlotte Mutodi is ensuring Zimbabweans can buy mushrooms all year round by embracing smart farming techniques

Mushrooms all year round
Mushrooms all year round (BIRD)

It's early morning and despite the slight chill following a touch of rain the night before. Charlotte Ebber Mutodi's five-year old son is following her as she checks on the oyster mushrooms in the growing room.

With a tray in her hands, Mutodi inspects the progress on the new batch she planted three weeks ago in a cement structure covered with plastic and grass-thatched roofing. Once she fills the tray, Mutodi empties the mushrooms into a bucket.

Her son is trying to mimic what his mother is doing. But Mutodi has her eyes and mind firmly fixed on the “flowering gold”. 

This has been the 27-year-old’s daily routine for the last five years, ever since she graduated from Zimbabwe’s Midlands State University with an Agricultural Economics degree in 2016.

Unlike other young graduates, Mutodi never even attempted to send out a resume. After graduation, she decided not to put herself through the tedium of trying to find a job.

“Most of my former classmates are still looking for employment five years after graduating. Those formally employed complain daily because they get paid in our local currency. It’s not stable because of high inflation,” she explained.

Most of my former classmates are still looking for employment five years after graduating. Those formally employed complain daily because they get paid in our local currency. It’s not stable because of high inflation

Tough environment for young graduates

According to Education Statistics Report released by the Zimbabwe National Statistics Agency in December 2021, 62,629 female and 53,699 male students enrolled at Zimbabwe's universities in 2020.

Yet unemployment rates are sky-high and opportunities for young graduates are few. Having seen those who had graduated before her get stuck in limbo after seeking formal employment, Mutodi chose not to become a statistic.

Mutodi had fallen in love with oyster mushroom farming during a student work-related learning attachment.

She got an opportunity to do her industrial attachment at the Department of Agricultural Technical and Extension Services (Agritex), a government department that mobilises and provides advisory services to farmers.  During this time, Mutodi was taught how to grow mushrooms. For her, this offered a way of life that she had always dreamed of. 

“Mushroom farming has enabled me to be self-sufficient; I run my own business and have managed to employ three other people,” Mutodi said.

Oyster mushrooms are scientifically referred to as Pleurotus ostreatus. They are usually white, but some can be grey or tan, with oyster or fan-shaped caps.

They grow in clusters of small mushrooms or individually as larger mushrooms. Their growing requirements offer a business opportunity for anyone who can reproduce the mushroom's optimum growing conditions, even in a small space.

A backyard business

Mutodi started her mushroom project with growing structures made of black plastic sheeting at her home in Ruwa, about 25km from Harare. She has been steadily improving her growing rooms with every harvest. 

“I didn’t have enough capital to start this project, so I gathered maize stalks and bought spore and mushroom seed for $10. I then went around collecting plastic paper bags from people; I basically recycled bread bags. I built my mushroom growing structure from black sheeting and started growing mushrooms. I started with $20,” she said. 

Mutodi initially planted 30 bags in that structure, and after harvest, she made a profit of $60. She used that to buy more materials and spores. She may have started small but today she has a number of structures where she grows mushrooms, including on a small plot 8km away, in Goromonzi. She hopes to expand her project further.

For a visitor, they are an eyesore and intrusion on this orderly and modern neighbourhood with houses standing on neatly manicured lawns fenced off with well-cut green hedges and brick walls.

But soon, Mutodi plans to reconstruct the growing rooms into complete cement blocks to strengthen and expand the structures.

“My desire has always been to one day run a successful farming business,” Mutodi said.

Mutodi supplies local supermarkets and is in the process of making mobile vegetable carts. These will be moving around suburbs selling mushrooms as ice cream vendors do.

Currently, she supplies 200-300 punnets of mushrooms a week with the intention of scaling up to 900 punnets weekly.

Spotting an opportunity

Mutodi's success is not only because of her agricultural training. She also spotted an opportunity.  Mushrooms thrive during the rainy season and are a delicacy in Zimbabwe. But the prices spike out of season due to low supply and high demand.

Mushrooms are so popular in Zimbabwe that when in season, it’s common to see families out in the deep woods picking mushrooms, which grow wild. They say the rains are the equaliser as both the low-income earners and the elite can all afford the treasured dish.

But the mushroom season is now unpredictable because of erratic rainfall patterns caused by climate change — and this threatens to relegate mushrooms to the elite tables only.

Even those who can afford the pricey delicacy are never assured of its availability. Which is where Mutodi comes in. To keep a constant, all-season supply using smart farming techniques where the oyster mushrooms, which take 21 days to flower, can be harvested all year round.

She has found a way to bring this luxury to the dining table of every family that not only desires it but can afford it, in and out of season.

These oyster mushrooms are a healthier and cheaper alternative source of protein. Also, with challenges in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, there is a need to rethink our diet

A healthy alternative

Sandra Garwe, a Global Health Professional, said that mushrooms are known for their low fat and high protein content. The Zimbabwean diet is primarily based on cereals (maize), increasing the chance of protein deficiency. 

“Proteins are fundamental to nutrition. They play a central role in biological processes. These oyster mushrooms are a healthier and cheaper alternative source of protein. Also, with challenges in non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, there is a need to rethink our diet, and mushroom is a good substitute because of its low fat,” Garwe explained. 

Rumbidzai Mukori William, a nutritionist and certified health and weight management coach, said that mushrooms are the only vegan, non-fortified dietary source of vitamin D and provide vegans with micronutrients that are not available from other foods. 

According to her, mushroom farming promotes food security as it does not occupy a large space and can be grown irrespective of weather patterns. Mushrooms are grown year-round across the nation. On average, one square foot of space in a mushroom bed can produce 6.55 pounds of mushrooms. 

“Mushroom produce can also be used in the production of a variety of products, such as dried mushrooms, soups, seasoning, fresh and canned. This is irrespective of the time of year and can be done all year round,” William said.

We target the markets that we have here in Zimbabwe because mushrooms are highly perishable; you have to know where you will take your product before you produce it

Growth in Africa

In Zimbabwe, mushroom farming is still in its infancy, with women like Mutodi leading in establishing Zimbabwe as a mushroom farming hub. According to reports, Zambia is the largest dried mushroom supplier in Africa, comprising81% of total exports; followed by Egypt, with a 4.5% share of total exports. Senegal comes in third with a 2.7%share.  

Hazel Munatswa, who heads the Research and Development department for the Zimbabwe Mushroom Farmers Association, says that there is room for mushroom farmers to increase their production scale until they can tap into the export market.  

“We target the markets that we have here in Zimbabwe because mushrooms are highly perishable; you have to know where you will take your product before you produce it,” Munatswa explained. 

“I chose mushrooms because it’s easier to grow. When growing mushrooms, the monitoring and supervision is minimal and simple compared to someone growing onions or tomatoes on a hectare. With mushrooms in a small space, you can start growing on a larger scale.” 

Plenty of challenges — but solutions abound

But running the business has not been without its fair share of challenges. Mutodi had to rebuild her growing rooms in February this year after a hailstorm destroyed them, and she lost all the spores she had.

Apart from growing and selling mushrooms, Mutodi offers training to people who want to start mushroom farming under her company Ebber Mushrooms. They also sell kits; these are already-prepared implements compromising of spores and feed that are ready for the growing room. These kits will only take seven days to start fruiting.

There is a big market for mushrooms this side because not many people are doing it

Natasha Munhande, 30, a resident of Midlands province in Gweru, learnt all about mushroom farming from Mutodi.

“There is a big market for mushrooms this side because not many people are doing it. People are dependent on wild mushrooms that grow seasonally. But with me, they get it all year round,” Munhande says.  

Mutodi agrees.

On the day we visit her operation, she is with one of her workers getting ready to take a fresh batch to a local vegetable market, located a few kilometres from her home.

She hopes to make more money there because it has become the primary mushroom market.

bird story agency



Growth in Africa

In Zimbabwe, mushroom farming is still in its infancy, with women like Mutodi leading in establishing Zimbabwe as a mushroom farming hub. According to reports, Zambia is the largest dried mushroom supplier in Africa, comprising81% of total exports; followed by Egypt, with a 4.5% share of total exports. Senegal comes in third with a 2.7%share.  

Hazel Munatswa, who heads the Research and Development department for the Zimbabwe Mushroom Farmers Association, says that there is room for mushroom farmers to increase their production scale until they can tap into the export market.  

“We target the markets that we have here in Zimbabwe because mushrooms are highly perishable; you have to know where you will take your product before you produce it,” Munatswa explained. 

“I chose mushrooms because it’s easier to grow. When growing mushrooms, the monitoring and supervision is minimal and simple compared to someone growing onions or tomatoes on a hectare. With mushrooms in a small space, you can start growing on a larger scale.”

Plenty of challenges — but solutions abound

But running the business has not been without its fair share of challenges. Mutodi had to rebuild her growing rooms in February this year after a hailstorm destroyed them, and she lost all the spores she had.

Apart from growing and selling mushrooms, Mutodi offers training to people who want to start mushroom farming under her company Ebber Mushrooms. They also sell kits; these are already-prepared implements compromising of spores and feed that are ready for the growing room. These kits will only take seven days to start fruiting.

Natasha Munhande, 30, a resident of Midlands province in Gweru, learnt all about mushroom farming from Mutodi.

“There is a big market for mushrooms this side because not many people are doing it. People are dependent on wild mushrooms that grow seasonally. But with me, they get it all year round,” Munhande says.

Mutodi agrees.

On the day we visit her operation, she is with one of her workers getting ready to take a fresh batch to a local vegetable market, located a few kilometres from her home.

She hopes to make more money there because it has become the primary mushroom market.

bird story agency

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