Why Western Cape Agriculture Works | Ep. 118
Mon Feb 02 2026
This podcast is proudly sponsored by Agrarius. Find out more: https://www.agrarius.co.za/?ref=recR9vP8u5CYfEOek&utm_source=lucentlands&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=LucentLandsPromo
Visit our agricultural stock site: https://lucentlands.smugmug.com/
In this episode of the Lucentlands Podcast, hosts Dewald Kirsten and Louise Brodie sit down with Jannie Strydom, CEO of Agri Western Cape, for a wide-ranging and deeply honest conversation about organised agriculture, farmer resilience, and the real engine behind South Africa’s food system.
Jannie unpacks what organised agriculture actually does behind the scenes — often unseen, often unthanked — to protect farmers from regulatory, political, labour, and infrastructure challenges. Using the powerful “windscreen of the bakkie” analogy, he explains how farmer organisations absorb the impact of policy and external pressure so producers can focus on what happens inside the farm gate.
The conversation explores why the Western Cape punches above its weight agriculturally, exporting close to 60% of its primary produce despite making up just 10% of South Africa’s land area. Jannie also reflects on the province’s strong institutional relationships, functional municipalities, and why these partnerships matter so deeply for rural economies.
Key issues discussed include farm succession planning, the aging farmer population, attracting young people into agriculture, rural safety, climate risk, and the misconception that farming is merely a “lifestyle” rather than a high-risk business operating without subsidies.
The episode closes with a clear call: tell agriculture’s good stories better, thank farmers more often, and recognise the massive value chain that depends on them.
Key Takeaways•Why organised agriculture acts as a buffer between farmers and policy risk
•How the Western Cape became South Africa’s agricultural export powerhouse
•The hidden complexity of farming as an unsubsidised business
•Succession planning challenges between generations of farmers
•Why agriculture must be made attractive to the next generation
•The urgent need to correct public misconceptions about farming
•Why “Thank a Farmer” shouldn’t be a slogan — but a habit
More about Agri Western Cape: https://awk.co.za/en/about-us/
Connect with us:
Website: https://lucentlands.co.za/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lucentlandsmedia/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lucentlandsmedia
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/lucentlandsmedia/
Support this podcast by buying us a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/lucentlands?new=1
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This podcast is proudly sponsored by Agrarius. Find out more: https://www.agrarius.co.za/?ref=recR9vP8u5CYfEOek&utm_source=lucentlands&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=LucentLandsPromo Visit our agricultural stock site: https://lucentlands.smugmug.com/ In this episode of the Lucentlands Podcast, hosts Dewald Kirsten and Louise Brodie sit down with Jannie Strydom, CEO of Agri Western Cape, for a wide-ranging and deeply honest conversation about organised agriculture, farmer resilience, and the real engine behind South Africa’s food system. Jannie unpacks what organised agriculture actually does behind the scenes — often unseen, often unthanked — to protect farmers from regulatory, political, labour, and infrastructure challenges. Using the powerful “windscreen of the bakkie” analogy, he explains how farmer organisations absorb the impact of policy and external pressure so producers can focus on what happens inside the farm gate. The conversation explores why the Western Cape punches above its weight agriculturally, exporting close to 60% of its primary produce despite making up just 10% of South Africa’s land area. Jannie also reflects on the province’s strong institutional relationships, functional municipalities, and why these partnerships matter so deeply for rural economies. Key issues discussed include farm succession planning, the aging farmer population, attracting young people into agriculture, rural safety, climate risk, and the misconception that farming is merely a “lifestyle” rather than a high-risk business operating without subsidies. The episode closes with a clear call: tell agriculture’s good stories better, thank farmers more often, and recognise the massive value chain that depends on them. Key Takeaways•Why organised agriculture acts as a buffer between farmers and policy risk •How the Western Cape became South Africa’s agricultural export powerhouse •The hidden complexity of farming as an unsubsidised business •Succession planning challenges between generations of farmers •Why agriculture must be made attractive to the next generation •The urgent need to correct public misconceptions about farming •Why “Thank a Farmer” shouldn’t be a slogan — but a habit More about Agri Western Cape: https://awk.co.za/en/about-us/ Connect with us: Website: https://lucentlands.co.za/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lucentlandsmedia/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lucentlandsmedia LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/lucentlandsmedia/ Support this podcast by buying us a coffee: https://buymeacoffee.com/lucentlands?new=1