I have 40 cattle that are for beef production; I keep for home consumption and also to sell. 
I sold about 15 cattle last year to the local people.
I wanted to make some profit so I could build something, so I sold some more cattle to the abattoir; about 18. 
Last year, I decided that I wanted to do something really useful with this occupation, 
so I took another 22 cattle and I sold them to Koala Meats in Harare. 
After that, I gathered all of my profits together and decided to register a church school.
I registered a college. 
Our main activity here is to rear cattle; I have a lot of cattle; 
if you look, you’ll see I've got very good breeds; you can tell by the look of my bull. 
I have very good breeds for meat,
so that people can happily eat it in hotels, at events and weddings.
There are workers who look after the cattle. 
The herders get their salaries from these cattle here. 
Moreover, these cattle provide manure 
and milk for me and my family,
and I also to sell to the local community.  
I don’t have cattle specifically for dairy farming as yet, 
only for meat, but people do come here for milk. 
We buy the medical and cleaning chemicals we use in Masvingo, at Farmer Supply
and veterinary products from Farm City. 
I always buy salt blocks for the cattle feed
and there are some other products that I provide for those cows with calves.
When we moved here, we did not own much. 
We came here from the communal areas, 
we only had 5 Brahman cattle that I had bought from a white farmer;
there were 3 cows, 1 calf and a bull.  
All that you see now came from those animals.
I have bought a Toyota Ipsum and a red car (a 1400), which is actually the first car I ever bought.
I’m planning on buying a 1 tonne truck that I will use to carry my farm produce to the market:
tomatoes, maize, potatoes and other crops.  
So this is the work I’m doing here, which came about when the government gave us the land.  
