African Crops For the Future E03: Pearl Millet (Cenchrus americanus/ Pennisetum glaucum)

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  • Опубліковано 28 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 75

  • @AjayTiwari-en9nz
    @AjayTiwari-en9nz Рік тому +3

    This beautiful millet plant is just amazing. My diabetic mother replaced rice with pearl millet, wheat flour with barley flour and became free of all diabetes meds.

  • @mengistok
    @mengistok 3 роки тому +10

    We call it Mahangu, it's a staple for the Ovambo of Namibia. It's our gold. The brew you mentioned is Oshikundu here. We also make cakes called oshikwiila. Lovely

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому

      Can't wait to taste some of your Namibian recipes. I'll be there very soon, so I'm looking forward to it!

  • @vineleak7676
    @vineleak7676 Рік тому +3

    Your channel is way up there for all the plant, agriculture and botany enthusiasts... A wealth of information on african plants that was desperately missing. It seems that on UA-cam only your channel and Jibril entreprise channel cover this topic.

  • @ZimbaDiva
    @ZimbaDiva 3 роки тому +11

    Gosh you’ve explained something I’ve been struggling to articulate to my peers! Thank you for explaining it so well. We have these health problems because we are eating a foods with zero nutritional value. Looking forward to more of your videos

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому +7

      Thanks, I'm glad you found it helpful. It's an inconvenient truth, but the food we've all been brainwashed into loving actually isn't good for us. And then, even worse, we're replacing it in the 21st century with chicken and chips! No wonder everyone's getting sick.......

  • @Nangiesx
    @Nangiesx 3 роки тому +4

    In my tribe Oshiwambo, this our staple food. We make Pap, porridge, bread, Oshikundu, other drinks from this. Yoh, if it is not in my home, I am hungry already even if there is rice and maize meal.
    And we use the strong stalks to build our homes though now with other combination of seed that do not have strong stems, things are changing.
    Thank you for the credits.

  • @neelsolanki9400
    @neelsolanki9400 3 роки тому +3

    This is great! Love all the millets and I hope they have a more prominent role as staple crops in the future. Love to hear about all these lesser known crops, keep it up I look forward to even more!

  • @heyfred7263
    @heyfred7263 Рік тому +1

    Maybe a video on best/favorite recipes useing millet. Thank you for sharing. God loves you.

  • @kudzaichidzikwe6738
    @kudzaichidzikwe6738 3 роки тому +3

    Nice & very informative video. Adoption of small grains has been quite low though they might be a better option considering our climate in certain areas. Some villagers have cited they are difficult to handle and process after harvesting thereby continuing with maize. Need to come up with methods which pose no difficulty in harvesting and processing for better adoption.

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому +1

      Totally agree! These are technical challenges which we can overcome very quickly if we put our mind to it. so far, we haven't really tried to solve, so they haven't been solved. Imagine the creative energy that Zimbabweans expend every day just surviving! If you could direct even a small fraction of that energy towards solving this problem, we'd have it fixed tomorrow!

  • @Ndabemlambo
    @Ndabemlambo 3 роки тому +2

    Really loved this and found it very informative.

  • @finaltouchpro648
    @finaltouchpro648 3 роки тому +2

    Where have you been all my life?! Awesome content!

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому +1

      Aah, thank you. Now that's a comment I'll frame and stick on my wall!

  • @mazvita1238
    @mazvita1238 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you once again Gus.

  • @joken8028
    @joken8028 3 роки тому +1

    Gus.... just subscribed, I appreciate your content and research. Looking forward to more videos. Cheers.

  • @nkosiemahlangu1158
    @nkosiemahlangu1158 3 роки тому +1

    Awesome info as always

  • @p-jo
    @p-jo 3 роки тому +1

    Thank you . I have just discovered your channel and have subscribed.
    I love your content. Keep going

  • @GrantLewthwaite
    @GrantLewthwaite 3 роки тому +1

    Great series -

  • @purandharkubanooraya493
    @purandharkubanooraya493 2 роки тому

    You are just superb... I am a farmer from India..love to go on listining to your talks

  • @severtone263
    @severtone263 3 роки тому +1

    You earned my sub buddy, just caught wind of you in a whatsapp grp on this very episode. Looking fwd to more content.

  • @greatoutdoors630
    @greatoutdoors630 3 роки тому +1

    Very good advice!

  • @uvencio1122
    @uvencio1122 3 роки тому +1

    Good one!!

  • @antonhuman8446
    @antonhuman8446 2 роки тому +1

    The prince of the present virus, mister jill bates says look for the simple answers.
    And millet. E.g. is THE simple answer. But. As mentioned. No matter what quality rubbish maize might be. Like father. Like son.
    Excellent presentations. Thank you!

  • @MrRastafari01
    @MrRastafari01 Рік тому

    Great video!

  • @elsabadenhorst9746
    @elsabadenhorst9746 9 місяців тому

    Thank you🌹

  • @linahchiwambo9836
    @linahchiwambo9836 3 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing this.

  • @brianndhlovu2926
    @brianndhlovu2926 3 роки тому

    Lovely

  • @sonikku956
    @sonikku956 2 роки тому +2

    Maize isn't inherently bad, you just have to nixtamalize it so you can unlock all of its nutritional value. That being said, pearl millet should be grown heavily.

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  2 роки тому

      Absolutely. The problem is that nobody in southern Africa does nixtamalize it, which is definitely an issue!

  • @jeffreyscanlan839
    @jeffreyscanlan839 3 роки тому +1

    Love this series. I've been heading down this road the last several years, looking for plants that will grow without chemicals and that are drought tolerant. Actually I got some African millet I will be planting in the next several weeks. I think the plant kingdom has so much to offer besides the meager choices that you get at the grocery store. Millet beer? Might have to try that one. Thanks Gus, I appreciate what you do.

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому

      Thanks Jeff, always good to hear from you! ?And yes, I'm most definitely working on millet beer. She's a comin'!

  • @jonasmolepo8631
    @jonasmolepo8631 2 роки тому

    Hello sir I need your halp to find a seed of unyawothi

  • @thendarasworld7692
    @thendarasworld7692 3 роки тому +1

    Mashangu, Mahangu in 🇳🇦

  • @muhammedjaseemshajeef6781
    @muhammedjaseemshajeef6781 7 місяців тому

    Pearl millet is widely consumed in india mainly in the states of gujarat , Rajasthan and haryana

  • @brighttendaimuvirimi1905
    @brighttendaimuvirimi1905 3 роки тому +1

    It's good for repressing the invasive witchweed: Striga

  • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
    @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Рік тому +1

    I'm real curious how yield compares there. In the USA, hybrid corn yields 150+ bushels per acre, millet is about 70. In the southern states army worm is an equal opportunity destroyer, attacking millet as well as corn. Except for GMO corn which is immune to army worm, earworm, and rootworm.

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  Рік тому +2

      Yield is a factor of many things, not all of them sustainable. In many of the drier parts of Africa (which is the majority of Africa!), if you planted hybrid corn and millet next to each other, without any irrigation, fertiliser or herbicide, the corn would die and the millet would survive. Corn yields may be higher when you irrigate, fertilise and fumigate, but the hidden environmental and climate costs are also very high.

    • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
      @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Рік тому

      @@AfricanPlantHunterYield is a factor in how many people get to eat. Maybe at the limit millet is always better. Maybe it would depend on the corn variety. The Zuni have been growing corn in the desert for a thousand years.

    • @odhiamboomulo5937
      @odhiamboomulo5937 Місяць тому

      ​@@AfricanPlantHuntervery true. Millet, sorghum, cassava, arrow roots and sweet potato just don't care about inputs 😅.
      They just need sufficient moisture...

  • @musajabi1923
    @musajabi1923 4 місяці тому

    Pearl millet is alkaline also?

  • @lofulsorro2841
    @lofulsorro2841 2 роки тому

    We grow them in sudan and South sudan

  • @MarSchlosser
    @MarSchlosser Місяць тому

    Maize is not and never was meant to be something we had to eat. American Indians grew it as a treat for sweet corn and beer. No grain was all that important because we're meat eaters. fruit and vegetables in season, often dried for winter, but fruit was usually liquified (AKA wine). Beer was usually sour mash, which could be stored in fermenting jars buried in the ground, then frozen in winter for early type of bourbon. Here, Arizona, honey mesquite was queen of the gardens.

  • @MrArthoz
    @MrArthoz 2 роки тому +2

    Maize lacks nutrition if you did not nixtamal it. Maize was exported from the Americas but people ignores to export the method to unlocks its nutrition which is nixtamalization which leads to fatal disease like pellagra.
    But yes, better other grains like millet or sorghum. Here in Southeast Asia sorghum is replacing rice, especially in Indonesia.

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  2 роки тому

      Thanks, yes, nixtamalisation is not done at all in most of Africa. One of the many reasons we need to focus more on our indigenous grains!

  • @juliaherbet2063
    @juliaherbet2063 2 роки тому

    With the ever growing droughts, growing these grains will help you to never go hungry. People just have to understand what this climate change needs depending on which part of the world you are from

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  2 роки тому

      You are so right. I think people are beginning to understand this, but it's taking a looooong time!

  • @bilaalmanselljones10
    @bilaalmanselljones10 3 роки тому +1

    How about Tylosema.fassoglensis or T.Esculentum; plectranthus esculentus; Sesbania.bispinosa;S.rostrata; S.sesban; Telfairia.pedata; Coccinia.sp; Dioscorea.sp and maybe a domesticated form of Vigna vexilata

    • @AfricanPlantHunter
      @AfricanPlantHunter  3 роки тому

      Aah, thanks for all those suggestions. Series 2 is clearly justified!

  • @viewersstop7720
    @viewersstop7720 Рік тому +1

    The British brought pearl millet, sorghum to india which has become a staple food

  • @leedza
    @leedza 3 роки тому +1

    Ancient grains are future. Drought tolerant, don't require a lot of fertiliser and nutritious.

  • @kukuipupule4415
    @kukuipupule4415 2 роки тому

    sold as wild bird seed in the 1st world

  • @Lawiah0
    @Lawiah0 2 роки тому

    Yahweh (YHVH), the God
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    ...
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    ...
    12 Tribes passed through the Caucasus Mountains
    (i)ssac's Sons / Saxons / Anglo-Saxons / Europe / Australia / New Zealand / Canada / North America / First World / "We the People"
    ...
    Not kind after kind
    ...
    38 For as in those days before the flood,
    *they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage,*
    until the day when Noah entered the ark, 39 and they were unaware until the flood came and swept them all away,
    *so will be the coming of the Son of Man.*

  • @ranchoelchamusquito3683
    @ranchoelchamusquito3683 2 роки тому +1

    awesome! but this video is very subversive big agro buisness will try to cancel you fren