Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
Sheona E. Shackleton and Charlie M. Shackleton 209

Home carvers, Bushbuckridge Roadside carver vendors,
neighbouring Nsikazi


  • work from home • produce and sell from makeshift
    roadside shelters

  • independent entrepreneurs • groups of carvers or individuals

  • family-based production, • males, mainly young
    women and children assist
    in finishing

  • use hard woods • use softer woods

  • produce utilitarian objects • produce animals and figurines (up
    to 2 m tall)

  • sell to vendors and retailers • sell directly to tourists

  • carving seen as a permanent • transient, carving forms safety net
    livelihood activity in times of unemployment

  • better equipment • low technology facilities (home-
    (chain saws, bought tools, made tools)
    power tools)

  • access to electricity • no access to electricity

  • work in covered workshops • work in the open on the ground
    or shelters

  • older industry—since 1970s • younger industry—since 1990s
    and before

  • industry stable with • industry has grown rapidly and is
    few new entrants still growing


Table 2. Different woodcarving production strategies found in the region

conservation areas. Seventeen species in total are used (Table 3). P. angolensis
is by far the most important, followed by Spirostachys africana, Dalbergia
melanoxylon, Berchemia zeyheri (Sonder) Grubov and Olea europea L. ssp.
africana (Miller) P.S. Green (Shackleton, S.E. 1993). A few woodworkers obtain
Apodytes dimidiata E. Meyer ex Arn. from private farms in a nearby commercial
farming area. This case study analysis focuses on P. angolensis as the most
favoured and most abundant species in the study area.
Because of scarcity of wood, especially over the last decade, alternative
sources are being sought at the instigation of both craftsmen and support
agencies. Recent work revealed that carvers are now accessing wood from
neighbours’ home plots and fields as well as revisiting previous harvesting
sites to salvage ‘waste’ wood. Furniture makers reported purchasing P.
angolensis planks imported from Mozambique and Zambia from timber
merchants in Johannesburg, Pretoria and Nelspruit. The Danish Cooperation
for Environment and Development Community Forestry Project and the KNP
Socio-Ecology Programme have assisted woodworkers in obtaining wood from
the national Working for Water Programme^5 and from areas cleared for mining
and other developments (Yeatman personal communication). One carver-
furniture maker successfully negotiated with a farmer to harvest the exotic
species jacaranda (Jacaranda mimosifolia D. Don ) and syringa (Melia azedarach
L.) from his farm.

12SAwoodcarving.p65 209 22/12/2004, 11:05

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