PaMombe Ranch
Pamombe Ranch is a cattle breeding Ranch based in Impinge Area 20km from Mvurwi & 120km from Harare.
We specialise in breeding Brahman, Boran, Tuli, Simmental cattle. We have transport services for cattle and stock feeds across the country

15 heifers going as a package. Free delivery within a radius of 200km. 10200usd. Mvurwi. 0772354194

Thinking About Dairy Cattle? 10 Top Breeds for Milk Production 🥛🐄
🐮 Jersey – High butterfat content, perfect for creamy milk;
🐮 Holstein – Highest milk volume producer;
🐮 Normande – Rich, high-protein milk and strong build;
🐮 Brown Swiss – Great temperament + excellent milk quality;
🐮 Ayrshire – Balanced between volume and quality;
🐮 Shorthorn – Dual-purpose: milk and meat;
🐮 Guernsey – Golden milk rich in beta-carotene;
🐮 Sahiwal – Heat-tolerant and great for tropical climates;
🐮 Gyr Cattle – Known for A2 milk and adaptability.
Choosing the right breed depends on your climate, space, and milk goals!

A Lot of 7 heifers and 3 steers going as a package at 5900usd. Mvurwi. 0772354194

Brahmans and Borans
Part of the heifers to be offloaded in batches of 10 per batch starting 4th July 2025. Price ranges from 750us-950us each heifer. Location Mvurwi. 0772354194

Body scoring

The Richest People in Agriculture Don’t Farm - They Sell
One of the Main Reasons Many Small-Scale Farmers Fail Is Because They Don’t Know How to Sell
Most farmers are not broke because they can't farm. They're broke because they don’t know how to sell. Full stop.
The most dangerous sentence in African agriculture is: “There’s no market.” That statement is the anthem of the uninformed. How can anyone in their right mind say there’s no market for food? We’re talking about a continent where millions eat every day, where cities grow daily and supermarkets expand by the month. Don't you know that the African food import bill is ballooning each year? What’s missing is not the market. What’s missing is your ability to sell to it.
Many small-scale farmers still believe that once they produce a good product, buyers will magically appear. From where exactly? Do they think quality sells itself? The truth is, quality without visibility is useless. If you don’t market what you grow, you will die with your harvest in your hands - literally.
Most of the people saying “there’s no money in farming” spend their days reading free WhatsApp PDFs on planting techniques, soil pH, and pest control. That’s fine for your workers. But if you are the owner of the farming business, you shouldn’t be obsessing over rows of spinach. You should be obsessed with who’s buying, how much they’re willing to pay, and how often they’ll come back. You should be reading books by Seth Godin, Michael Porter, and Geoffrey Moore. Because farming is not just about growing crops; it’s about building a system that turns produce into profit.
I’m a farmer. But I don’t read farming books. I let my employees worry about that. My focus is on positioning, branding, logistics, and margins. That’s why I always have stock, and more importantly I always have cash flow. I don’t romanticize farming. I treat it like the business it is.
Ironically, the people making the most money from agriculture aren’t even on the farm. They live in town, wear clean clothes, and have never touched a hoe. But they understand markets. They are the middlemen: the so-called “non-farmers” who go between you and the buyer, and take the lion’s share of the profit while you celebrate your bumper harvest. Why? Because they understand selling. They understand packaging, negotiation, distribution, and timing. They don’t plant. But they plan.
So here’s the truth many farmers refuse to hear: selling is more profitable than farming. Until you master that, you will always be the one who works the hardest and earns the least.
If you insist on being the one at the farm, fine. Then hire someone who knows how to market. Because whether it’s tomatoes, onions, chickens, or cabbages; if you don’t have a sales system in place, you’re just producing for the compost heap. Marketing isn’t optional. It’s not an extra job. It is the job.
Don’t be the farmer who is proud of wearing overalls but can’t show bank statements. Don’t be the farmer who produces food for others to profit from. Become a businessperson who farms not just a farmer hoping for miracles.
Have a good day.
Cattle Vaccination Schedule
At Birth or Within the First Few Weeks:
Brucellosis (for female calves only):
Give Brucella abortus strain 19 or RB51 vaccine between 3 to 8 months of age.
Administer 2 ml subcutaneously (under the skin).
Only one dose is needed for life.
At 2 to 3 Months Old:
Clostridial Diseases (Blackleg, Malignant Edema, etc.):
Use a 7-way or 8-way clostridial vaccine.
Administer 2–5 ml intramuscularly or subcutaneously.
Give a booster dose 4 weeks later.
Respiratory Diseases (BVD, IBR, BRSV, PI3):
Use a 5-way respiratory vaccine (either modified live or killed).
Administer 2 ml intramuscularly or subcutaneously.
Give a booster dose 3–4 weeks later.
At 3 to 6 Months Old:
Foot and Mouth Disease (FMD):
Give FMD vaccine depending on your region’s regulations.
Administer 2 ml subcutaneously or intramuscularly.
Repeat every 6 months or yearly.
Pasteurellosis (Shipping Fever):
Use Pasteurella multocida vaccine.
Give 2 ml intramuscularly or subcutaneously.
Booster dose after 4 weeks.
At 6 Months Old:
Anthrax (in endemic areas):
Use anthrax spore vaccine.
Give 1 ml subcutaneously.
Repeat annually.
Lumpy Skin Disease (L*D):
Use live attenuated L*D vaccine.
Administer 1 ml subcutaneously.
Repeat yearly.
Hemorrhagic Septicemia (HS):
Use Pasteurella multocida type B vaccine.
Give 2 ml subcutaneously.
Repeat yearly, ideally before the rainy season.
At Breeding Age (Heifers and Bulls):
Leptospirosis, Vibriosis, and Campylobacteriosis:
Use combined Lepto-Vibrio vaccine.
Give 2 ml intramuscularly.
Repeat yearly, ideally 4–6 weeks before mating.
Late Pregnancy (3–6 Weeks Before Calving):
Calf Scours Prevention (E. coli, Rotavirus, Coronavirus):
Use scours vaccine like ScourGuard.
Administer 2 ml intramuscularly.
Repeat with each pregnancy.
Annual Vaccination for Adult Cattle:
Revaccinate for:
Clostridial diseases
Respiratory diseases
FMD
Anthrax
L*D
HS
Lepto-Vibrio (breeding animals)
Brucellosis (for new female calves only)
Tips:
Always deworm 1–2 weeks before vaccination for best results.
Store vaccines at 2–8°C and keep away from direct sunlight.
Maintain a vaccination record for each animal.
Always consult your veterinarian for region-specific adjustments.

Big shout out to my newest top fans! 💎
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Munotipasa manyemwe

Which is the best farmers?

A lot of 5 incalf cows 5500us
Another lot of 9 empty cows plus one Brahman bull @ 9900us
Call or Inbox for fotos
0772354194
PaMombe Ranch
Mvurwi

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Contact the business
Telephone
Website
Address
Harare African Township
Opening Hours
Monday | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Tuesday | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Wednesday | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Thursday | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Friday | 09:00 - 17:00 |
Saturday | 09:00 - 17:00 |