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Barley imported image

Crop details

Barley

Hordeum vulgare
Family: Poaceae

Quick stats

Family Poaceae
Typical harvest 2.9 t/ha
Varieties 2
Pests & diseases 2
Seasons 2

Crop profile

Growth habit annual
Days to harvest 120
Main uses Grain for food, feed, malting and straw for livestock bedding or feed.
Pollination self
Origin / where it grows Common in cool highland zones and some irrigated cereal systems in East Africa.

Weather, soil & spacing

Best temperature 12–24 °C
Rainfall 350–650 mm/yr
Altitude 200–3500 m
Best pH 6.5–7.5
Soil type Wide range; best in well-drained soils
Row spacing 20 cm
Plant spacing 5 cm
Planting depth 4 cm
Seed rate 100 kg/ha
Nursery days

Simple notes for farmers

About the crop: This crop is annual. You plant, grow and harvest it in one main season, then plant again. You can normally start harvesting about 120 days after planting, depending on care and variety.

Main use: Farmers mostly grow this crop for grain for food, feed, malting and straw for livestock bedding or feed..

Pollination: This crop is mainly pollinated by self. Keeping flowers healthy and having insects like bees in the field helps improve fruit set and yields.

Where it grows: Common in cool highland zones and some irrigated cereal systems in East Africa. It is grouped under: Cereals & Pseudocereals.

Best climate: This crop does well in warm areas where the temperature is usually between 12 and 24 degrees Celsius. It prefers places that receive around 350 to 650 millimetres of rain in a year. It can grow from near sea level up to about 3500 metres above sea level.

Soil: The crop grows best in slightly acidic to near neutral soils, with a pH of about 6.5 to 7.5. Choose a fertile, well-drained soil. Avoid places where water stands for long periods.

Plant spacing: Plant in rows about 20 centimetres apart, and leave about 5 centimetres between plants in the row. This gives each plant enough space for roots and canopy to spread.

Planting depth: Dig planting holes or furrows about 4 centimetres deep so the roots sit firmly in the soil but are not buried too deep.

Seed or planting material: Use around 100 kilograms of seed or planting material per hectare. Spread or plant evenly so the field has a good stand without being overcrowded.

Farmer guide (mwongozo wa mkulima)

Planting: Direct-seed into a fine seedbed at onset of reliable rains or under irrigation.
Transplanting: Not transplanted.
Irrigation: If irrigated, maintain moisture at establishment, tillering and grain filling.
Fertigation: Split nitrogen between planting and tillering where rainfall or irrigation is adequate.
Pest scouting: Monitor for aphids, armyworms, rusts and lodging risk in dense stands.
Pruning: No pruning required; manage weeds early and avoid excessive late nitrogen.
Harvest: Harvest when heads are dry, grain is hard and moisture is low enough for safe threshing.
Postharvest: Dry to safe moisture, thresh cleanly and store in dry insect-free conditions.

Nutrient schedule (mbolea kwa hatua)

# Stage DAP Product Rate Targets (kg/ha) Notes
1 Basal 0 DAP 100 kg/ha N: 18, P₂O₅: 46, K₂O: — Drill or band at planting.
2 Tillering 30 CAN 100 kg/ha N: 26, P₂O₅: —, K₂O: — Apply before rain or irrigate lightly after topdressing.

Nutrient requirements

Nutrient Stage Amount Unit
N Basal 30 kg/ha
P₂O₅ Basal 30 kg/ha
K₂O Basal 20 kg/ha
N Tillering 30 kg/ha

Field images (picha shambani)

Barley imported image
Barley imported image
Primary
Barley imported image
Barley imported image
Barley imported image
Barley imported image
Name Country Maturity Traits
Nguzo KE 120 Adapted malting type for Kenyan highlands.
Sabini TZ 115 Cool-season grain type.
Stage Product Rate (kg/ha) Notes
Planting DAP 100 Use with clean seed and firm seedbed.
Tillering CAN 100 Avoid late excessive nitrogen on malting barley.
Name Type Symptoms Management
Aphids pest Sap sucking on leaves and heads, sometimes with virus spread. Scout early and preserve natural enemies; intervene where thresholds are exceeded.
Leaf rust disease Orange-brown pustules on leaves reducing grain fill. Use tolerant varieties, balanced nutrition and fungicide when needed.
System Typical Min Max Notes
Rainfed smallholder highland production 2 1.2 3 Typical food or feed grain production under moderate management.
Improved malting barley production 3.8 2.5 5 Highland production with improved seed and balanced fertility.
Country Region Planting Harvest
KE Rift Valley Highlands Mar-Apr Jul-Aug
ET Central Highlands Jun-Jul Oct-Nov
Country Region Suitability
KE Rift Valley Highlands High