I would assume because half of lower juba isnt part of the river drainage basin so the land is a bit arid and also because alshabaab would probably attack the farmersWhy no one plants in Juba?
They cant sell whatever they plant because of the ridiculous amount of shabab and jl isbaarosWhy no one plants in Juba?
It is, most diasporas are descendants of urbanites but going into the tuulos and you'll see sorghum with some milk being the staple food.Is sorghum still widely eaten in Somalia. But it makes sense Baay was always the breadbasket of Somalia especially back in siyaad barre days.
Probably the only grain our stomachs can handle with little downsides. Domesticated by our cousins/ancestors, and a staple of our diets from the Bronze Age.
That’s why you don’t eat 100% grains. In terms of a balanced diet, Somalis got that down. Most of us have grain, veg, protein, and a drink with most of our meals. As a result we don’t face much of those issues in times of abundance.I honestly don't think any humans are all that adapted to any grains, period. Even observe long-time settled farmer populations; still all sorts of autoimmune and digestive issues (IBS etc.) found all throughout the population alongside the usual metabolic dysfunction. There are little adaptations like the Japanese and seaweed and, sure, slight tolerances like us and probably sorghum but, in the big scheme of things, everyone is 90%+ still walking around with a Paleolithic physiology.
This and teff, I can handle, anything outside that, I bloat and feel like shit, much prefer having some fatty cut of beef, a nice egg and some salad.Probably the only grain our stomachs can handle with little downsides. Domesticated by our cousins/ancestors, and a staple of our diets from the Bronze Age.