81-year-old Volker Miros picked sand acid soil to grow spores of the French Perigord variety. A decade later, the Miros family is South Africa's number one Perigord grower and supplier
Paul Miros of Woodford Truffles with his dog Baccio, who found a Black Winter Perigord truffle near Ceres, South Africa
Image: Rodger Bosch / AFP
Only shrubs grew naturally in the sandy acid soil that farmer Volker Miros chose as a site to test the potential for truffle production in South Africa. Â
The determined mycophile saw no reason why the highly prized fungi could not grow on the plateaus of South Africa's rugged Cederberg mountains in the west of the country, where the climate is similar to that of Mediterranean Europe.
"We looked at where truffles are grown in the rest of the world and it's in the northern hemisphere, about 32 to 35 degrees north," said the white-bearded Miros, wearing a black beanie on a chilly winter day.