When I was growing up, we learnt in school that India is an
agrarian economy with 70% of the people involved in agriculture. To a city-bred
lad like me, the closest we came to agriculture was the vegetable market or, if
you were lucky, a trip to one’s ‘native place’ which could be in a village with
farms. I never understood (or maybe didn’tcare) where the atta that went into
my chapattis came from, where the toor dal that went into the dal at home came
from or how did a cucumber plant look like.
Cut to then life in the 21st century; I had
checked all the boxes that went into making a ‘good boy’ for a middle-class
Indian family – an engineering degree topped up with an MBA and a cushy
corporate job with an MNC. And while spreadsheets and powerpoint presentations
could answer questions about the best investments and when to enter/exit the
market,I realised I still didn’t have the answer to ‘where does the dudhi that
goes into dudhi halwa come from?’
It began as a weekend activity. It was cool to do something
other than work/sleep/watch movies over the weekend ;). I had access to the
most critical resource i.e land, not very far from Mumbai. I was willing to
carry out some “experiments” over the weekend. And thus was born the weekend
farmer in July 2010.
I was a complete novice to agriculture. And looked like I wasn’t getting any help from beginners’ luck; I was already late for the current season of crop. I didn’t want to start the experiment with an ‘out of the box’ idea, so chose to start with rice (since that was the common crop taken during rains).
Initially I took advice from the local experts. They had
divided opinions. “We own numerous acres of land here, but we have never
attempted cultivating it. It is no longer remunerative “. While there might
have been merit in their advice, frankly what did I have to lose., I just wanted
to get a first hand experience of what it feels like to be a farmer ; the piece
of land indulged me!
Paddy Crop after transplanting |
With a lot of hiccups and numerous hours of phone
co-ordination, I managed to plant around 1.5 acres of paddy. In October, I
harvested around 400 kgs of paddy, which post dehusking and cleaning was about
160 kgs. My first Win!- I had produced enough rice to consume and sell.. err
was I getting somewhere?;-)
Paddy getting harvested |
Harvested Paddy |
The problem with produce like vegetables is the shelf life;
it has to be consumed quickly. Given the experimentative nature of my idea, I
wanted to move to a crop that had a long shelf life post harvest. So I
chose Ginger. Ginger requires soil that does not hold water and is typically a
9 -11 month long crop. With heavy rains in this part, Planting ginger was
indeed a challenge for a novice like me. But I persisted by constructing a shed
and planting ginger on the slopes to
ensure water-logging does not happen.
Ginger, vegetables, rice- I was getting somewhere ; closer
to a getting a complete meal on the
table through my home grown produce; perhaps not a pipe dream anymore
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