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Drumstick cultivation proves profitable for farmers in drought-prone Solapur

Drumstick cultivation proves profitable for farmers in drought-prone Solapur

Sunday May 27, 2018 , 7 min Read

Perfectly adapted to dry land farming, the nutrient-rich moringa has become the crop of choice for many farmers in Solapur, earning them a steady income through the year.

Appa Karmakar of Angar village in Solapur has tasted success by cultivating drumsticks. Image Credit: Hiren Kumar Bose

It is 8 am on a hot day in May, and a steady stream of visitors are already at Bala Shivaji Patil’s four-acre farm in Uplai Khurd village in Madha taluka of Solapur district.

The 30-year-old farmer, who left school in the ninth standard, and is known as the lakhpati shetkari (rich farmer), is taking his unannounced guests around his farm, explaining how the stick-like fruit called shewga (also known as moringa or drumstick) has brought prosperity to his six-member family. This has been done without much effort, trifling investment and very little irrigation, he explains.

Krishiratan, the two-storied house of the Patil family with a statue of a farmer standing atop the humble structure that can be seen from a distance, is proof what Bala has achieved.

“I began with two acres in 2011, and now have four acres under moringa, with each acre fetching me around Rs 4 lakh,” Bala told VillageSquare.in. 

He is the successful author of a book titled Crorepati Banvel Shewga (Moringa can make you a millionaire), which has sold over 4,000 copies since it was published in 2016.

Stories of enrichment

Such stories of Solapur farmers who have seen prosperity by cultivating moringa has become common in the drought-prone district of Maharashtra, and is being emulated by others in dry-zone areas like Buldhana, Sangli, Osmanabad, Latur, Beed, Satara, Amravati and others in the state.

About 91.5% of the total cultivated area in the district is under dry land farming. The annual rainfall, which is just 625 mm compared to 3,255 mm in the Konkan region, determines the pattern of crops, its rotation, and the land’s productivity.
A harvest of moringa is ready for the market. Image Credit: Hiren Kumar Bose

While the eastern zone comprising Barshi, North Solapur, South Solapur, and Akkalkot talukas has assured but scanty rainfall, the central zone comprising Mohol, Mangalwedha, eastern part of Pandharpur and Madha talukas, and the western zone, which comprises the scarcity areas of Karmala, Sangola and Malshiras talukas, and the western parts of Madha and Pandharpur talukas, have uncertain rainfall.

Dry zone

In short, Solapur has the dubious distinction of being identified as one of the 99 drought-prone districts in India. Some of the extreme weather patterns here can be attributed to climate change.

As global warming increase, extended periods of drought, heat waves, and unpredictable rainfall have intensified. The average annual rainfall tremendously varies from year to year, directly impacting agriculture and horticultural activities in the area.

The Ujani dam, built on the Bhima River at a cost of Rs 3,300 crore, and serving around 500 sq km of Solapur district, has helped farmers grow water-intensive crops like sugarcane and other crops like wheat, millets and cotton. In the drier areas, farmers grow horticulture crops that require little irrigation, such as pomegranate, chilli, papaya, custard apple and moringa.

In the 70s and 80s, farmers here tried their hand with bhor (jujube or Indian plum), but by the 90s, they were slowly shifting to the new hybrid varieties of pomegranate developed by the local agriculture university.

However, prone to pest attacks, the pomegranate-growing area, which was at its peak in 2011 with 45,413 ha, was reduced to only 10,000 ha by 2013.

Moringa option

Considering the problems of vegetable growers, the district’s Krishi Vigyan Kendra (KVK) introduced the drought tolerant and high-yielding variety of drumstick (PKM-2 variety developed by Tamil Nadu Agricultural University) in 2000-01. “As drumstick yields around the year, the crop has been embraced by the farmers of Solapur,” Vikas Bhise, horticulturist, KVK, told VillageSquare.in.

“And an estimated 1,500 ha is presently under drumstick cultivation. It is spreading as droughts become a regular feature here.”

Moringa is among the rare horticulture crop which begins fruiting within six months of planting, and continues to do so for a period of eight to nine years.

According to Adinath Chavan, the editor of Agrowon, a popular Marathi farm daily from the Sakal Group, farmers of Solapur have been enterprising in crop selection, considering they inhabit the state’s most dry zone. “They are likely to continue growing moringa as long as it offers good returns,” Chavan told VillageSquare.in.

“Earlier, they had tried horticulture crops like bhor and pomegranate, but abandoned them either due to pest attack or when it became non-profitable.”

Farmer Appa Karmakar’s is another success story of growing moringa. In Angar village, with a sparse vegetative landscape, the sun beating at 40 degrees and the squat houses widely distributed, has become a go-to destination for the arid zone farmers from Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh.

At a distance of 47 km from Sholapur town, this 545-household village that hosts his three-acre farm, has become a shining example of dry land farming at its best.

Climate-smart agriculture

Among the early adaptors of moringa, this post-graduate introduced the perennially fruiting plant in 2012, and grows it with an intercrop of chilies, papaya, pomegranate and guava, besides marigold, which has been traditionally used to control pests.

The farm produces 50 tonne of drumsticks every year, which sells for Rs 30 to Rs 80 a kg in the wholesale market, fetching approximately Rs 6 lakh a year.

His climate-smart horticulture improvisations with minimum inputs getting good returns attract farmers, journalists, agricultural graduates and experts to his farm.

“Having heard that I made Rs 7 lakh in the first six months of planting moringa, and make around Rs 15 lakh a year, we get more than 50 visitors a day and an equal number of calls from farmers wanting to know whether they too can replicate this experiment. Once they visit the farm, they are convinced that they too can do it,” Appa, 42, told VillageSquare.in while fielding a query from a Telangana farmer interested in cultivating drumsticks.

Newer varieties

After a couple of years, moringa’s yield reduces and the pod color changes, requiring the introduction of newer varieties. In view of this, KVK introduced the Bhagya variety developed by University of Horticultural Sciences, Bagalkot, Karnataka in 2008, while discontinuing the promotion of PKM 1 and PKM 2 varieties. The other varieties widely grown in Solapur include Siddhivinayak, ODC Vasanthi and Rohit 1.

Rohit 1 has been developed by Nashik’s Balasaheb Marale, which has traveled to places like Komomoto in Japan and Arizona in the US. Rohit-1 is under validation by the National Innovation Foundation.
Bala Shivaji Patil of Uplai Khurd village stands with a bunch of drumsticks grown in his farm. Image Credit: Hiren Kumar Bose

Bhise of KVK informs that 2,000-odd farmers, with an average landholding of one acre, earn anything between Rs1 lakh and Rs 2 lakh per acre growing moringa. Atul Bagal of Vadegaon village in Sangola taluka, who began growing moringa since February 2016 on three acres, is one of them. He has so far produced 115 tonne of this fruit.

Mahadev Shankar Nanavare of Wadwal Nagnath village in Mohol taluka, who besides growing moringa on 20,000 sq. ft of land, also grows sugarcane, guava, pomegranate, wheat and fodder on 4.5 acres. “The 250 moringa trees give me between Rs 70,000 to Rs 75,000 annually,” Nanavare told VillageSquare.in.

“I’m toying with the idea of creating a farmer produce cooperative to produce moringa leaf powder and moringa oil,” says Karmakar of Angar village. “Hope the banks will fund this project,” he says.

Disclaimer: This article was first published in VillageSquare.in. The views expressed by the author are his/her own and do not necessarily reflect that of YourStory