20th September 2016
Swapna James is an award winning farmer from a village, twenty kilometres from Palakkad town. The bus to Cherpaullasherry from
Olavakode junction, goes near her village, Kulakattikurusi, four
kilometres on a country road, from
the mainroad at Kadampazhipuram Hospital Junction. Journalists and
government officials know her well, and her name goes out to the committees
which look to honouring farmers for the work they do. Her husband, James, is a
successful rubber plantation owner and latex dealer, who says that “Swapna
looks after the Krishi (crops)” which includes organic rice cultivation, along with
vegetables and fruits, coffee and spices.
Since 2000, they have worked extremely hard, beginning their day at 5 am
and winding up their duties at 12 midnight. They say that their profits
actually come from the work they do as a couple, and that if they were to
delegate, not only would the costs be high, but also the efficiency would be
lower. They constantly reiterate that hard labour, and ownership management
allows them to do what they do: grow vegetables for the table, distribute
organic vegetables to clan members, and sell the excess to a neighbouring
school, bringing in a steady income. Swapna has been recognized by the Kerala State, multiple times,
because her output of fruit and vegetables is substantial. She has been able to
generate an income of ten to twelve thousand rupees a month, has no expenses
for fruit, vegetables, turmeric, ginger, spices, coffee and rice. She harvests
honey with the help of workers, who are able to squeeze it from the hives because it is work they are familiar with.
There is a new interest in Kerala in orchids and ornamental plants, so these
last two years, she has been able to expand her garden in this direction. She
buys the ornamental plants from nurseries, and then multiplies them by growing
them in optimum conditions using pebbles, tiles and coir for the base, then
transplanting them on to tree trunks. School children, doing projects in
Botany, often come to see her garden for their projects, assiduously taking
down notes.
Organic farming as an
idea is an offspring of the Kerala Scientists, who wanted to wean the
population from chemically infused vegetables, fruits and horticulture. It’s success has depended
on the housewives and retired people of these small towns and its adjoining villages. Swapna and James are
representative of the interest that the rubber plantation owners have in
negotiating with traditional Jaiva Krishi or natural farming methods, while
growing cash crops and spices. They believe that coffee, for instance, can be
interspersed with rubber trees, which is quite revolutionary, with nitrogen
provided from runner beans, which are not used for the table.
Swapna is deeply integrated in social media platforms, and
says that her exposure to ideas from other farmers comes from the posts they
put up in their facebook pages. The couple also travels widely over the state,
visiting farms, and nurseries, attending courses on organic farming, and also
reading the vast literature that is being generated by the government employees
who are committed to this programme. One of the innovations they have put
together on the farm is a tube well, without motor. The well is six hundred
feet deep, and it requires no electricity to pump up water. The valve used
here is a “foot valve”, similar to that one used in a motor device,
where water once it comes up, shuts, and water does not go back. Much of these
simple innovations have appeared after much thought on their part, of simple
and inexpensive ways of accessing water or good soil.
Swapna says that the earthworm count has gone down
considerably because of pesticide use, and what one should strive for is a
natural return to a soil which harbours earthworms. For this, they have devised
various compost heaps, which are state sponsored in design, which allows them
to place a base of cowdung manure, and layer it with leaves, rotting materials,
including dead farm animals, and
everything is organically broken
down into fresh earth fit for growing things
in a matter of weeks. In these compost heaps, wooden frames like chicken coops
are constructed with lattices that allow the compost to be aerated. They also
use solar traps to catch beetles which
arrive at night to destroy fruit, flowers and vegetables.
In his spare time, as members of the Arts and Sports Club of
Kadampazhipuram, they look after those villagers who are dying of cancer, and
provide palliative care for people who are old, sick and incapable of looking
after themselves. They are now collecting money from friends and relatives for
a hospice for those who are in the last stages of their life, and live alone
without children or attendants, a common problem for Malayalees, generally,
whose family work abroad or in other cities in India.
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