Back to news
12 Oct 2015 | Livelihoods

Off Season Vegetables Improving Rural Livelihoods

3 mins Read

70% Complete

 

Agriculture and livestock keeping are the main sources of livelihoods for all 528 families (100 in Jajurauli and 428 in Bans-Maitoli village) living in Bans Maitoli and Jajaurali villages of Bin block in Chandak-Aonlaghat micro watershed of Pithoragarh in Uttarakhand, India. In addition to traditional food crops such as wheat, rice, maize, potato, and pulses, farmers in these villages also cultivate seasonal vegetables such as tomatoes, capsicum, cabbage, peas, okra, brinjal, potato, ginger, onion, and garlic to earn cash income.

Nearly 50 percent of the households in the area are engaged in cultivation of seasonal vegetables producing over 27,000 kg of different vegetables most of which is sold in local market. A household generally sells between 8-35 kg of different vegetables depending on the size of plot put under vegetable cultivation earning an income of around 6,190 rupees per year.

However, farmers can earn even higher income by producing off-seasonal vegetables as the agroclimatic conditions of the area support cultivation of vegetables during the period when they are not produced in the plain areas.

Therefore, building on the farmers’ knowledge and skills and favourable agroclimatic conditions, the Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI) is supporting the farming families particularly women and the poor in production of off-season vegetables to increase their income. The Initiative aims to enhance the capacity of farmers to increase production and profitability of vegetables by engaging them in vegetable production using organic inputs. Key interventions in include organizing the farmers into Self Help Groups (SHGs)/Joint Liability Groups (JLGs), establishing common collection and grading centres, facilitating the provision of high quality vegetable seeds, promotion of organic farming technologies — for example, vermicomposting and integrated pest management (IPM techniques), and facilitating access to information by farmers. The Initiative has, so far….

Initial results are available and some farmers successfully cultivated and sold the off seasonal vegetables

Success story of Darshan Singh

The Kailash Initiative carried out a pilot study into the use of hybrid seeds for off-season cultivation of vegetables. Darshan Singh – a progressive farmer from Bans village was keen to take part in the study. He had been practising agriculture using traditional methods that he learnt from his ancestors. His major challenge in cultivation of seasonal vegetables were pests and diseases, making his venture less profitable.

Initiative engaged Darshan in this study by providing him hybrid vegetable seeds and other inputs such as environmentally safe pesticides, poly-tunnels, poly-houses and moveable vermi-beds. He was trained to produce organic compost, using green techniques and inputs e.g. organic manure and integrated pest management and sent on exposure visit to areas where off-season cultivation is carried out at a commercial level.

Darshan benefited from this and increased his tomato growing area from half a nali to two nalis (0.01-0.02 ha). He hopes to harvest approximately 1000 kg of produce to sell in the Pithoragarh market by the end of the season. He has already sold three quintals for a total of INR 6000. He is also using his poly-house to cultivate chillies and capsicum.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Contents

Continue exploring this topic

14 Nov 2017 News
Collaboration Strengthens Climate Resiliency of Upper Gojal Gilgit Mountain Villages in The Upper Indus Basin

Carried out in coordination with partners including WWF-Pakistan and Agha Khan Agency for Habitat (AKAH), these efforts have strengthened service ...

14 Aug 2017 Climate change
Living in the Shadow of Climate Change

These days, readers frequently come across headlines spelling of the approaching doom and gloom of climate change. In South Asia, ...

26 Feb 2016 KSL
Sustainable Management of Local Varieties in Kailash

A local crop diversity fair in Khar VDC of Api-Nampa Conservation area of Kailash landscape of Nepal was organised at ...

10 Feb 2015 News
Myanmar to lead the way with ecotourism in protected areas

On 19–21 May 2015, the Government of Myanmar launched its ambitious Ecotourism Policy and Management Strategy for Protected Areas, developed ...

17 Apr 2019 Cryosphere
HKH Science News: Conventional models for glacier melt calculation may not work in High Mountain Asia environments

The conventional approach of using temperature index models for modelling glacier ablation requires few input variables and relies on simple ...

ICIMOD DG Inaugurates Nepal GIS Society Office Building

Krishna Poudel, the president of the society, chaired the programme. Welcoming guests to the programme, he highlighted the activities of ...

26 Jan 2016 News
Learning to Map and Monitor Glaciers

A week-long training course on ‘Application of Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems for Mapping and Monitoring of Glacier’ was ...