Plan to conduct an array of sensitisation programme Farmers will be taught the raising and technical aspects of jatropha farming They will be educated on aspects like digging bore well and disc ploughing Tirupur: Promotion of methods to develop wasteland and subsequently take up large scale cultivation of jatropha on it will be on the top of the priority list for the Department of Agriculture in Tirupur district during the current financial...
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Easy-to-apply bio-fertilizers, the answer to farmers' yield problems by MJ Prabu
“If one goes through the agricultural production history in the last six decades, the number of farmers opting out of agriculture, suicides of hundreds of farmers in the past 10 years, and shrinking cultivation lands are ample proof that our agriculture policy is totally wrong,” says Mr. R. Kulandaisamy a progressive farmer and liquid bio-fertilizer producer called Tari Biotech in Thanjavur. “Though policy makers and certain sections of the scientific fraternity...
More »LatAm could contribute to India's food security by Huma Siddiqui
India should look at Latin American countries to keep its food security intact. With little or no investment in the agriculture sector,it is estimated that 45% of Indian farmers want to quit farming—supply-side constraints have been a major causeforconcern. Add to that rapidly falling water tables in North India – India’s bread basket, and erratic monsoons from climate change leading to domestic food output falling short of demand, repeatedlyinthefuture. Talking...
More »Assam tea estate goes organic by Subir Bhaumik
Visitors making their way along the muddy track leading to the Gossainbarie tea estate in India's north-eastern Assam state will be greeted by huge mounds of cow dung, rotting water hyacinth, as well as and fish and meat waste. But this is no cause for alarm - the tea-estate has gone organic and is following the principles of India's ancient plant medicine Vriksh Ayurveda. "This is our fertiliser because we don't...
More »‘Goshala' animals come under SHGs' care
DINDIGUL: For the first time, milch cows, calves and bulls at the ‘goshala' maintained by Dhandayuthapaniswamy Temple in Palani will facilitate the economic uplift of members of self-help groups (SHG) — mostly poor rural women — in Oddanchatram, Palani and Thoppampatti blocks in the district. The temple administration has started distributing these domestic animals to SHGs free of cost. The temple administration has laid only one condition: the recipient has to give...
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