In the Philippines, corn is second to rice as staple food – how about farmers’ earnings? Early this December, I’m looking at
This
is the inspiring output of the labors of the “993 Farmer’s Association” in Barangay 993 in
Alamada, Cotabato in the group's 2nd
corn cropping, with the full assistance of the Special
Area for Agriculture Development (SAAD) Program of the Department of Agriculture (DA). It’s an
outstanding lesson in public-private cooperation in farming.
The
report is by Jennifer Valcobero
(17 Dec 2021, “Cotabato Corn Farmers Earn P4.1M From Second Cropping[1],” saad.da.gov.ph). The harvest was from 28
Nov to 05 Dec by the 25-member group farming 25 ha of corn.
Association
President Nelly Eulogio said:
I’m so grateful to
SAAD for reaching our far-flung area and lending their help and sustaining our
needs, for the assistance they have given to our association. Because of SAAD
intervention, our association earned a huge income from the yields we got from
planting corn that the SAAD has shared with us.
Mr Eulogio also said that “he was able to reconstruct his
house and help his grandchildren pay for their school fees through his P300,000 share (of) the income.”
Group member Rowin
Eulogio said:
SAAD changed our
lives. Before, I couldn’t even send my kids to school due to (lack of) financial
support. (After) I became the beneficiary of SAAD projects, I successfully got
a higher yield in planting corn. It helped me pay my debts, sustain my family needs,
and pay my kids’ school fees.
How important is corn in the Philippines? According to ANN
(Author Not Named, 22 Dec 2021, Rfo3.da.gov.ph)
Corn is the second
most important crop in the Philippines. About 14 million Filipinos prefer white
corn as their main staple, and yellow corn accounts for about 50% of livestock
mixed feeds. Some 600,000 farm households depend on corn as a major source of
livelihood,
In the Philippines, we usually look at corn as the staple
food of poorer Filipinos. We were not poor, but when I was young, during
lean months, that is, in-between rice harvests, my father (he was the cook)
would mix corn with rice for a meal – and I found it delicious!
For the Cotabato corn farmer details, Ms Jennifer says:
From November 28 to
December 5, the group with 25 members harvested 2,848 sacks of corn, weighing
209,753 kilograms (from a) 25-hectare corn (field)… After deducting the (costs
of) hauling, drying, and other expenses, the group arrived at a net income of P2.8 million [higher (than) from their 1st
cropping of P1.5 million].
That
2nd income is almost 2 times higher than the 1st! The data tells me
that DA’s financial and technical assistances work like magic when farmers work
together and do their best.
When
government singularly assist farmers to assist themselves mutually, millions
happen!@517
No comments:
Post a Comment