Restoring Past
glory
Vanam Jwala
Narasimha Rao
Millennium Post, New Delhi (07-06-2020)
When Chief
Minister K Chandrasekhar Rao reinforces time and again the essentiality of
Regulatory Farming in the state, it connects people like me, who lived with the
agriculture decades ago. In whichever position such people may be living now,
the olden days, the past memories will inflate afresh.
The wonderful
village atmosphere pervading and prevailing then, with agriculture playing a
pivotal and predominant role was simply great. The implements associated with
farming, skilled people with expertise to take up works related to agriculture
in time and those villagers despite being illiterate but having knowledge and
wisdom to predict the suitability of crop for a particular soil and season for
more profitability were all god sent gifts then.
In India and more
so in the Telangana State, agriculture dates back to thousands of years. The
agriculture sector had undergone sea change in the last century responding to
everchanging technological advancements as well as the expansion of the global
market. In the place of human and natural resources and organic manures, there
came machines, chemical fertilisers and pesticides. Notwithstanding the fact that yield of the
crops increased multi-fold due to technology, the climatic equilibrium took a
beating and health hazards became order of the day. The returns on the
increased yield became a necessity to invest on fertilizers in the subsequent
years.
Recalling and
recollecting the village rural atmosphere of half-a-century ago, several sweet
memories will haunt the yester year farmer. The rich and green paddy fields,
flower gardens decked up with jasmine, mango groves, maize orchards, red chilli
fields, the spacious open well, jowar fields, the cucumber creepers, the
plough, the temporary uppish platform (Manche), oxen, cows, goats, heaps
of dry grass, well at the house, Lemon and Banana trees adjoining the well, the
churning of butter and butter milk at the backyard of the house, eating the
fresh butter, eating overnight cooked rice with yoghurt mixed mango pickle in
the morning, placing the cots outside the house in the evening after cleaning
the ground with water, sleeping on the cot and looking at the vast sky up, and
a host of these pictures emerge and give an enjoyable feelings to one.
The agriculture
operations normally take off in the beginning of summer season. They start with
transporting cattle manure to the farmlands. Initially the farm owner will
transport manure of the family cattle to the farm. A separate place used to be earmarked
to stock the manure. In addition to this, manure used to be bought from those
who had no land of their own. All the payments were used to be in the form of
grain, some sort of barter system with no cash transactions. A lot of cattle particularly
the sheep were also kept on the fields day and night for the manure collection.
Even this is at a price. The manure thus collected used to be the organic
fertiliser for the farm. Added to this, the silt taken out from the tanks was
also transported to the farmlands.
The
transportation of manure used to start early in the morning by getting the cart
loads ready. After transporting the manure to the farmlands till midday, people
used to come back to homes and continue in the evenings till late in the nights.
During the full moon days, the activity used to take place in the nights also.
This would continue till the first rain of the monsoon. Even after the onset of
monsoon whenever there was discontinuation of rains this activity goes on.
After the onset
of monsoon, there will be some change in the agriculture activity. Seedling to
raise paddy nurseries, tilling of the soil with ploughs and the works on the
field used to be in tune with the nature of rains. Groundnut and Red gram used
to be the intercrops. Paddy used to be cultivated when there is adequate water
in the tanks. Later they used to go for Jowar.
Before transplanting
the paddy saplings, the entire land used to be tiled
with ploughs. In general women used to transplant the Paddy saplings. They used
to do the work with tremendous enthusiasm by singing songs and cracking jokes
among them. After the transplantation, water used to be supplied in phases. Sometimes
farmers used to go in the nights to water their fields by turns. After paddy
plants reached a specific height, weed was removed. After three or four months,
when the crop was ripe, harvesting used to be done. At a convenient time, crops
used to be harvested, collected and brought home. People used to sleep overnight
in the field for the entire process of work. Labour wages were paid in the form
of paddy.
The groundnut
farming was a little bit different. It used to start with preparing the seed.
Farmers used to call labour home and ask them to take out the seeds from the
groundnut harvested last year. Some of these works used to be outsourced to the
labour who used to work from home. Every day by evening the labour based on
their expertise would take out a pot or two filled with the seeds. Paddy used
to be given as their wage. While picking up the seeds some of the groundnuts
used to break into pieces, which were used to make edible oil. Groundnut used
to be the major crop.
The harvesting is
done by pulling out the plants and separating the groundnut from the roots. Seedling
groundnut seeds in combination with Red Gram, through the plough in to the land
was a high skilled job and few people were able to do it. Groundnut crop would come for harvesting first
and the red gram would come two months later. Once the ground plants reached a
height, they were skilfully tamed by the plough, which is also an art by itself.
Only few farmers
had the required measurements to measure the crop. The entire produce used to
be measured with great precision. The produce used to be stored in special
enclosures in the house. Paddy used to be sold at a proper time in the markets.
Separate sacks of paddy used to be kept aside to use as seeds the next year.
Very fascinating fact is that paddy heaps which were of lakhs of rupees of
value used to be kept open in the fields by farmers without worrying about any
theft.
Some farmers used
to go for red chilli and some for the Tobacco cultivation. Some for Maize, some
for edible roots. Some even used to grow cauliflower, cabbage etc. Mangoes
groves were also part of the farm sector. In the fields cucumber creepers used
to be present. People used to eat the raw cucumbers. Green gram used to be
eaten after roasting them on fire. Estates used to have an open well. Drawing
water from these open wells using oxen was also a skilled one. It was also a
fun.
A portion of the
yield used to be kept aside to use them as seeds. There was no habit of buying
the seeds then. There was very less use of Chemical fertilisers or pesticides.
When the use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides started, keeping aside a
portion of the yield for seeds was also given a go bye. Desirous of high
yielding varieties, buying of seeds in the open market had begun. Now there is
no option.
As CM KCR had
been saying, the good olden days for farming should come back. The over use of
fertilisers and pesticides should be stopped. The seeds required for each
village should be produced in the village itself. As desired by the CM based on
the advice given by the Agriculture Extension Officers, farmers should
cultivate the crops. If agriculture to become profitable, there is no other
choice but to go in for Regulatory Farming.
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