Farmers at the Puthenkari paddy
field collective in Ezhupunna, about 20 km south of Kochi, celebrated a
symbolic victory over great adversities on Sunday when they began harvesting
140 acres of pokkali rice fields that were brought under cultivation after a
gap of 25 years.The harvesting operations were launched officially by Laha
Gopalan, the leader of Sadhu Jana Vimochana Samara Vedi, which is at the head
of the historic Chengara struggle for agricultural land in Pathanamthitta
district. Around 100 people from the Chengara also participated in the
harvesting operations on Sunday.Francis Kulathungal, convenor of the Pokkali
Samrakshana Samiti, which led a group of activists in wresting the paddy fields
collective from the grips of the shrimp farming lobby, said that about 20 acres
of farmland was harvested on Sunday and that the rest of the area would be
harvested over the coming days.
He said the yield from the fields
would be lower than expected because of the bad weather that immediately
followed sowing, launched by the Alappuzha District Collector N. Padmakumar
early in July.Large swathes of paddy field were inundated in heavy rain in the
months of July and August but most of it survived through the rains. “The yield
is likely to be a little over 2.5 tonnes a hectare,” said Mr. Francis.The
Puthenkari paddy fields used to be under shrimp cultivation throughout the
year. However, the efforts by Pokkali Samrakshana Samity saw the fields being
brought under rice cultivation under the traditional practice of ‘one rice and
one fish’ cultivation in a year.
Exhibition
An exhibition of the traditional
practices involved in cultivating pokkali rice, a salt resistant and tall
variety of rice unique to the marshy parcels of land in Alappuzha, Ernakulam
and Thrissur districts close to the backwaters, will be organised at the
Puthenkari fields from Monday.The exhibition comprising posters, live animals,
fishes and reptiles from the fields and tools used in pokkali cultivation was
supported by the Vyttila Rice Research Station of Kerala Agricultural
Univeristy, said Mr. Francis. The show is on for seven days.
No comments:
Post a Comment