Lack of drying facilities reduces MP corn income
>> Sunday, August 26, 2012
By Gina Dizon
PARACELIS, Mountain Province -- Lack of corn drying
equipment decreased income of farmers here due to lessened quality of corn
produce brought about by decreased drying of corn kernels during the rainy
season.
Here in this corn producing municipality adjacent the
commercial town of Santiago Isabela, the lack of corn drying
facilities and mechanical dryers has resulted to reduced corn quality
with corn seeds getting black.
Rogelio Ngafitna, corn coordinator here in the office of the
municipal agriculturist said the cost of corn per kilo gets to as low as half
the price per kilo during the rainy season from July to December.
Corn gets down to as low as P6.00 per kilo during the rainy season.
Paracelis grows corn in two cropping seasons – January to June and July to
December.
There are some 15 drying pavements in 115 sitios of the nine
barangays of Paracelis, reports from the agricultural office revealed. Apart
from drying pavements, farmers make use of basketball courts and highways to
dry their corn produce due to lack of drying facilities. Corn is heavily
produced in the barangays of Butigue, Palitud, Bananaw, Bantay, and Anonat,
Poblacion, Bacarri and some in the highlands of Bunut nearby Kalinga
province.
Vice chairman of the federation of farmer associations
of Paracelis Inocencio Bayangan said corn farmers
need mechanical dryers especially during the
rainy season that corn produce cannot be brought out for
drying.
Corn farming is the major source of livelihood of nearly
5,000 farmers here apart from rice farming. There are 7,410 hectares planted
mostly to yellow corn harvested in two croppings- June and December. The
harvest is sold to feed millers of nearby Santiago and Roxas markets in nearby
Isabela province.
Apart from the lack of corn drying pavements and equipment,
high costs of production inputs particularly that of hybrid seeds and
fertilizers bug farmers here.
Municipal agriculturist EusebiaBalocnit
said a corn farmer can only get a net income
of P 7,000 to P8,000 income following five months of
corn farming. The problem: corn seeds and labor inputs costs almost 85%
of the total costs of production.
A case study computation revealed here at the office
of the municipal agriculturist noted that a P43,000
total cost of a five month production of corn on a one
hectare farm yields P7,000 pesos net income after expenses are
deducted.
Of the P43,000 total production costs, seeds cost P10,000
plus urea and side dressing of commercial fertilizers costing to
some 7,500 pesos.
Other costs incurred are that of
labor and transportation fees composing 50 percent
of the total cost of farming expense.
What remains for household use from the investment provided
is a measly amount upon sale of the harvest roughly amounting to 700 to 800
pesos a month for domestic needs as food, and medicine. With the highly low
turnout of capital and investment returns, a question of how the farmers’
children go to school is a pending concern.
With this measly net return, farmers resort to borrowing
capital from cooperatives that along the vicious cycle of loaning resulted to
some lands used for collateral eventually taken by some loaning cooperatives. Farmers also resort to individuals who loan money for the
cost of fertilizers and hybrid seeds and getting as much as
30% interest for the cost of production inputs
loaned to the farmer.
What alternative do the P5, 000 plus corn farmers have over
a highly exploitative system of corn farming?
Balocnit forwards crop
diversification. She wants farmers to plant vegetables along with corn to
include eggplants and legumes and not only corn. She noticed that a number of
farmers plant only corn.
Municipal agriculturist Luthgarda Fangonon
also introduces planting of bananas and fruit trees apart from corn
farming to let farmers add more farm produce and not be dependent on corn
farming.
Ngafitna is emphatic about promoting organic
farming with the use of organic fertilizers. The provision of trainings on
organic farming shall lessen the dependency of farmers on commercial
fertilizers and commercially grown seeds, he said.
1 comments:
thank you for this news update. I'm glad to know that concerns about our corn production is given attention.
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