COMMUNITY
BILLBOARD
Ernie n.
Olson Jr.
BAGUIO CITY --
barangays and even non-government organizations here are expected to benefit
from a mushroom propagation livelihood program introduced to village leaders
here last week.
The result of a
partnership between the Office of Baguio Lone Congressional District
Representative Bernardo Vergara and the Department of Agriculture regional
office in the Cordillera under Regional Executive Director Marilyn Sta.
Catalina, the said program is set to start off with a minimum of 40,000
fruiting bags of oyster mushrooms this month.
“We plan to start this
with our city’s barangays, and afterwards, also include some NGOs who are
interested in benefitting from this livelihood program,” Vergara said after the
launching program at the City Hall multipurpose hall late last Friday
afternoon.
He explained that
since the 40,000 fruiting bags of the oyster mushrooms would already be enough
to initially supply the needs of five barangay clusters managing a total of 100
mushroom houses constructed by his teams in areas selected by indigenous
leaders to ensure productivity, “this livelihood initiative planned using cooperative
principles, values and systems can build bridges and make a continuous path
that would lead to reduced incidence of poverty in Baguio.”
It was explained that
the oyster mushroom or Pleurotus, which is also called abalone or tree
mushroom, looks, smells and tastes like oysters. With virtually no stalk, this
mushroom's oyster-shaped caps usually grow in layers on dead deciduous wood
like clusters of oysters, and its moist, hairless, fragrant, white to
smoky-gray caps measure from two to eight inches wide.
Mostly found in both
tropical and temperate climates throughout the world, most species of Pleurotus
are white-rot fungi on hardwood trees, although some also decay on conifer
wood.
Pointing out that
since mushrooms grow anywhere, they could be harvested and marketed into a
sustainable community enterprise.
Mushrooms also
reportedly give maximum nutritional benefits because they have high protein,
are fat-reducing and strengthen the human immune system, and can complement
unbalanced diets.
Since the cultivation
of mushrooms can be integrated into existing agricultural systems and is
pro-nature or environmentally sound, they also break down agricultural wastes
into organic fertilizer.
As an offshoot of this
program, Vergara said that feeding programs can also be set up using mushroom
floss as an extender of lugaw and champorado, and that mushroom
nutri-snacks may also be made as an alternative to junk food in schools,
offices and other establishments.
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