By Pigeon Lobien
BAGUIO CITY – Honey from bees and no chemical strawberry
from backyard gardens here or coffee from Atok in northern Benguet make good
wine.
These are the ingredients that make up fruit base
honey wine, or mead during the dark ages, which is fermented in Alabang,
Muntinlupa City.
Whatever excess is sold in selected markets in
Manila is patronized because it is chemical-free and cheaper than most.
Green Leaf Concepts, Services, and Products is
behind the Dielles honey wine, its concept was born here but only fermented in
the Big City.
Antonio Mendoza, manager of Green Leaf, said the
ingredients come from backyards or any small spaces where a patch of land costs
more than in some parts of Metro Manila.
“For as small as 45 square meters, we can have a substantial
yield of strawberry that could earn a goodly sum for the lot owner,” Mendoza
said.
Part of Mendoza’s backyard at their residence at
Shangrilla Village has been converted into a greenhouse and inside are eight
steel pedestals with five tiers where strawberry can be grown.
Each of the tiers is planted with 10 small
strawberry forbs that have a yield at least 120 kilograms of the delectable
fruit a week.
It takes 45 days before a forb could be productive
and for at least eight months, they can harvest twice a week, Mendoza said.
“After eight months, the soil changes color
indicating that it is time to replace,” he said, adding that the new batch has
been prepared using soil, vermicast, and compost placed in an elongated plastic
vessel about six-inch wide.
Due to the lack of space, the family of national
artist Kidlat Tahimik has converted a riprapped wall into a sort of the De Guia
strawberry terraces.
The wall is terrace-like, with a patch of soil
about a foot wide with each tier that Mendoza and his “roving” farmers imported
from Tublay, Benguet converted into a garden of strawberry forbs.
“We expect about 40 kilos of strawberry per harvest
once the fruits are ready for picking next week,” he said.
Mendoza
has mobilized “roving” farmers who can visit the farms every day on their
scooters.
“What they do is just check on the garden and see
if it needs tending or it is under attack by pests, so we can address that,” he
said.
In fighting pests, they usually use pest-fighting
pests also that can be found in Baguio’s pine trees.
“We use what is available from nature and not
chemicals in combating pests,” Mendoza said.
Insects
harmful to strawberries can be solved with the Department of
Agriculture-endorsed insecticide.
“No chemicals that could harm those who eat or
ingest the strawberry,” he said.
Green
Leaf harvests about 500 kilos of strawberry from the six farms they tend in
Baguio.
Bees honey for honey wine while organic strawberry
serves to give flavor to one of Green Leaf’s more known honey wine products,
the base is honey harvested from their apiary at the Botanical Garden.
Green Leaf uses a small patch of a lot within the
garden that serves as home to 18 colonies of European bees, which are larger
than those found in Baguio.
Tristan Apiles, the apiarist, said 18 queen bees
serve as matriarch to the hives, wooden boxes measuring about 18 inches by 16
inches by 10 inches, with a small opening that serves as an entrance for any of
the male worker bees that gather pollen and nectar to feed the hive.
Mendoza said the bees could travel a five-kilometer
radius to gather the food needed for their hive to thrive.
“That is
why the flowers of the Botanical Garden could be the best in the city, with
bees to pollinate it,” he said.
Sunflowers are also in full bloom especially before
the “waxing” season during the last quarter of the year that ends in the
harvesting of the beeswax before the end of the year and early January said
Apiles, who worked as an apiarist in Canada before he was lured by Mendoza in
2016.
Once ready for harvesting, the hives are brought to
a mechanical extractor that is a spinner type where the beeswax is removed from
the hive.
Once the wax is removed, the hive is returned to
the box where the bees would start working anew to have it filled with wax.
Green Leaf maintains hives in Tiptop within the
Busol Watershed where six can be found, near the Tam-awan Village with 11 and
eight in Barangay Pinsao where households have at least 5-10 hives each, said
Apiles.
The Green
Leaf yield is more than 1,000 kilos of pure honey which is augmented by
purchases in La Union, the Saint Louis University apiary in Bakakeng, among
others.
These are brought to Manila for fermentation which
is mixed with various fruits like strawberry as well as the Philippine fruit
map of Green Leaf where they get fruits from other parts of the country like
Quezon, mango from Guimaras, mangosteen from Mindanao, to name a few.
Other vegetable products Green Leaf “farms” are
found in barangays Crystal Cave, Green Valley, Shangrila, Pinget, Tacay and the
De Guia residence at General Lim where more lettuce, cucumber, cherry tomato,
and strawberry are produced.
These are the ingredients that make up the Baguio
salad which, Mendoza said, has a yield of more than 500 kilos a month per
produce.
These are sold in Manila, mostly hotels, the Manor
at Camp John Hay and the Good Shepherd Convent which is known for its homemade
products like strawberry jam, ube jam, among others.
“The de Guia yield alone will go to Good Shepherd,”
he said.
“Using technology, we could maximize land use that
is good for an urbanized city like Baguio where land is lacking, especially
near the central business district,” Mendoza said.
“Anybody who has extra land or even a rooftop that
can be used as a garden can be our partner. Either it will be a shared venture
or we fund it all and buy it after harvest,” he added. (PNA)
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