By
Gina Dizon
SAGADA,
MOUNTAIN PROVINCE- Couple Jessica and husband George who manage a coffee shop
in this tourist town planted some 1,000 square meters of a parcel of lot to cabbage four
months ago to augment income at this times of the Covid pandemic. Came harvest
time this September and a part of the produce, some 500 kilograms was given out to
whoever was interested to get from their farm located at the southern part of
this town.
The rest of the produce harvested by the couple along with two of their children was donated to Linking Smallholder Farmers to Markets (LinkSFarM) LinksFarm, a program of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR).
The rest of the produce harvested by the couple along with two of their children was donated to Linking Smallholder Farmers to Markets (LinkSFarM) LinksFarm, a program of the Department of Agrarian Reform (DAR).
Asked
why, ‘cabbage is priced low at the market’, Jessica said.
‘Rather than see these rot in the garden we donated these’, she added.
As
of harvest time third week of September till now at presstime, cabbage
plummeted at a market price of P4.00 per kilogram at the La Trinidad trading post.
Transporting
cabbage to La Trinidad can’t even answer for the transport cost at P8, 000 from
Sagada, Jessica lamented.
Arsenio,
another gardener at the central part of town did it another way.
Arsenio
plowed back his 500 square meters of cabbage produce he was about
to harvest from his farm located some two kilometers from the
roadside when he learned that cabbage costs P4.00 a
kilogram. The plowed back cabbage serves as fertilizer for the next
cropping.
Asked
why, another gardener said, labor to harvest the produce and transportation
costs are not enough to answer for the cost of cabbage to be sold in the
market.
Other
vegetable farmers who transported their vegetable produce to la Trinidad
trading post and reached the P4.00 per kg price of cabbage donated their
produce to passersby along the sidewalks of La Trinidad.
The
same way that farmers whose carrot produce reached a low of P1 per kg at the La
Trinidad trading post early this March donated their produce while some threw
their produce along the roadside.
Marketing
woes
Such
is the marketing problem of vegetable farmers of Benguet and Mountain Province
in the 80s till now.
That
is, when prices go down, the vegetable farmer could only drop the
vegetables at the roadside or leave the vegetables to rot in the garden.
Most
times, gambling on veggie prices in the market had been the practice. Prices
that were never sure if the market value will return investments relied on.
Good if the veggie price reached at least ten pesos plus per kg of cabbage for
example, but if not the produce is wasted.
With
expensive inputs on fertilizer and seeds to include labor fees, the vegetable
gardener could only say ‘waday swerte waday malas’ (there is good luck and
there is bad luck) depending on the market price of veggies .
A
fair share of the gardeners’ capital and labor had long been the problem since
the 80’s on to the ‘90s to the present where the Covid pandemic highlighted it
so.
For
highland vegetables from Benguet and Mt Province which supplies 70-80% of
highlands vegetables in Manila, marketing issues has doubled where gardeners
increased at this time of the pandemic.
For
some 200 conventional farmers here in the tourist town of Sagada have obviously
increased with some tourist guides and others in the tourism business who have
gone to vegetable farming to feed a family.
Others
not in the tourism business but have turned to farming as an additional source
of income and livelihood made the once bushy and weedy lots go
green with vegetables on the go since the pandemic began this March.
March
to May was preparation and planting time and farmers just have seen the fruits
of their labor August-September this year. Comes September and farmers
are again preparing their fields for harvest this Christmas season.
Private
and government support
Help
and support is needed especially in the government sector which has the
resources.
The
plight of farmers especially on the marketing side of it looks up to the
Department of Agriculture and other concerned government line
agencies such as the Department of trade and industry (DTI) and the
Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and local government units
(LGUs) to take notice and address the problem.
In
Sagada, efforts of kailyan and friends based in Manila help in the marketing of
veggies rather than see these rot.
Manila-based
Tracey Santiago a friend of Sagada coordinates veggies from Sagada through the
office of the Municipal agriculturist (OMAG) and gets orders in Manila before
these are transported to the city in a marketing program called Sustainable
Sagada.
Maria
Ap-apid, OMAG officer said the LGU shall be transporting 4 tons of veggies per
week to Manila beginning this September. She calls out to farmers to reach her
office that their produce be included in the weekly transport to Manila.
Sagada
farmers pay P7.00 per kg of their veggies transported via the LGU truck. In the
first two trips, the Department of Agriculture (DA) took charge of the freight
in April. The DA resumed recently this September with the transport fee
partly handled by Santiago.
Recently, with
DA’s delivery truck having malfunctioned, Santiago shall be handling the transport cost and with at least P10.00 per
kg of cabbage given to the farmer, Ap-apid added. .
Under the
DA’s Kadiwa Express provides farmers’ groups transport assistance and links
them directly to buyers. News reports say DA regional director Cameron Odsey
said 768,070 kg of assorted vegetables have been sold as of August.
From
September to December this year,the Agri-Pinoy Trading Center (BAPTC) in
La Trinidad, Benguet shall serve as farmers’ “buyer of last resort” when there
is an oversupply of vegetables in the Cordillera region.
Equally,
Menchie Buking of the Department of Agriculture who manages Linking Smallholder
Farmers to Markets (LinkSFarM) in Mountain Province expects that farmers
themselves come together and coordinate with DAR for their produce to be
marketed.
“We
pay farmers at higher prices from the usual market price. Farmers pay
transportation cost at 7.00 per kg”, she said.
With
cabbage at P19-22 per kg sold in Manila, farmers get P10 per kilo and the rest
for packing materials and freight.
LinksFarm
aims to make smallholder farmers increase agricultural productivity and
effectively manage their agricultural production by applying value chain
process. LinksFarm is now ARBold, an expanded version of its project that links
agrarian reform beneficiaries (ARB) and smallholder farmers to the supply chain
of products.
Packaging
and processing woes
Packaging
and processing of vegetables remains a big challenge among farmers and food
processors so with concerned government line agencies and other stakeholders .
Enthusiast-retail
businessman Agustin Christian Lizardo based in Manila gets pre-ordered veggies
before these reach Manila from Sagada via private transport where farmers
pay a P10.00 per kg of their veggies to answer for freight and toll fee.
Asked
what issues he contends with, Lizardo said packaging is an issue to deal with.
Having better boxes and better packaging facilities is important in selling
veggies’, Lizardo said.
Good
looking veggies also come up significant in retailing veggies in Manila.
‘We
are constrained to buy veggies at La Trinidad Trading post as these are
more attractive looking’, Lizardo said.
Lots
of farmers' vegetable produce of cabbages, carrots, bell pepper, tomatoes pose
long time ago challenges in processing and preserving these into bottled
pickles, kimchi, dried tomatoes, candies, chips much as these offer potential
marketing possibilities.
That
is, a vast economic opportunity that has long not been given a chance to get
noticed in the vegetable and marketing industry.
It’s
about time and it has long been about time that vegetable processing facilities
be in place and help farmers regain their efforts, capital and labor.
It’s
a welcome development that the office of the Department of Agriculture
Secretary William Dar has funded a processing center to be built at
Benguet State University BSU through the Bureau of Agricultural Research (BAR).
The amount of P10 million is meant for the construction of a building, while
the P10 million will be used for equipment.
Meantime
in Benguet province, Governor Melchor Diclas is intent on constructing
vegetable processing facilities in the province’s five municipalities following
an earlier discussion with DA Secretary William Dar.
Benguet
locates the popular vegetable producing towns of Buguias and La Trinidad.
A
vegetable processing facility is looked forward to be in place in Mountain
Province with the attention of officials and concerned officers in government.
Mountain
Province locates the vegetable producing town of Bauko adjacent Buguias, and
the tourist town of Sagada where gardeners have increased since the Covid
pandemic struck March this year.
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