Mangoes Arrive Early in Telangana: Fruits Are Usually On Sale by March But 2017 Breaks Trend
Mangoes Arrive Early in Telangana: Fruits Are Usually On Sale by March But 2017 Breaks Trend
Mangoes Arrive Early in Telangana: Fruits Are Usually On Sale by March But 2017 Breaks Trend
2017
Officials are saying that a few parts of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and AP have
adopted hybrid crops (Representational Image)
Usually, mangoes start arriving here in the first week of March but, for the first
time ever, Hyderabad is able to buy mangoes in January.
Officials are saying that a few parts of Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and AP have
adopted hybrid crops but very few varieties such as the Banginapally, Totapuri
and Rumani are available off season.
But nearly a tonne of the Rumani variety has been arriving at the biggest
markets in both the Telugu states for the past two days. The Rumani variety is
being supplied from Sri Bommarajapuram near Puttur in Chittoor district.
The food safety manual would also deal with steps required for protecting food
preparation areas from pests.
As part of Neer Patra drive, the NGO has already sold more than 1,000 such
bottles.
He pointed out that though plastic bottles have made drinking water easily
available, people don't pay heed to leaching, that takes place if these bottles
are used continuously.
Leaching means that some of the chemical content of the plastic bottle is
discharged into the water. This makes bottled water hazardous to health,
Abhishek added.
The increasing awareness about eco-friendly products and earthenware got the
NGO to foray into making earthen water bottles.
As for the bottles Abhishek said, The clay prevents green algae from forming
inside the bottle, hence, they are easy to maintain as light rinsing is all that it
takes to wash away all the dirt. But if one finds the need for a thorough wash
then it can be done by using a bottle brush. The outer layer can be washed
using normal scrub and soap used in the kitchen.
Regarding environmental impact he said the clay bottles are made out of
natural elements of the earth and are biodegradable. Whereas, plastic poses a
major threat to the environment.
For REWA, this initiative also means helping underprivileged women improve
their livelihood by making the clay bottles. So far they were eking out a
livelihood by making earthen pots.
Not very long ago, Prekka Subba Rao, a resident of Ventrapragada village of
Peddaparupudi mandal in Krishna district, was a worried man. In the absence
of electricity supply to his village, he was forced to shell out between 1,500
and 2,000 per day at the time of transplantation in his fields.
Not any more. I opted for a solar-powered farm pump set in June 2014, a
zero-maintenance mode of irrigation that has brought me peace and happiness
in addition to prosperity, said the farmer, interacting with Krishna district
Collector Babu A. on Saturday.
Among the 675 districts across the country, Krishna district is in the forefront
in use of solar-powered pump sets. Urging farmers, especially in areas where
grid electricity is not available, to rely on the eco-friendly solar pump sets, the
Collector said the renewable energy source was a boon in disguise. Andhra
Pradesh is surging ahead in the renewable energy sector and the Government is
focussed on tapping this area in a big way. In the last two years, several
initiatives have been taken to promote solar energy and farmers are given a
huge subsidy to be able to opt for this new mode of irrigation. Farmers who
opted for the pump sets in the first phase encouraged others to follow suit and
the several advantages of it were spread through word of mouth, said Mr.
Babu. He complimented officials and staff of the Non-Conventional and
Renewable Energy Development Corporation of Andhra Pradesh (NREDCAP)
and Discom for facilitating the shift to the new mode of energy.
Pointing to lily bulbs in his two-acre land, Palagani Ramamohan Rao, said he
had cultivated the flower and was sure of adequate water for it. After
attending a few farmers meetings, I realised that by replacing the diesel run
water pumps with solar-powered ones, I could reduce the cost of investment. I
was paying Rs. 50 per hour for a hired pump set and that money is saved now,
he said.
Penamalur MLA Bode Prasad said this mode of energy was best suited for
farmers facing inadequate power supply.
Against an expected arrival of over 6 lakh tonnes during the season, only 6,087
quintals of redgram have been traded under the minimum support price
operations by Government agencies until January 18 and no payment has been
made to the 483 farmers who sold their produce worth over 3 crore at market
yards in Adilabad and Nirmal districts.
Moisture content
Officials attribute the slow pace of trading to the issue of high moisture content
in the redgram arriving at the markets. The Food Corporation of India and the
National Agriculture Marketing Cooperative Federation and the TS
MARKFED are insisting on quality produce before making purchases,
observed an official at Adilabad Agriculture Market Yard.
He said the delay is because farmers are drying their produce after bringing it
to the market rather than bringing in sufficiently dry redgram. The produce
with more than 12 per cent moisture content is being rejected by the purchasing
agencies.
Payment process
Though the government had promised quick payments through bank accounts,
no farmer has received payment. This is because the purchased quantity has
not been shifted to godowns, General Manager of MARKFED Adilabad
branch Gouru Nagender explained.
The payment is released by the FCI and NAFED upon generation of bills
which happens only when the purchased redgram is deposited in the godowns.
We have received about 20 lakh which has been deposited in banks and will
be released today to farmers, Mr. Nagender added.
The Bellampalli purchase centre has been opened in Mancherial and Jainoor
and Asifabad will soon be opened in KB Asifabad district.
Adilabad and Kumram Bheem Asifabad districts account for over 80 per cent
of the produce so there is a need to concentrate on the market yards in these
districts, suggested a farmer leader from the ruling party.
The yasangi [earlier called rabi] activity which was slow till the Sankranti
festival started picking up in the last few days and farmers are busy with paddy
transplantations in the command area of major and medium irrigation projects
and also under bore-wells.
However, in the tail end of the Sri Ram Sagar and the Nizam Sagar projects
and also under a couple of medium irrigation reservoirs the activity is still slow
due to problems in release of water.
At the beginning of the season, demonetization and farm labour problems hit
the transplantation activity with farmers being unable to get money and coolies
not showing interest in taking up work.
Normal area
Delays
Another factor for delay is that farmers are not using the transplantation
machines, for various reasons. That apart, migration of farm coolies who come
every year from Nalgonda district has come down this year. The irregular
release of water from Nizam Sagar and Sri Ram Sagar resulted in the delay in
the transplantation, former minister P. Sudarshan Reddy said. As per my
information not even 30 per cent of the sowing has been completed in the tail-
end. Further, there is a lack of coordination among authorities, which has led to
delay regular release of water, he added.