The Asian Age

Kerala ginger growers shift to Ch’garh

- JOSE KURIAN

Ginger farmers and head labourers from Wayanad are going to distant lands like Chhattisga­rh in the quest for fertile land and better farming enviorns. Among the thousands of ginger farmers from the state now working in the leased land of Karnataka, over 200 have already started farming in the leased land in Chhattisga­rh, over 2,500 km away.

The majority of farmers and key farm aides travel by air while the seeds and bunch of labourers follow soon by road.

Kerala Ginger Growers’ Associatio­n general secretary Navarang Mohanan told this newspaper that the shift in rainfall patterns in Karnataka, depleting levels of ground water, drying up of tubewells, plummeting lease price for land and high wages had forced the farmers to go in search of greener pastures having fertile land, water availabili­ty and cheap labour. “Though the trend started last year with a few testing their luck in these parts of the country, including Odisha and Jharkhand, apart from Chhattisga­rh, only this year more farmers joined,” he added.

Ranjan Swami from Sulthan Bathery told this newspaper that the nearest

Farmers from Kerala are moving out in the quest for fertile land and better farming enviorns

airport is at Raipur from where they have to travel another five hours by road to reach the remote village. Swami, who continues his Karnataka leg of farming, extended it to Chhattisga­rh this year. “In Karnataka we are paying up to `1 lakh per acre annually on lease fee while in Chhattisga­rh, it is just around `8,000. The wages of Karnataka have almost trebled during the last five years which is around `250 and `400 for women and men respective­ly whereas in Chhattisga­rh, it is around `100 and `200,” he added.

“Even if we are paying `60,000 for a 12-tonnes truck to transport ginger seeds to the farm from Karnataka, we hope it would be profitable considerin­g the cheap cost of all other farming inputs,” he added.

“The climate is almost the same as in Wayanad but we were warned about recurring cloud burstsdriv­en torrential rains,” he said. “We also get a better price up to `1,000 per a sack (60 kilograms) higher than what we get in Karnataka and Wayanad,” he added. “This year we would incur a huge loss in farming if the prices do not improve. Now we are getting only `1,000 per sack which is much lower than what we received last year,” he added.

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