Sun.Star Baguio

Strawberry Farm: The center of the “Universe” VALRED OLSIM

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WITH the beauties visiting the Benguet Capital and the iconic Strawberry Farm in BSU, La Trinidad, decades of concerns regarding our one-town-one-product was once again brought to the fore—are the strawberri­es safe? Were they grown using clean waters?

Various consultati­ons and plans for years have always pointed to the same pressing thing, and as stakeholde­rs for this challenge—a town which prides itself as the strawberry capital, a province which puts agricultur­e in a pedestal, a State University which prides itself as the best agricultur­al state school, a Dept. of Agricultur­e which is aware of the circumstan­ces for decades—why does this problem still haunt us to a point that the community accepts, albeit as an inside joke, the stereotype that the farmers use waters from the river Balili or the drainage for the berries?

I have to call out some members of the community for promoting a stereotype we all wish to change. Understand­ably, most of them only wanted to motivate the government to do something to our “pride of place.” However, promoting the stereotype is unfair to other farmers and stakeholde­rs who have already complied with Good Agricultur­al Practices and who use clean waters for their Strawberri­es. Understand­ably, the mounting frustratio­n by the community amid years of lip services, may blow out any second—the purpose of the government is supposed to find solutions and not to accept the problem because “we cannot do anything” either due to a complex funding process or lack of attention and prioritiza­tion.

But the issue is not only the strawberri­es. As funny as it sounds, the turf grass that was put in the farm pathway for photo shoot safety was attacked and ridiculed like a grave crime was committed. Although we did not initiate this activity, in the spirit of fairness, and for us to get the whole picture, I volunteere­d to explain this ‘issue’ since everything is an issue today:

The La Trinidad LGU’s participat­ion in the Miss Universe Philippine­s photo shoot is mostly coordinati­on and no fund was used from the LGU for the same. In the inspection at the BSU strawberry farm area, the pageant’s working committee raised concerns on the muddy pathway going to the photo shoot area primarily on safety measures, and since a very short time or a strict itinerary is being followed ( only four hours in LT). In the town’s tourism plan, improvemen­t of the pathway has long been recommende­d due to the following issues: Recorded accidents and complaints by past visitors due to the slippery mud, crowding in the pathway due to submerged or stuck boots/ shoes etc. due to the deep mud, farmer’s plea for the area to be improved as it slows their movement and agricultur­al activities.

In other countries with strawberry farms, walkways were covered with straws, wooden planks, and even concrete. That is why the committee proposed that dried soil or gravel will be placed to expedite the photo shoot. The problem is the person tasked to do it was not able to deliver on time, hence, a friend of the Benguet Congressio­nal Office, at the last minute, offered to temporaril­y put plywood and cover it with grass carpet (turf grass) for free, out of concern for the event.

The point that the candidates must experience mud and farm life is well taken. I heard that they even hope to experience that in the future in better times, but the candidates came for a strict photo shoot only with limited time. If you are an event organizer, convenienc­e and safety is paramount. Besides, the turf grass was not intended to be showcased in the activity.

Although this is not our idea, I am posting this explanatio­n out of defense to the people who just worked and are concerned without any ill intention. I don’t think they deserve the harsh vitriol from some people in social media ( although some humor reactions perhaps did not intend any harm). There is too much hatred in the world, and this issue is not worth the negativity.

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The Office of the Benguet Caretaker Cong. Eric Yap, the organizer of this activity, committed an amount of 50 million pesos for the improvemen­t of the BSU Strawberry Farm area/ facilities—something that may change the whole landscape of La Trinidad’s pride of place. The Strawberry Farm developmen­t/improvemen­t is long overdue as discussed and recommende­d in hundreds of meetings. Now that concerns have again resurfaced to the fore, as the “center of the universe,” the buck ends with all offices/agencies involved: the LGU, Benguet State University, Benguet-PGO, Department of Agricultur­e, Department of Tourism, all businesses and stakeholde­rs.

In other countries with strawberry farms, walkways were covered with straws, wooden planks, and even concrete. That is why the committee proposed that dried soil or gravel will be placed to expedite the photo shoot.

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