Like wild fire, commercial tomato cultivation has taken roots in Delta
to the extent that its farmers claim that they have the capacity to
crash market prices and push the near total dependence on supplies from
Northern Nigeria into the dustbin of history in no distant future.
Around markets in Asaba, the state capital and environs, a
significant proportion of fresh tomatoes supplies are now sourced from a
rapid growing league of local growers who are expanding cultivated
farmlands by every harvest.
At the 2015 World Food Day which was marked with a food fair in
Asaba, stakeholders had close assessment of the progress so far gained
by the local tomato farmers as a team showcased its harvest.
Governor Ifeanyi Okowa who used the occasion to distribute tractors
and other vital farm implements to leading farmers was quoted as
instructing Prof. Eric Eboh, the State’s Chief Job Creation Officer to
key the emergent tomato farming revolution in Delta state into the
government’s youth agriculture empowerment schemes.
Silencing doubting Thomases
Winifred Gilbert, a young farmer, regarded as the Face of Tomato
Farming in Delta, told Vanguard Metro VM that many people who came to
the Fair doubted their ability to mass produce tomatoes. “Even with live
nurseries and fresh growing tomato plants we displayed at our stand at
the food fair, some participants still felt that we had stage- managed
the baskets of harvest we brought in.
Some felt we bought the tomatoes we brought, but these doubts are
turning out to pay us more prominence as some of the doubting Thomases
who cared to inspect our field efforts left our farms convinced and have
joined in spreading testimonies to the public,” she said
Winifred, an established poultry farmer in Asaba got engrossed in the
tomato farming revolution in Delta following an encounter with former
State Assembly lawmaker, Paul Okpue.
“We had a chance meeting and he passionately spoke about his
promotion of commercial tomato cultivation in Delta and his
determination to help as many persons as would embrace the revolution.
Just one curious visit to his home garden and another to his
expansive tomato plantation off Ibusa Road was enough to make me join
the bandwagon and there has been no looking back since then,”she
explained.
A cost effective venture: Compared to her poultry business which she
has been running successfully for the past four years, Winifred said the
cultivation of tomatoes is far more cost effective given the minimal
input needed to nurse the crop to harvest.
“My birds rearing has been a sustainable venture since I vacated
public service employment into full time farming, but it’s been quite
cost intensive giving the substantial amount one invests in procuring
feeds, animal health commitment involving consultation of vets and
medication for the birds as well as water among the very indispensable
inputs which come with a lot of movement (transportation) added to
regular presence which is key.
Regular presence
Whereas at my entrance into the Delta tomatoes revolution, all I did
was buy a pack of 1500 resilient planting seeds from Hon. Okpue at
N3500. He gave minutes of takeoff practice, I procured a farmland and
hit the ground running almost immediately.
Interestingly, in just three months from preparing the nursery I had
already started harvest after one weeding session and application of
pesticides against attacking white flies. In the couple of months that
followed, I plucked and sold nearly 20 baskets from my small first farm.
Cultivation costs was so minimal,” Winifred explained
Basic challenge: The basic challenge with tomato farming is that it
is so water absorbing from nursery to harvest much like other
vegetables. Winifred who shared her experiences with VM said:. “I
started my first tomato farm at the peak of last rainy season, so there
was little or no problem at all with water as nature did most of the
watering.
Now in the heat of the sun through the harmattan that has set in, the
challenge with watering the growing tomato in my second outing has been
enormous.
However, the basic motivation for dealing with this challenge was to
ask ourselves, if the North that is so dry has been the major source of
tomato consumed across Nigeria, why should the South including Delta
which experiences more rains be discouraged in farming the highly
demanded vegetable?”
Currently, Winifred waters her growing tomato twice a day, at dawn and dusk. This task for virtually every entrant in the Delta tomato farm environment has been very labour- intensive and time consuming as they all approach it manually. Efforts among stakeholders are in high gear to introduce technical intensive irrigation systems to drastically limit the intense human labour employed in the watering input.
Returns on investment, ambitious projection
With tomato a common item in most delicacies across Nigeria, the
demand for it has always been higher than supply, especially in other
regions including Delta which depend enormously on supplies from the
North. The implication is that it is a steady economic opportunity with
minimal risk for those engaged in its production.
She said: “My first farm harvest sold out in a hurry more because
those who patronised me realised that the cobra tomato specie I farmed
was far heavier, richer and is preserved longer than the regular one in
the market. “No doubt, it is a reliable economic opportunity worth
expanding. It is, however, too trivial to narrow the return on
investment in emerging revolution of tomato farming in Delta to the
personal gains of the first line investors. Thanks to the open
mindedness of Hon. Okpue who is the outstanding leader of this
revolution, more individuals and group are joining the campaign and
expanding the cultivated space almost every day.
“The real return on investment therefore is the societal development
value of gainfully engaging as many Deltans as possible either as first
line investors or as labour to support various aspects of the farming
process. That is not only a plus for the quest for food security, it is a
plus for diversification of the local economy in the face of dwindling
oil revenue and a plus for peace and security of lives and property as
several idle minds can be taken off the streets.
“Already, the remarkable success being recorded with tomato is
providing inspiration to delve into cultivation of other vegetables many
would have considered impossible to grow in this part of the country. I
just set my first nurseries for onions and they are sprouting fine.
“On the short term among the growing league of tomato farmers in
Delta, there is tacit challenge to raise production so high with intent
to crash the volatile market price of the largely Northern sourced
tomato in the market. Ultimately, in the long run, we want to halt
dependence on external supplies. It’s such an ambitious dream, but very
reasonable. I am speaking from experience.”
Source: Vanguard
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