A Google hound, I was googling for “success stories” of PH farmers and I saw these (above images): “Success Stories Of Filipino Farmers” (from youtube.com) and “Agriculture Monthly” (from Facebook facebook.com/agriculturemagazine). The YouTube webpage is showing only one success story; the Facebook page likewise shows only one story.
I
ask now: “Why cannot they list, say 5-10 success stories of Filipino farmers at
any one time – they don’t know? The honest answer is: They can’t find such a
number!
In the 1960s, my father, Lakay
Disiong (Dionisio), was a farmer and one of the “successful” farmers in
our hometown Asingan, Pangasinan.
That is, he could pay back his debts and have some money left for the rest of
the year – and more. But he could not afford to send 2 boys to college
at the same time – and UP College of
Agriculture (UPCA, now UP
Los Baños) was hardly
expensive!
Why because my father was engaged in Chemical Agriculture (CA) – applying chemical fertilizers
and chemical pesticides, which are expensive. CA is High Costs, so? Low
Returns! That’s the economics I know – and hate.
I studied for my BS
Agriculture (major in Ag Edu)
at UP College of Agriculture (UPCA) 1960-1965,
but I never heard about Organic
Agriculture (OA). Our lecturers and instructors had not been instructed on
OA themselves. I blame the Americans who founded UPCA. When I ransacked the UPCA
library in the mid-1960s, I did not find OA books or articles in American
magazines.
How
can the millions of Filipino farmers be successful in their farming when their
costs are high and their returns are low?!
My
recommendation: For hardworking Filipino farmers to be as highly successful as
they deserve, they have to be assisted by government in shifting to Regenerative
Agriculture (RA), RA methods being essentially organic. A
few RA examples that farmers already are familiar with: intercropping, green
manuring, and relay cropping. The chemical fertilizers and pesticides applied are
preventing millions of farmers from becoming financially successful!
More. Now then, to me, with Regenerative Agriculture a
successful farmer generates each one of these:
(1)
Healthy soils
(2)
Healthy crops
(3)
Healthy harvests
(4)
Healthy foods
(5)
Healthy markets
(6)
Healthy pockets
(7)
Healthy villages.
What
we have are millions of farmer dreamers!
Published by the Manila
Bulletin, Agriculture Monthly
is now 16 years old, starting with Zac
Sarian as founding Editor In Chief.
The magazine is now digital – where are stories of farmers who have transcended
their poverty themselves?!
And no, Agriculture Monthly has not discovered Regenerative
Agriculture – why not?
And
no, the magazine is not talking about organic agriculture much, so it cannot
do much about increasing the number of successful Filipino farmers on its pages!
If
I were Editor In Chief of Agriculture Monthly, I would feature hundreds if not
thousands of essentially organic farmers and gardeners. Or with external
funding, I could start a new magazine – if you
don’t know me, you can visit my blog “The Editor In Chief”, the-editor-in-chief.blogspot.com).@517
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