Farmers’ Progress – How Might The PH DA Convince A Million Farmers To Switch To Organic Farming, And How I Wish It Would!
The Philippines has an 11-year-old Organic Agriculture Act of 2010 (Republic Act 10068), but I have yet to read so many successful stories of farmers applying organic fertilizers in their fields. Today, I would like to find out more.
RA 10068 says (FAO, 2010, leap.unep.org):
This Act declares that
the policy of the State shall be to promote, propagate, develop further and
implement the practice of organic agriculture in the Philippines in order to
enrich the fertility of the soil, increase farm productivity, reduce pollution
and destruction of the environment and prevent the depletion of natural
resources.
Beautiful! But I saw something I did not like. This
Editor In Chief with 50 years of experience immediately saw what was lacking in
the Abstract as presented by FAO
12 years ago:
Did
you notice that the 4-5 purposes of the Act does not say anything about the
farmer? If you ask me, it should have said, in the first place, instead of
fertility of the soil: “in order to enrich the farmer…”!
I think I know why they missed putting that in – because the
thinkers of Organic Philippines were strictly guided by their desire to
standardize and guarantee that all farm produce claimed to be “organic” are in
fact organic and have passed the strict criteria called for under the so-called
Organic Certification.
Meanwhile, I would like to say that I am proposing that farmers
go into organic farming without first aiming at organic certification.
The
first objective of farmers applying organic fertilizers to their crops is to
reduce the big costs of fertilizers – and thereby guarantee their big returns!
(Certification can come later.)
But as I write this, I see that “not-so-expensive” Atlas PerfectGro 14-14-14 is selling 25
kg for P1750 (lazada.com.ph).
For 10 bags total, for fertilizer alone a farmer cannot afford P17,500!
(lower image from BusinessMirror.com.ph)
So I recommend that he concocts his own fertilizer, maybe asking
advice from a member of the organic-conscious MASIPAG farmer organization (to
contact, visit masipag.org).
(Extra: To conquer the cecid
fly, I am also advising the mango growers to apply organic fertilizers on their
orchards – a healthy tree fights off any pest or disease naturally.)
I have my own organic formulation. I call it WEALth,
for “Weeds-Enriched Automatic Layer of Trash to Trigger Terrestrial Health” –
here’s how to create your WEALth:
Run the rotavator so
that the blades will cut down into the soil shallowly, 2-3 inches deep. When
you have rotavated the whole area, your organic would-be fertilizer has already
been spread across the field for you!
Thus, you produce WEALth at zero expense – you spend only
for the cultivation, which you have to do anyway.
About WEALth, I have the 50-year experience of my
brother-in-law Enso Casasos to
back up my claim of the organic wisdom of my WEALth – although I did not call
it by that name when he was applying it in his ricefield.
Try
WEALth sometime. You will be glad you did!@517
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