Agriculture
Farmer Tasks Govt On Fight Against Weeds
A cassava farmer,
Mr. Israel Njoku, has called on the Rivers State Government to help farmers in the fight against weeds.
Njoku, who spoke to our correspondent Monday in Port Harcourt said fighting the scourge of weed had become the farmer’s nightmare over the years.
According to him, most farmers in the rural areas were faced with the challenges of clearing the weeds, adding the control of weed was capital intensive, especially to large cassava farmers.
He said due to lack of funds, most farmers could not afford the cost of buying herbicides and other incentives to boost cassava yield.
While acknowledging the efforts of the Rivers State Government in the agricultural sector, he said though the cassava cuttings given to farmers was pest friendly, “weeds remain the number one enemy to the farmer”.
According to sources, weeding account for between 50 to 80 per cent of total labour budget of cassava growers nationwide.
A report from the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture, (IITA) and obtained by or correspondent, weeds, were a major threat to African farmers.
According to the report, with the practice of traditional methods still holding sway, children and women were bearing the brunt of weeding.
The process invest between 200 to 500 hours annually in clearing weeds on a hectare of cassava to prevent economic root loss.
Effort to control weeds in cassava farms received a boost with Nigerian engineers joining forces with experts from the IITA to seek sustainable solutions to tackling the menace.
At a meeting in Ibadan to kickoff the collaboration recently, project leader for cassava weed management project, Dr. Alfred Dixon, described the partnership as key milestone that would redefine mechanical control of weeds in crops such as cassava in Nigeria and Africa general.