pineapple farming in Nigeria is another sure money maker. Thousands of fruit juices are made with pineapple and the makers of fruit juice are always on the look out for pineapple farm where they could buy their raw material. Go to mile 12 market orany market near you or even the fruit sellers near you and try to price pineapple. Then you will realize that pineapple is edible gold.One head of pineapple is sold for N200 in the local market while the same head of pineapple goes for N300+ in the fruit shops. For wholesale farmers, they sellfor N70 – N100. Lets assume youharvested 200,000 pineapple and decided to sell for just N50 for wholesale, you will make a whooping N20 million. Takeaway N8 million as cost ofproduction, labour, and transportation, you will haveN12million as pure profit. And once they starts producing, they can fruit for the next 10 years if well maintained.Now you see what I am talkingabout? If you are thinking of a profitable farming businessto start in the country, then think no more, pineapple is the current money spinner. This sweet fruit also known as “ANANAS COSMOSUS”is as sweet as the profit it can generate. Pineapple has a worldwide appeal and is known for its nutritional and health values all over the world. How the fruit got to Nigeria may not really be our main concern in this article but the business aspects of planting and how lucrative it is. Nigerian soil and weather are extremely good for pineapple farming too.
Now that you know the profit that awaits you in pineapple farming, let us gostraight into the processes needed in pineapple farming and how it could be done profitably and professionally formaximal benefit.Steps By Step Pineapple Cultivation In NigeriaChose A Good Site– First of all, making a good selection of the site to have pineapple planted is usuallythe paramount thing to do. The site has to be checked for the soil textures because pineapple thrivesvery well on sandy soil with lots of nutrients, good water retention, coupled with the humid conditionsof the chosen field for planting.Clear The Farmland– The next thing to do is to have the area cleared of stumps and thereafter prepare the land by ploughing or making some raised beds for the planting. Bearin mind also that the crop requires a place where therainfall is evenly distributed duringthe early periods of planting; and this is very important to get good yields and sweet produce atthe same time.While preparing the ground for planting, be on the look out for some possible insects attackersbut which is usually handled by overturning the soil and exposing it to sunlight. You cando it manually or mechanically with a tractor to plough and ridge the place because it is not the best to plant on a flat ground because of easy penetrations in the ground.
Select The Desired Specie–Some of the most desirable species suitable for commercial pineapple farming are: The Smooth (or Smooth Leaf Cayenne) pineapple; Pure Gold pineapple specie (newly developed); The Gold Crown. Get the pineapple that you will plant. Its always good to know there are two basic ways to go about pineapple planting, you can either plant the sucker or the crown. What this means is that pineapple sucker is not the same as the crown.
The sucker is the shoot-out by the side of a pineapple and it takes lesser time to grow than the crown which takes up to a year and two months as against the sucker of about nine months. Andgetting the sucker is far easier than getting the crown.Another interesting thingsabout pineapple is that it could beplanted at the backyard if you have enough space there, which even serves as flowersat the same time,but that’s by the way but it goes further to buttress how easy it is to start pineapple farming.Commercial Pineapple FarmingIf you decide to go into pineapplefarming in a big way of which I am recommeding, then there are certain things to get right before planting. As mentioned earlier, the first step is usually to choose a very good soil that is well drained and less sloppy, but ifevery other things
are OK except the sloppiness, then making ridges across the slop would prove beneficial against erosion.Also make sure that the soil is well drained and soft for the root of your crops to have easy access to the ground for the needed nutrients from the soil. Always pay special attentions to the cultivars used.I mean, those parts of pineapples to be planted because it goes a long way to determinehow long your crops take to germinate and it’s important thatmost of the ones to be planted should be gotten between six to eight weeks afterharvesting and have them exposed to the sun for about a week to kill off some likely parasites that may attack them when planted.
Spacing them is also very important for proper growths as each one absorbs just enough nutrients from the fertilizers insteadof two or three closely planted struggling for manures, spacing also assist in weedingand making sure that it is free from insects. For instance, proper spacing would have about 50,000 plants perhectare instead of multiplying that by two or more.Market research plays good role in assisting a person to know the very species to concentrate oninstead of planting the type that has less market because of the preferences in the area and what people like to buy. Going intopineapple farming is lucrative in ways that many peoplemay not know as I have explained at the beginning.The Business Opportunities In Pineapple FarmingA sucker of pineapple goes for N20, N30 and (N40 for the treated ones). It is advised to go for the treated ones because it has greater survival rate thanthe untreated.Now, let’s calculate for small scale pineapple farmers – For a sizable land, assuming you buy 5,000 suckers which is 40×5000 = N200,000 add thecost of labor, herbicides, transportation, fertilizer and the rent of the land if its not your own and every thing amounting to about N300,000.Presently, one pineapple goes between N100 to N150 if you are selling in bulk but, put yours at N120 per pineapple and multiply that by 4,500 since not all may likely survive, that gives you N240,000 pure profit in a single harvest and now think of what thatwould mean for the next ten years or more that the pineapples will be producing.
So you can see the huge profit there for both small scale and commercial largescale farmers? And one can even start with less amount like N10 or N20k and partner with the retailers for easy disposing and gradually grow his business to a top level and have processing companies buying from him.Pineapple farming is not a quick way of money making but a sure way ofmaking sustainable income over time. If taken seriously as a business, pineapple farming is sure toget a person stabilized financially in life.Pineapple has wider appeal than we could ever think of and there are even somany ways that it could be preserved now through some modern techniques whichwe will be uncovering in ourfuture article on pineapple and itsusages.For now, go ahead and start looking for land where you can plant your pineapple this year. Drop your question below and make sure you share this onFacebook and Twitter using the button provided for it.
agrobuss
Thursday, 25 February 2016
Thursday, 19 November 2015
The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Sunny Echono, on Tuesday urged stakeholders in the seed sub-sector to address the problem of inadequate improved seeds facing farmers.Echono made this call at the stakeholders’ workshop on community seed production, organised by the National Agricultural Seeds Council (NASC) in Abuja.The permanent Secretary, who was represented by a director in the ministry, Mr Damilola Eniayeju, said that one of the most critical problems facing farmers in the rural communities was lack of access to quality seeds.He said that farmers had no option rather than to obtain seeds from previous season harvest or purchase grains from the market to be used as seed.“Most cases, such grains used as seed resulted to low yield and made farmers poorer,” he said.According to him, the situation most often is brought about by lack of awareness of availability of improved seed varieties that are high yielding, disease and drought tolerant.He added that it could be as a result of poor distribution network by seed companies and Agro dealers in rural communities that denied farmers access to quality seeds.Echonoappreciated NASC for bringing stakeholders together in finding a way of addressing the challenges of seeds affecting the sub-sector in order to boost agricultural productivity.“Through Community Seed Programme, the problem of low agricultural productivity resulting from the use of grains by subsistence farmers in the rural farming communities can be greatly reduced.“The programme also has the potential of serving farmerswithin close proximity on the benefits derivable from the use of improved seed,” he said.He hoped that the workshop would achieve its objectives of complementing community based seed production programme, knowing the importantof seed in achieving food security in the country.In his address, Dr Olusegun Ojo, the Director General, NASC, said that the whole idea of the workshop wasto bring all stakeholders in the Community Seed Programmetogether in order to streamline their activities.He added that a lot of development partners are out there to ensure adequate support for community projects.“Community Seed Programme is simply the production ofseed at the community level for easy diffusion.“We want to disabuse the mind of farmers in the former sector that the programme is complementary.“We discovered that a lot of research result does not get to the grassroots.“But this programme will ensure that seeds become available at the right time to farmers in the rural areas.“The development partners are out there to identify these communitiesto work with.“The seed council is here to control their activities and ascertain the quality of what they are producing is actually good,” he added.Ojo, however, called on all stakeholders to key in to this project, brainstorm and share experiences for further improvements.He expressed optimism that the modalities and guidelines for the operation of the Community Based Seed Production Programme(CBSP) would have been fashioned out at the end ofthe workshop. (NAN)
The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Sunny Echono, on Tuesday urged stakeholders in the seed sub-sector to address the problem of inadequate improved seeds facing farmers.Echono made this call at the stakeholders’ workshop on community seed production, organised by the National Agricultural Seeds Council (NASC) in Abuja.The permanent Secretary, who was represented by a director in the ministry, Mr Damilola Eniayeju, said that one of the most critical problems facing farmers in the rural communities was lack of access to quality seeds.He said that farmers had no option rather than to obtain seeds from previous season harvest or purchase grains from the market to be used as seed.“Most cases, such grains used as seed resulted to low yield and made farmers poorer,” he said.According to him, the situation most often is brought about by lack of awareness of availability of improved seed varieties that are high yielding, disease and drought tolerant.He added that it could be as a result of poor distribution network by seed companies and Agro dealers in rural communities that denied farmers access to quality seeds.Echonoappreciated NASC for bringing stakeholders together in finding a way of addressing the challenges of seeds affecting the sub-sector in order to boost agricultural productivity.“Through Community Seed Programme, the problem of low agricultural productivity resulting from the use of grains by subsistence farmers in the rural farming communities can be greatly reduced.“The programme also has the potential of serving farmerswithin close proximity on the benefits derivable from the use of improved seed,” he said.He hoped that the workshop would achieve its objectives of complementing community based seed production programme, knowing the importantof seed in achieving food security in the country.In his address, Dr Olusegun Ojo, the Director General, NASC, said that the whole idea of the workshop wasto bring all stakeholders in the Community Seed Programmetogether in order to streamline their activities.He added that a lot of development partners are out there to ensure adequate support for community projects.“Community Seed Programme is simply the production ofseed at the community level for easy diffusion.“We want to disabuse the mind of farmers in the former sector that the programme is complementary.“We discovered that a lot of research result does not get to the grassroots.“But this programme will ensure that seeds become available at the right time to farmers in the rural areas.“The development partners are out there to identify these communitiesto work with.“The seed council is here to control their activities and ascertain the quality of what they are producing is actually good,” he added.Ojo, however, called on all stakeholders to key in to this project, brainstorm and share experiences for further improvements.He expressed optimism that the modalities and guidelines for the operation of the Community Based Seed Production Programme(CBSP) would have been fashioned out at the end ofthe workshop. (NAN)
The Permanent Secretary, Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Mr Sunny Echono, on Tuesday urged stakeholders in the seed sub-sector to address the problem of inadequate improved seeds facing farmers.Echono made this call at the stakeholders’ workshop on community seed production, organised by the National Agricultural Seeds Council (NASC) in Abuja.The permanent Secretary, who was represented by a director in the ministry, Mr Damilola Eniayeju, said that one of the most critical problems facing farmers in the rural communities was lack of access to quality seeds.He said that farmers had no option rather than to obtain seeds from previous season harvest or purchase grains from the market to be used as seed.“Most cases, such grains used as seed resulted to low yield and made farmers poorer,” he said.According to him, the situation most often is brought about by lack of awareness of availability of improved seed varieties that are high yielding, disease and drought tolerant.He added that it could be as a result of poor distribution network by seed companies and Agro dealers in rural communities that denied farmers access to quality seeds.Echonoappreciated NASC for bringing stakeholders together in finding a way of addressing the challenges of seeds affecting the sub-sector in order to boost agricultural productivity.“Through Community Seed Programme, the problem of low agricultural productivity resulting from the use of grains by subsistence farmers in the rural farming communities can be greatly reduced.“The programme also has the potential of serving farmerswithin close proximity on the benefits derivable from the use of improved seed,” he said.He hoped that the workshop would achieve its objectives of complementing community based seed production programme, knowing the importantof seed in achieving food security in the country.In his address, Dr Olusegun Ojo, the Director General, NASC, said that the whole idea of the workshop wasto bring all stakeholders in the Community Seed Programmetogether in order to streamline their activities.He added that a lot of development partners are out there to ensure adequate support for community projects.“Community Seed Programme is simply the production ofseed at the community level for easy diffusion.“We want to disabuse the mind of farmers in the former sector that the programme is complementary.“We discovered that a lot of research result does not get to the grassroots.“But this programme will ensure that seeds become available at the right time to farmers in the rural areas.“The development partners are out there to identify these communitiesto work with.“The seed council is here to control their activities and ascertain the quality of what they are producing is actually good,” he added.Ojo, however, called on all stakeholders to key in to this project, brainstorm and share experiences for further improvements.He expressed optimism that the modalities and guidelines for the operation of the Community Based Seed Production Programme(CBSP) would have been fashioned out at the end ofthe workshop. (NAN)
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