Cassava Farmers |
Resource-poor farmers who are participating in the
demonstration farms being organized by the IITA-led Cassava Weed Management
Project (CWMP) have said that the project intervention is making life easier
for them. According to them, the project is a “burden lifter.” They said they
have “suffered over the years, seeking solutions to weed management in cassava
farming systems.”
For farmer Fortunatus Okeke, the IITA-CWMP is
perhaps the best thing to have happened to farmers in recent times.
“It was a ‘new normal’ to hand weed and face
drudgery. But now, IITA has brought solutions to control weeds. We are glad for
this,” he said.
Another farmer, Abu Ogundapo who is based in
Abadapo village, said that the yields from the demonstration farm were
unprecedented. “We have never had it so good like this,” he said, while
admiring his cassava harvest.
Farmer Esther Ayangbade from Otuu village said,
“This project has made cassava farming easier. I am glad to be part of this.”
Responsible for between 50 and 80 percent of yield
losses in cassava farming systems, weeds rank high among the constraints to
cassava production in Africa, limiting the yield of the root crop to less than
10 tons per hectare in Nigeria.
Farmers plant cassava to the extent to which they
can control weeds, notes Dr Alfred Dixon, Project Leader of the IITA CWMP. For
women, who contribute up to 90 percent to weeding labor, it is a “nightmare”
imagining the emergence of weeds and having to clear them. In some cases,
children of school age are withdrawn from schools to support weeding
operations, a practice that undermines the future of this vulnerable group.
With the interventions of the IITA-CWMP using integrated
weed control, farmers are heaving a sigh of relief from the ‘yoke’ of weed
infestation in cassava.
The integrated weed management package comprises
the use of best-bet agronomic practices plus the use of safe and
environmentally friendly herbicides.
Using this approach, Prof Friday Ekeleme, Project
Investigator for the IITA-CWMP, has reported that farmers are now doubling the
national yield average of cassava—crossing the 20 tons per hectare mark to 32
tons per hectare in some cases.
Participating farmers in the demo farms
interviewed said they were willing to adopt the weed management practices, a
signpost that the intervention is relevant.
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