BSS, Rajshahi :
Vegetable farming brings smile on farmers face here as they are becoming financially solvent by cultivating various types of vegetables, meeting its rising demand with increasing population.
Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE) sources said farmers are cultivating vegetables like red amaranth, bottle gourd, Indian spinach, lady’s finger, pointed gourd and brinjal in the region including its vast Barind tract round the year, meeting the demands of consumers.
Riaz Uddin, 43, a farmer of Khirshin Tiker area, said he earned Tk 16,000 by selling red amaranth from one bigha of land after sowing its seed hardly 16 days back at a cost of Tk 12,000.
“We are very much happy over the vegetable farming because we get good yield with fair market price within short time,” he told BSS.
Ashraf Ali, 37, another farmer of Mollapara area, said not only red amaranth but also many other short duration vegetables are being produced here.
“Farmers get benefit by farming vegetables in the region including its vast Barind Tract. It brings smile on marginal farmers and poor people’s face,” said Dr Shakhawat Hossain, Senior Scientific Officer of On Farm Research Division, an organ of Bangladesh Agriculture Research Institute. Dev Dulal Dhali, Additional Director of DAE, said Rajshahi has been regarded as the country’s most prospective vegetable producing region.
The farmers are interested in vegetable cultivation as they have been gaining more profit during the last couple of years, he said. He said farmers are cultivating vegetables on fallow lands and homesteads along with farm land, increasing its production which is changing the economic condition of local farmers.
Vegetable farming brings smile on farmers face here as they are becoming financially solvent by cultivating various types of vegetables, meeting its rising demand with increasing population.
Department of Agriculture Extension (DAE) sources said farmers are cultivating vegetables like red amaranth, bottle gourd, Indian spinach, lady’s finger, pointed gourd and brinjal in the region including its vast Barind tract round the year, meeting the demands of consumers.
Riaz Uddin, 43, a farmer of Khirshin Tiker area, said he earned Tk 16,000 by selling red amaranth from one bigha of land after sowing its seed hardly 16 days back at a cost of Tk 12,000.
“We are very much happy over the vegetable farming because we get good yield with fair market price within short time,” he told BSS.
Ashraf Ali, 37, another farmer of Mollapara area, said not only red amaranth but also many other short duration vegetables are being produced here.
“Farmers get benefit by farming vegetables in the region including its vast Barind Tract. It brings smile on marginal farmers and poor people’s face,” said Dr Shakhawat Hossain, Senior Scientific Officer of On Farm Research Division, an organ of Bangladesh Agriculture Research Institute. Dev Dulal Dhali, Additional Director of DAE, said Rajshahi has been regarded as the country’s most prospective vegetable producing region.
The farmers are interested in vegetable cultivation as they have been gaining more profit during the last couple of years, he said. He said farmers are cultivating vegetables on fallow lands and homesteads along with farm land, increasing its production which is changing the economic condition of local farmers.