Sunday, April 29, 2012

Orchid display- Brings joy to hundreds

Orchids belong to the family Orchidaceae with over 21,000 species and 10% of all seeded plants. This family includes Vanilla which adds flavour to ice creams and cakes. Singapore has the best of the collection at the airport nourishing the senses of the tired traveller with the beauty of the colors shapes and textures. Orchids are grown all over the world in hothouses and people tend to associate them with romance, beauty and finer things of life.

The following photos are those of the orchid display by Tamworth Orchid Society. The members of the society do a massive service by bringing such biodiversity to general public and ensure that people are in touch with the natural world through flowers of such beauty and grace. These orchids bring joy and pride to many people and show that in the world we need to preserve enjoy and appreciate what nature has to offer. Thanks to these members of the society that every child in Tamworth has an opportunity to look and appreciate these magnificent flowers of nature. Just enjoy!!




Orchids have held a special place among gardners and they are similar to roses in some way as people adorne their beauty grace and enchanting looks and a sense of romance and finess they bring to human lives. They belong to family Orchidacease with over 21,000 species with about 10% of all seed plants. Vnailla whihc provides flaour to icecreams and cakes is part of this family. World over people grow them in hot houses and tend to care for them to ensure they have the best looking ones in their gardens. Singapore airport has the best of them and nourish the senses with best presentation and eye soothing colors and beauty. The following photos are the ones which were displyed in the malls in Tamworth, NSW Australia. This collection is small however, the pride of the Tamworth Orchid Society members is no less than the best collectors in the world. These societies not only bring pride and joy to the orchid onwers but also show general population the joy of flowers thereby gardening and the joy of valuing the biological diverstiy and appreciating the nature around us though flowers in different colors and huges leaves of different shapes and textures. These socieites do in some way more than many scientists as they bring biodiversity to general public who at times are disconnected to the natural world. Thank god for these people who make effort to conduct these displays that the children and city dwellers get to expirence the value of these plants.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Rural Training, not handouts that will develop rural India

Rural Development needs local solutions

The story below in The Hindu is a clear example of how training rural folk who are under and un educated can help to develop a better rural economy. Governments in India and Africa constantly apply the formula for development which they use in urban areas of India and Africa and fail to deliver targeted growth in rural areas. Why? Simple lack of locally based tailored thinking. Just like one can't apply the methodology and tools that one uses in large scale agriculture used in the western countries such as the US and Australia where a farmer could easily own 3000 hectares of land as a minimum  holding to subsistence farming in India and Africa where a farmer could own 2-50 hectares of land, one can't apply the thinking for urban development to rural one. Training based on local situational analysis and solutions are the way to go as seen in the story below.

Educational target set by Indian government is noble however not achievable to a large extent. Rural youth need rural based training such as training in agriculture equipment usage, management and repairs, development of businesses for contract sowing and harvesting considering rural India is facing farm labour shortage due to urban migration, development of small scale tunnell houses for industrial farming of high value farm crops such as cherry tomatoes, blue berries and strawberries, development of small scale rural tooling and machining operations etc.

Use of rural training to develop small scale solar equipment will allow for employment opportunities not just for those who are employed directly but indirectly for those who want to use them to develop businesses and for those who want to get educated. Right To Education can only happen when there are associated services and tools for the rural folk to enable their children to be educated not just up to high school but at least obtain a trade or vocational qualification that apply to rural industries and agriculture.

Solar mates- The Hindu 15-04-2012

Bharat Dogra

Barefoot women solar engineers of Rajasthan train their African sisters on how to light up their villages with the renewable resource


It's an unexpected scene that you come across in the dusty plains of Kishangarh block in Rajasthan's Ajmer district -- women from several African countries being trained by their Indian sisters to become barefoot solar engineers.

Welcome to the world of solar energy in Tilonia village. Here the campus of Barefoot College has emerged as a leading international centre for training barefoot solar engineers. Under the Indian Technical and Economic Cooperation Programme of the External Affairs Ministry, women from many underdeveloped countries come here regularly in small batches for training.

Speaking to trainees from Chad, Sierre Leone, Zambia, Namibia, Kenya and Tanzania, you learn that most of them are grandmothers from African villages who hoped to light up their hamlets with solar energy after returning from Tilonia. The necessary equipment would be sent in huge parcels even before they themselves leave Tilonia.
Follow-up records maintained at the Barefoot College reveal several success stories. Fatuma Ababker Ibrahim from Beyahile village in Afar (Ethiopia) made very good progress and returned to her village to install 90 fixed solar units. She also helped to start a rural electronic workshop in her village.

Gul Zaman, a 26-year old from Afghanistan, came to Tilonia with her husband Mohammed Jan. They returned to their community to provide solar electricity to around 50 houses.
The Tilonia project serves as an amazing example of women-to-women communication skills that can overcome in innovative ways despite crucial language barriers.

Most barefoot solar engineers under the project are provided six month training on vital technical details such as fabrication of charge controllers and inverters, printed circuit boards, testing, wiring, installation of solar panels, repair and maintenance. Trainers Leela and Magan Kanwar, who are currently active at the college, underwent the same training a few years back. They also coped with many initial problems and found their own innovative ways of overcoming them. Having gone through the entire process themselves, they are better able to understand problems faced by their sisters of Africa.
The involvement becomes so close that many trainees are in tears at the time of leaving, reveals Leela.

At a time of increasing involvement with decentralised rural energy systems particularly solar energy, such a system of training barefoot solar engineers can prove very useful in increasing the self-reliance of rural communities in installing and maintaining solar energy systems.

While there is fierce debate about the transfer of renewal energy technology from rich to poor countries, Tilonia's training provides a great example of how much can be achieved by South-South technical cooperation.Tilonia also conducts regular courses for trainees from remote areas within the country, including villages of Ladakh and other Himalayan areas.

The training has paid off. Several women with experience of solar energy work have got together to set up the Women Barefoot Solar Cooker Engineers' Society -- a registered association of rural women involved in fabrication and production of parabolic solar cookers.
This cooker can do the most environmental-friendly, cost effective, day time cooking on sunny days. Its design too is unique. The in-built spring and clock system is accurately set to complete one rotation in fixed time, and this in turn rotates the cooker to track the sun automatically, making the sunlight fall on all the 300 (9cm x 12cm) reflectors throughout the day. So once the cooker has been adjusted in the morning, uninterrupted cooking can be carried out the rest of the day. At Tilonia workshops cookers are fabricated using precise measurements by bending, welding and cutting. Such 2.5 sq.m parabolic solar cookers have been installed in nine villages and some institutions.

It is indeed remarkable that rural women with little formal education have not only learnt to make the cookers, but also travelled to other places to install the system successfully.



Thursday, April 5, 2012

Rural and home garden profitablity - use technology smartly

Rural and home garden can be a profitable business if technology is used.

The article below  (The Hindu) clearly illustrates how even smaller jobs in rural areas can be turned into profitable business using technology. Technology such as Internet and mobile phones can be used to obtain information on sowing times, harvest times, weather, market prices new agricultural technological products garden products. If one has smart phone such as iPhone or android phone one can easily down load apps and use them for free and get information.

Many home gardeners in the west grow small amounts of exotic and regular crops and sell them to their local produce shops to make money. If one has a bit of land such as the home back yard it is not hard to grow some cherry tomatoes, chokos (chokote or Seemebadane kayi) etc and sell it locally either online or to their produce shop people. It is a matter of bit of an effort pride in oneself and entrepreneurship.

The following links will provide these information to either a home gardener or rural agriculturist.

http://www.gardenate.com/ (planting information on many vegetables in Australia, NZ, South Africa and the US)
http://www.weatherzone.com.au/ (weather information in Australia very reliable in a user friendly manner)


http://www.weatherusa.net/  (weather in the US)

To download Android apps for free go to https://play.google.com/store?hl=en

Login to get this plucky coconut plucker

Press Trust of India The Hindu, Thiruvananthapuram, April 4:

Shortage of trained nut pluckers is a grim farm sector problem in Kerala but for 37-year-old Selvin Chacko, coconut plucking is a hi-tech profession involving car, mobile phone and even a dedicated Web site.

While many youngsters look down upon coconut plucking as a non-glamorous vocation, Selvin from Changanassery opted for it with “pride and pleasure.” Keeping in tune with the changing times, he is using modern facilities such as mobile phone and Internet to get connected to customers.
Travelling in the car helps him save time as he can rush from one coconut garden to the next.
Selvin says he climbs 40 to 45 trees a day, earning not less than Rs 30,000 a month. His phone number and profile are available on a Web site launched in the name of 'Changathikoottam', a gathering of trained coconut pluckers.
A failed business man, Selvin said coconut plucking has helped him to rebuild his life.
“I have tried my luck in a number of enterprises but could not succeed. Finally, I started looking for a job which could give me a steady income. After some search, I found coconut plucking a gainful career as there is a huge demand for coconut harvesters in Kerala,” Selvin said.
After his schooling, Selvin became a bus conductor and even bought two buses eventually. But the bus business failed soon and he was pushed into a debt trap.
Father of three kids, he later joined a week long coconut climbing training programme conducted by the Krishi Vingnan Kendra in Kumarakom near Kottayam.
He gets an average of 100 calls a day from various parts of the district. Apart from wages, he also charges petrol price for the assignments outside the district.
“Though I mastered the nuances of tree climbing and nut plucking, I had to face stiff opposition from my family and traditional coconut pluckers in the initial days,” he said.
“My family and community members complained that I humiliated them by entering in the profession while conventional nut pluckers blamed me for charging lower wages.”
Of late, he has also turned a trainer, having helped a dozen youth learn the job.