Second Menu

Sunday, November 23, 2014

RE: [camnetwork] RE: [cameroon_politics] @Gov Tambe: Dangote Farms begins hybrid tomatoes production in Kano

Dear Samira,
Yes, the Muketes are into the third generation of farming at Mukete Estates Ltd (since 1901), with Prince Mbei Mukete as incumbent General Manager. I met the General Manager in Buea in August and we had an in depth  discussion of the issues at stake in family agricultural enterprises and the need for continuity.
Ekoko Mukete was probably smirking at the defeatist attitude we all show towards agriculture, always referring to the hardships and lack of roads.  Large scale farming It is a tough pioneer business in Africa involving tenacity in dealing with harsh weather, always rejuvenating forests, incessant squatters, land ownership issues and bad farm to market roads.  The pioneer white farmers who thrived in Zimbabwe and have now made inroads into Nigeria are virtual frontiers men who do not let hardship deter them.  Pamol and CDC have thrived on dirt roads for decades. Any determined African farmer will invest in robust four-wheel drives like the Muketes and TELCA Cocoa have done.
For your information, cattle-rearing is now into big ranches in the North West and Northern Provinces.  Gentlemen farmers like Hon Achidi Achu, Danpullo are now into big-time cattle-rearing.
My profile picture above confirms my charm offensive for the gubernatorial post in the North West Region. I hope my former detractors will see my bona fides as a populist politician.  Thanks for picking that up.  Barrister Tumasang missed that.
Thanks for offering child-minding services for the two new princes of Besongabang.  I shall come back to you shortly on that.

Mukefor
Gubernatorial Aspirant
South West and North West Regions.
Platform issue: Cameroon is a cultural melting pot.






To: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com
From: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 09:14:53 +0000
Subject: Re: [camnetwork] RE: [cameroon_politics] @Gov Tambe: Dangote Farms begins hybrid tomatoes production in Kano

 

Aspen Leaves

English Holly
Da Gov,
I was in your neck of the woods all of yesterday. I left you a message on Friday - check your phone. I thought I should clock in my baby-sitting duties before Christmas, which is a busy time. I'm off now to "sunnier climes." 

BTW, the Muketes scions are into farming? Really? That's nice. Maybe they have a stake in their father's agricultural pursuits, but as hands-on caretakers, I doubt it. I remember a conversation between my big sister and Ekoko some a short while back; something to do with the unexplored industrial agricultural sector by ordinary Cameroonians; that is, individuals and not businesses -- ventures which have been left largely in the hands of foreign corporations and maybe powerful politicians, who exploit our natural resources without investing even in the necessary road infrastructure for ease of produce.
My sister raised the issue that
"...there are no farm to market roads in Cameroon," to which Ekoko laughed and observed,
"You talk like a true Brit. Those things don't exist here in Cameroon."

Your tagline invites some interesting questions:
Mukefor Gubernatorial Aspirant,
South West & North WestProvinces.
Platform issue: Agro-industrial development.

All very commendable indeed. My question to you is, how do you intend to achieve any improvements in this sector, factoring into the equation Ekoko's poignant remark? Agriculture is a tedious entreprise in Cameroon. While countries like Zimbabwe have a tradition of individual farmers engaging in large-scale industrial agriculture, Cameroon does not.

Take just our cattle rearing as an example; left largely in the hands of nomadic tribesmen of Northern persuasion. We are content with consuming just about every bit of the cow, including the hooves in the most basic manner - eating them. We do not have the technical know-how to explore other by-products for dairies like the milk to make cheese and yoghurt. We eat the hide, and the tripe and other offals, but we know that Northerners use hides to make those smelly Samara slippers and bags which are not very marketable beyond the enclave of our national borders. In short, our agricultural products are underutilized.

This applies to sheep, and some of the unique fruits like soursop, cocoa, breadfruit, lychee, Monkey kola, Eru [the latter almost given away at dirt cheap prices to Nigerian traders] etc. Fruits of our soil which are not found in other parts of Africa.

We have tasted the fruit juices of these produce, made from the most minimum essences of their fruits, while we have them flourishing in abundance in the wild in Cameroon -- being undermined.

Tacklings agriculture is a Herculean task in Cameroon. And it does not just begin with sensitizing a largely illiterate smallscale farming population. How do you intend to square that circle, Da Mukefor?
 
ANYANGO
If age ain't nothing but a number, is a jail just another room?
http://samiraedi.ning.com/



English Holly

Aspen Leaves




On Sunday, November 23, 2014 8:14 AM, "Martin Tumasang tumasangm@hotmail.com [camnetwork]" <camnetwork@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 
Hi Gov,
thanks for the below.
 
Regards
 
Tumasang
 

To: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com; camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; ambasbay@googlegroups.com
From: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sun, 23 Nov 2014 07:49:50 +0000
Subject: [camnetwork] RE: [cameroon_politics] @Gov Tambe: Dangote Farms begins hybrid tomatoes production in Kano

 
Dear Barrister,
I have always lauded a return to large scale agriculture, which empowers Africa's most abundant capital of production after unskilled labour. Geometric population in Nigeria (predicted to grow to 750 million by 2100) ensures that investment in food production in Nigeria and Cameroon will always be a winner.
I had contemplated settling in Kenya in 1983 after the USA refused my application for permanent residence and continuous employment in a DC Corporate law firm. My wife and I contemplated cattle-rearing in Kenya's settled agricultural sector made famous by the late settler, Karen Blixen (Out of Africa - Book and Film).  The attempted coup d'etat against Arap Moi in 1982 changed our plans. I have also contemplated cassava and garri production in Mamfe. I abandoned the later plans when my children did not show interest in continuing such activity after my dwindling days on earth. Large-scale farming is a multi-generational activity especially in Africa where land ownership is precarious and the climate can be hostile to absentee farmers.
  Any farming family must be continuously hands-on for many generations like the Muketes of Kumba who are now three generations into farming -  since 1901.

Mukefor
Gubernatorial Aspirant
South West & North West Provinces.
Platform issue: Agro-industrial development.




To: camnetwork@yahoogroups.com; cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com
From: cameroon_politics@yahoogroups.com
Date: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 08:48:29 +0000
Subject: [cameroon_politics] @Gov Tambe: Dangote Farms begins hybrid tomatoes production in Kano

 

Dangote Farms begins hybrid tomatoes production in Kano


November 22, 2014 | Filed under: main story | Author: Editor


tomatoes

Dangote Farms have started a pilot hybrid tomatoes production in Kano to meet the demand of it's tomatoes processing plants in the state, its Managing Director, Alhaji Abdulhamid Kaita, disclosed on Friday.

Kaita told newsmen at the end of a two-day stakeholders' forum on tomatoes value chain in Kano that the company had also introduced the hybrid seedlings to farmers.

He said the farmers, however, insisted that the seedlings be tried by the company's farm before they could patronise it.

He noted that the company had begun a pilot project at Kadawa area of the state during this year's rainy season and was about to begin the second phase of the project in the dry farming season.

"The yield produced before is about 10 tones per hectare, while the hybrid seedling varieties introduced will produce 80 to 100 tones per hectare using the best practices," Kaita said.

He said the meeting was aimed at mobilising the farmers to rub minds to save the company from shortage of raw materials.

He added that the company had engaged farmers in the past two years and provided them with best practices in tomatoes production and processing.

Kaita said the company had orgnised the farmers into groups to enable them benefit from the company.

Contributing, one of the stakeholders, Mr Richard Ogundele, commended Dangote Farms for the initiative.

He expressed optimism that Dangote Farms would reap the benefit of the forum as many problems were brought for discussion.

The Dangote Farms collaborated with the World Bank to conduct the meeting on tomatoes.

The meeting, held between Nov. 20 and Nov. 21, had several stakeholders such as Federal and State Ministries of Agriculture, development partners and insurance companies in attendance.

(NAN)





__._,_.___

Posted by: Samira Ed i <samiritecreate@yahoo.com>
Reply via web post Reply to sender Reply to group Start a New Topic Messages in this topic (4)
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cameroon_politics/

.

__,_._,___

No comments:

Post a Comment