Provincial
Pyrethrum losing its charm to humble potato
A pyrethrum field: Many farmers have uprooted the pyrethrum plants because of financial problems the sector has been facing in the past ten years. Photo/FILE
Posted Monday, March 1 2010 at 21:49
A tractor is busy cultivating an arable land in Molo just next to the Pyrethrum Board of Kenya research station. It is during this planting season that farmers take advantage of the research station to plant latest variety of flowers.
But like a majority of the farmers in this area, Mr John Kimani, the owner of farm being ploughed, is no longer interested in planting flowers. “I am preparing a potato (Irish potatoes) seedbed,” Mr Kimani told the Nation team at his farm.
Most of the other small holder farmers have pyrethrum flowers for Irish potatoes, which they say are well paying, compared to the former. According to Mr Kimani there is likely to be good market for Irish potatoes in July and that is why he is busy preparing the seedbed to plant crop.
Molo is the leading producer of Irish potatoes in the country. Why not concentrate on pyrethrum farming? “It would be a waste of time and resources to cultivate flowers. And it would also mean going back to the old bad days,” the farmer answers back.
He is among other small holder growers in the area that were the first to abandon the internationally high demand crop to adopt new farming practices after years of hard labour while growing pyrethrum. The farmer’s sentiments are an indication that the country may never recapture the 80 per cent world market share it had enjoyed since independence.
At the research station the situation is no different from what the local farmers are undergoing if the kind of activities going on at the more than 20 acre farm is anything to go by. What used to be pyrethrum seedbeds for propagating the flowers has now been neglected. And land is invaded by all kinds of weeds.
Food crops are also being grown by ‘willing’ farmers – most of who have been contracted to take charge of the remaining flower seedlings. Such farmers were given small plots some three years ago to do inter-cropping while tending to pyrethrum after more than 300 former local employees were either retrenched or retired.
They harvest and sell the little flowers produced at this centre to Pyrethrum Board of Kenya (PBK) factory in Nakuru. But most of them prefer growing food crops for their own consumption and some for commercial purposes.
According to a farmer, Ms Beatrice Kerema, production of pyrethrum flowers has been declining since 2001 and it is no longer a secret that PBK has lost both the regional and domestic market. This is due to diminishing production of the crop she blames on apathy among the grower and the board due to non-payment of their deliveries.
Pyrethrum farmers maintained that they have uprooted the crop and will not go back to it any time soon since its losses are still being realised in a big way. Ms Kerema recalls the good old days when she and her family used to solely depend on pyrethrum growing.
This was way back in the 1980s when she ventured into the sub sector because of its high returns. She joined local farmers at Ololongoi in Narok North district who had abandoned wheat farming to grow pyrethrum, which had higher returns.
But 20 years down the line, she can only grow Irish potatoes and vegetables which she says fetch more profits compared to pyrethrum. Pyrethrum she says is expensive to grow.
Irish potatoes
Ms Kerema does not only earn Sh300,000 from the sale of Irish potatoes per year but she gets additional Sh200,000 from her vegetables. Another Sh100,000 she says comes from the sale of sheep they keep in their 75 acre farm. And the farm according to her is under-used.
But as many farmers are wondering when the rain started beating them, an audit report prepared by Inspectorate of State Corporations gives a candid revelation of how pyrethrum industry collapsed in 2001/2002 financial year. It cites non-payment of flower deliveries to PBK which greatly affected the levels of stock of pyrethrum and its products. The report says that growing of pyrethrum in Kenya is lucrative if only farmers could be paid promptly.




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