Black Bush farmers reap bumper rice crop
Rice farmer Sasenarine Ramnarine
Rice farmer Sasenarine Ramnarine

RICE farmers in Black Bush Polder are celebrating a bumper crop with yields of 45 bags of paddy per acre.

In the Black Bush Polder, 18,000 acres were cultivated and a further 24,000 in the front lands of the Corentyne coast between Adventure and Number 43 Village.

Sixty-five per cent, of the 18,000 acres of rice cultivated in Black Bush, has already been harvested. Another 4,500 acres remain in the fields to be harvested.
Roshad Gafoor, of Yakusari, Black Bush Polder, said he has 45 acres under rice cultivation and is expecting to receive $1.9M for his paddy.

Region Six Chairman David Armogan

Another satisfied rice farmer is Sasenarine Ramnarine, whose 21 acres have yielded him an average of 35 to 40 bags of paddy per acre.
Ramnarine described this crop as an excellent one, particularly since during the previous crop some farmers were reaping 25 bags of paddy per acre in the Black Bush Polder.
He attributed this abundant crop to proper field management and the correct use of fertilisers and insecticides.

According to Ramnarine, he had previously planted the hybrid strain referred to as GRDB 10, however, this crop he tried a hybrid strain from Brazil.
It should be noted that some farmers who have planted the GRDB 10 have also reported similar yields to those of Ramnarine.

Region Six Chairman David Armogan who recently met with some of the farmers, pointed to the fact that the reduced cost to hire trucks and combined harvesters for this crop had a positive effect on operational costs, resulting in larger profits for rice farmers.
The chairman also explained that the regional administration is tackling the issue of ensuring that the fields in the backlands (Black Bush Polder) remain dry for harvesting, while those in the front lands, expected to be harvested in a few weeks, receive water that will be pumped into their fields.

“So that is a little problem that we have to keep the water in the canal at a level that it can reach to the front lands for those farmers; and also at a level that if it rains, there will be no flooding in Black Bush because then the farmers will not be able to reap and those who have not finished reaping will have big losses,” he said.

A rice field in Black Bush Polder

He also gave the assurance that the administration is looking into the “erection of a solid fence” to separate the rice-cultivation area from the area where cattle are grazed, in order to prevent destruction of rice fields.
Armogan said that this will be carried out as a capital project in 2019.

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