Mahottari, Nov 19: The farmers in the district are swamped with the activities to harvest paddy and cultivate cash crops. Paddy is the major crop.
Cutting paddy, drying up,
threshing, and storing are the activities for completing its harvest. In
addition to harvesting the major crop, the farmers are busy in cultivating
lands and sowing seeds of wheat and legumes.
Other cash crops as potato and sugarcane
are also planted in this season.
However, the farmers are worried
over shortage of labour at this peak season.
Some have been over with paddy
harvest, while some are drying up the paddy in fields. Similarly, some fields
are still with golden rice ready for harvest.
Immediately after the paddy
harvest, the farmers cultivate the land for cash crop, utilizing land moisture
for germination.
"Thanks to weather this year,
we have a good harvest. There is adequate rice yield," said an octogenarian
farmer, Dipak Bahadur Phuyal from Ramnagar of Bhangaha-4.
He, however, worried, "There
is acute shortage of labour. The paddy is ripe and ready for harvest which
needs immediate labour."
Even the cultivation for winter
crops requires additional labour.
Yogendra Mahato from Gaushala-12
also said additional workforce was required as it was peak season of harvest,
but lack of sufficient labour had made them weary and full of hassles. He
shared that the labours skilled at harvesting rice and tilling land had left
for Punjab and Haryana of India for better job, which caused a shortage in the
district.
The active people from Musahar and
Bantar communities which are skilled at agricultural works had left for abroad.
There are only children, women and elderly ones in their communities now.
However, Ram Julum Bantar from
Karpurganj of Bhangaha-5 said the active workforce in the age group of 15-19
years left home because the wage in the village was too low to run family.
Similarly, some of the youths who
were able to secure loan from highbrows are in the Gulf countries.
This trend has left the farmers in
jittery in the district of late. It has resulted into lessening agricultural
activities.
As recent as three decades back,
the farmers who kept three teams of oxen and devoted to agriculture, are now
selling land and migrating to the cities.
Bachchula Mahato from
Pashupatinagar Banarjhulla of Bardibas-9, explained, "Why to leave the
lands unused when there was an acute shortage of workers? Children also left
the country for higher education. Some lands are given on lease and we packed
up."
The number of people like Mahato is
growing in the district of late.
If the agricultural workforce
continues leaving country for better employment abroad, the district will be
forced to leave sizable land untilled, warned Binod Thakur, a 55-year-old
farmer from Krishnapur, Bardibas-6.
According to Agriculture Knowledge
Centre, Mahottari, there is 70,000 hectares of agricultural land in the
district. Most of the lands are cultivable for three season crops in a
year. RSS