CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment
No Result
View All Result
CEO Tab
No Result
View All Result
Home Prime News

Orange farming changes the face of the entire settlement

CEO TAB by CEO TAB
January 22, 2020
in Prime News
0
Orange farming changes the face of the entire settlement
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

-Krishna Darnal

You might also like

Finance Ministry Faces Pressure from Politicians to Include Small Projects in Upcoming Budget

SpiceJet Resumes Delhi-Kathmandu Flights After Six Years, Boosting Competition

Government Struggles with Revenue Collection and Budget Utilization as Fiscal Year Nears End

Palpa, January 22: Bahundanda at Amlabas which lies in the Rainadevi Chhahara rural municipality-4 in Papla is home to 30 households. The identity of the village does not end here as it has also lately earned the recognition as a ‘pocket zone’ for orange production.

Commercial orange farming has now become a means of bringing a significant change in the lives of Bahundanda folks. The villagers for whom to see cash in hands was only occasional in the past now export oranges worth around Rs 200 million a year alone. Foreign employment has turned out to be an outdated choice among the youths here. The villagers are free from the compulsion of seeking loans for household expenses, children’s education, and other purposes. They are in the position of affording higher education for their children.

Their decision to switch to commercial orange farming from traditional agricultural production has proved the right one. They have separate orange gardens. During initial days, they had planted just one or two plants for personal consumption and gradually transformed it to a commercial scale. They face no market shortage or low payment for their produces as they sell the produces for Rs 70-75 per kg right from the gardens.

A local Gita Bhattarai said that some 13 families of the area earned around Rs 1.5 million annually by selling oranges. Similarly, a general family has also been able to make Rs 300,000 – Rs 400,000 income. Bhattarai said that the locals have become successful to save some amount after spending on their food, clothes and medical treatment for a year from their income from the sale of orange. A local Humnath Kandel has been into orange farming for the past 20 years. Kandel, who gave up animal rearing and traditional agriculture profession, said that he would give continuity to the orange, lemon farming in the future. Kandel said that he makes income of more than Rs 600,000 annually from orange farming alone.

Yamlal Koirala had led the commercial orange farming 40 years ago. Eighty-year-old Koirala is happy after seeing the whole settlement attracted towards the commercial orange farming. Another local Tikaram Pokharel opined, “We are facing problems to identify disease in lack of technical knowledge. So we are not able to make income as expected.” Orange farming has become the main source of income of all villagers. The oranges produced in the area are supplied to many cities including Butwal, Bhairahawa, Chitwan, Nawalparasi, and Kapilvastu. Another orange grower Kamal Ghimire shared that he sold oranges worth about Rs 1.5 million this year. He said they have left traditional cereal crop cultivation and adopted orange cultivation as it was less costly and easier as well.

However, the farmers of this area known as the orange pocket zone are deprived of the government subsidy program. Orange farmers here have not got the grants from the federal, state and the local government. The farmers here have been able to earn adequate income from commercial vegetable farming done in the orange orchard. Orange is cultivated on 853 hectares land in Palpa district and the annual production is 5,660 tonnes. The district earned more than Rs 110 million from the sale of orange in the last fiscal year alone.

Orange grows well at Somadi, Bhuwanpokhari, Mujhug, and Chhahara of Rainadevi Chhahara Rural Municipality in Palpa district. Orange farmers from this region earn Rs 1.5 million annually on an average. Youths at Ribdikot, Palumainadi, Kusumkhola, Bhairabsthan, Khasyouli, and Bagnaskali are also attracted to commercial orange farming. Commercial orange farming has helped retain the youths within home instead of going on foreign employment and also improved the economic income of many families. RSS

Share30Tweet19
CEO TAB

CEO TAB

Recommended For You

Finance Ministry Faces Pressure from Politicians to Include Small Projects in Upcoming Budget

by CEO Tab
May 11, 2025
0
Finance_Ministry

As the Ministry of Finance (MoF) prepares the national budget for the upcoming fiscal year, it is under growing pressure to accommodate small-scale projects pushed by political leaders...

Read more

SpiceJet Resumes Delhi-Kathmandu Flights After Six Years, Boosting Competition

by CEO Tab
May 11, 2025
0
SpiceJet to Resume Nepal Operations with Daily Delhi-Kathmandu Flights Starting May 10

After a six-year hiatus, Indian low-cost carrier SpiceJet has resumed its regular Delhi-Kathmandu-Delhi flight service. On Saturday morning, a SpiceJet Boeing 737-800 carrying 140 passengers landed at Tribhuvan...

Read more

Government Struggles with Revenue Collection and Budget Utilization as Fiscal Year Nears End

by CEO Tab
May 11, 2025
0
Federal government expenditure at Rs 943.05bn

With just two months remaining in the current fiscal year, the government is falling short in both revenue collection and effective budget spending, signaling weak fiscal performance. According...

Read more

NRB to Withdraw Additional Rs 30 Billion via 21-Day Deposit Auction

by CEO Tab
May 11, 2025
0
Interest rates not to change despite high demand for loans

Nepal Rastra Bank (NRB) is preparing to withdraw another Rs 30 billion from the financial system as part of its ongoing liquidity management strategy. The central bank will...

Read more

Udayapur Cement Produces Rs 550 Million Worth of Cement in One Week Despite Power Outages

by CEO Tab
May 9, 2025
0
Udayapur Cement Industry Resumes Operations Amid Legal and Financial Hurdles

Udayapur Cement Industry Limited, a government-owned enterprise based in Jaljale, has produced over Rs 550 million worth of cement within a week of resuming operations after a six-month...

Read more
Next Post

ToR of Sunkoshi-III hydropower project nears final phase

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Corporate
  • Entertainment
  • Featured
  • International
  • Major Story
  • Next Gen
  • Opinion
  • Prime News
  • Special Report
  • Tete – A – Tete

EDITOR

Manish Raj Poudel
info@ceotab.com
9841317747


PUBLISHED BY

Welcome Group
www.welcomeadnepal.com

Publisher

www.ceotab.com is a premium news portal being run by Welcome Group. The website features quality business/economic news contents,  in-depth profiles of companies, stories of struggle and success of entrepreneurs, articles that assess various dimensions of  the commerce, trade and economy.

Editor

Manish Raj Poudel

info@ceotab.com

9841317747

Sub-Editor

Riza Poudel

poudelriza@gmail.com

Archives

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Prime News
  • International Market
  • Special Report
  • Corporate
  • Opinion
  • Next Gen
  • Entertainment

© 2023 CEO Tab. All rights reserved.