HOW I MAKE KSH.1.2 MILLION PER YEAR FROM GARLIC FARMING
Samuel Mwenda’s garlic onions farm is located off the Meru-Nanyuki Road in Kisima, Buuri sub-county.
The farm owner has seen his fortunes rise to millions from
the crop. On a good year, he makes up to Sh. 1.2 million from his produce that
is planted on parcels of his 10 acre farm on rotational basis.
It has been 13 years since he started garlic farming, after
finding the going tough with tomatoes and French beans he was farming on his
10-acre farm.
“I started farming by growing the two crops, but the profits
were minimal due to diseases. Tomatoes were prone to diseases making me spend
more on pesticides. On the other hand, the market for French beans was small,”
says Mwenda, who has been a farmer throughout his adult life, also keeping
sheep, growing wheat and potatoes.
So in 2003, he planted his first garlic plants on quarter
acre, testing the waters after getting seeds from a farmer in Timau, where
garlic is widely grown.
Garlic has a dormancy of up to eight months after planting.
To break it, he stored seeds in sisal sacks for warmth to enable the shoots to
sprout in three to four months.
Other farmers use a bio-stimulant hormone, which breaks the
dormancy and helps the seeds to germinate in less than a month.
“It took me about 10 months to get my first harvest after
waiting for about five months during the dormancy period and four-and-a-half
months for the crops to mature,” says Mwenda, whose investment was Sh.50,000.
“I planted 45kg of garlic and harvested close to 1,000kg,
which I then sold at Sh.260 each kilo. A kilo of garlic seeds yields between
30Kg and 40kg. It was a surprise and motivation to me.”
But before the harvest, all had gone well until when the crop
was attacked by thrips. “All along, I had known that garlic is hardly affected
by diseases. But I realized my mistake, the garlic farm bordered a maize
plantation with the cereal acting as a host for the pests,” he recounts.
To control thrips, he also learnt that the pesticides used
are crops specific which means you cannot apply chemicals used to control
thrips in French beans and baby-corn to control the pest in garlic.
Mwenda says garlic plants need fertilizer like CAN and NPK
1717 to boost the yield.
However, he adds that some diseases like blight and rust may
also affect the plants on the farm, therefore, appropriate pesticides should be
used.
“I grow cloves that I have stored to break dormancy. The
larger the clove, the bigger the bulb during harvesting. When planting at 10cm
between plants and 30cm between rows, I use 100kg of fertilizer and some other
100kg of the top-dressing fertilizer before the garlic starts forming tubers,”
says Mwenda, noting mulching helps the crop grow better.
Garlic is ready for harvesting when the leaves wither. One
uproots the crop, cuts the roots and the stems and separates the bulb for
drying.
Mwenda grows the crop on a rotational basis on half-acre
portions, planting 200kg on each. This method has ensured he earns throughout
the year and helps keep diseases at bay.
“Since I started garlic farming, I have been planting the
crop twice a year. I grow the Gatumani type but l am planning to change the
variety because there are others that mature faster,” he offers, adding from
each portion he harvests about 3,000kg.
He sells a kilo at Sh.360 when demand is high.
In May, the farmer earned about Sh.600,000 after selling
3,000kg from half-acre.
“My expenses include labour, buying of seeds at Sh.200 a kilo
and pesticides costs. With the money I ended up with, I was a happy farmer,”
says Mwenda, who through garlic (and his other farming ventures) has been able
to educate his eight children to college level and start a sheep farm where
over 100 Merino animals thrive.
According to Mwenda, demand for garlic peaks between August
and September, when a kilo goes for between Sh.300 and Sh.400.
And from December to January, prices are lower since the market
is flooded with the commodity.
However, despite the price fluctuation, garlic prices do not
fall below Sh.200 a kilo.
His greatest challenge remains pests and diseases, which
include rust and thrips.
“Thrips are a big enemy of the crop. I spray twice or thrice
per week depending on the stage of maturity and the rate of infection,” he
says, noting an influx of imported garlic from Asia has started to cause worry
among farmers.
Head of Agriculture Department at Meru University of Science
and Technology Dr Peter Masinde says garlic can grow in wide range of climatic
conditions.
“Cool conditions with an adequate soil moisture for early
growth, followed by warm, drier conditions for maturation, harvesting and
drying are ideal,” he says, adding bulbing of garlic requires longer exposure
to daylight.
He adds that cloves stored at temperatures higher than 25
degrees Celsius will not bulb properly when planted.
“Bulbing requires that first the cloves or the plant be
exposed to low temperatures. When the plant has about 12 to 14 leaves size,
bulb swelling can start but this needs long days and warm temperatures.
Exposing the plants to cold temperatures for too long can cause clove formation
in all leaf axils, hence the bulb appears to be rough,” he warns.
Garlic, just like ordinary onions, need nitrogen, phosphorus
and potassium nutrients for higher yields.
“Adequate nitrogen is necessary for maximum bulb production,
while excess reduces the yields,” says Dr Masinde, noting that the amount of
nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizers to apply should be determined after a soil
test is done.
Other major pests in garlic farming include cut worms, leaf
minors and nematodes, and can be controlled by use of approved insecticides.
Preparing Garlic Seeds
To make seeds, one buys or harvests the garlic onion and then
dries in the sun for one month before disinfecting in chlorine.
The next step is to clean the onion bulbs using organic soap.
The purpose for doing this is to wash away the disinfectant and dirt.
After the cleaning, it is important to prevent mould
formation on ‘bruised’ onions. Organic salt is used to do the work.
At this point one should mix a bio-stimulant in water and the
onions immersed in the solution for 12 hours. This is to break the onion’s
dormancy, which lasts up to eight months when planted. The stimulant makes the
seeds germinate in two weeks.
If not added, and the rest of the procedures are followed, it
takes about three months.
The onions are then stored in a room whose temperature should
be controlled to 20 degrees Celsius for germination to take place.
The treated onions are left in the room for two weeks before
they are then dried in the sun for two days.
The garlic bulb seeds are ready for splitting into parts
called cloves, from which shoots will emerge.
Finally,
Garlic farming is a lucrative venture with the demand for the
crop peaking in the months between May, June, July, August, and September where
a kilo cost anywhere between Ksh.300 and Ksh.400.
When the demand is stable from December to January, the
prices decline to around Ksh.200.
Nevertheless, it is important to note that despite the price
instabilities, it is unlikely that garlic will fall below Ksh.200 per kilo any
time soon.
Under good agricultural practices an acre of garlic produces
between 4000kgs to 5000kgs.
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