Meet Nitesh Borkar, a 28-year-old from Goa, who is taking the state by storm with his innovative yellow watermelon farming project.
Earlier this month, the young farmer cultivated more than 250 yellow watermelons from an area of 4×4 square meters. Without using any chemical fertilisers or pesticides. 100 per cent organically!
Spending a meagre input of Rs 4,000, Nitesh earned more than Rs 30,000 at the sale.
The Better India got in touch with him to know more about how he achieved this feat.
Nitesh had completed his diploma in automobile engineering and worked a secure job in the insurance industry. But three years ago, his passion for the soil pushed him to quit his job and become a full-time organic farmer.
The fact that he grew up watching his father and grandfather toiling in the family farmland for years added fuel to his fire. As a boy, he had worked in the fields with his father. His grandfather, a first-generation farmer, cultivated native and traditional paddy (ukde tandul) and cashew plantations for 50 years.
“After my grandfather’s death, our paddy cultivation stopped. My father and I worked hard to revive it. It was difficult because the farmlands in Neura are affected by seawater intrusion most of the time. But we managed to do it.”
When Nitesh began his journey as a full-time farmer, he started cultivating rice and seasonal Goan vegetables, selling them in the local market. He also experimented with several fruits and exotic veggies like zucchini, lettuce, and broccoli.
“I was adamant that whatever I would grow, I wouldn’t let my land or produce be poisoned by chemicals,” he says.
When asked how the idea of growing yellow watermelons came to him, he says, “Back in 2017, a friend of mine told me he had yellow watermelon seeds. He knew I was always keen on trying something new. I did not think twice and bought the seeds from him.”
However, it is important to note that the farmer did not succeed in his initial attempts.
The first attempt was in 2017. Since his land was affected by seawater intrusion, it was not conducive to the growth of yellow watermelons; he decided to do the trial cultivation on a leased plot in Agaçaim, a village on the northern banks of the Zuari River in Ilhas, Goa.
“I took the land from a friend on lease for three months. The previous crop, sweet potatoes sown into the land, were set to harvest in March. And so, after the harvest, I let the land rest for ten days before planting the watermelon seeds.”
In 70 days, the vines started fruiting. But since the monsoons were heavy, much of the fruit was damaged. The second time around, he decided to do it on another leased plot in Margao.
“Since the plot was more than 22 km away from my village, several issues cropped up, including negligence, additional transportation costs, labour charges. I had to leave the land midway because I had financial crises at home too. I lost close to Rs 40,000 since it was a big plot.”
The loss was disheartening and would have pushed anybody else to give up. But not Nitesh. He turned it into an opportunity to try something new.
“I decided to try a demonstration project on a small patch of land. I chose a hilly terrain which had our family’s cashew plantation. Most people thought the land was rocky and unsuitable for growing watermelons. But I knew that the surrounding area mimicked a forest land. So if I tried hard enough, it would work.”
Nitesh began by demarcating a 4×4 sqm plot in December 2019. To put it simply, this space is as small as an attic.
Instead of sowing the seeds into the ground, he invested in 50 grow bags or sapling bags. He filled them with soil and enriched them with farm-made organic manure. This included cow dung and farm waste like leaves and twigs.
Once the soil was fertile, he sowed the yellow watermelon seeds.
The entire input cost, including seeds, bags, preparation of organic manure cost the farmer Rs 4,000. Within 70 days, he yielded a bumper harvest, where he cultivated 250 watermelons from the 50 grow bags.
“The overall weight was 407 kg, with each watermelon weighing between 1.8-3.5 kg. Around this time, watermelon farmers in our neighbouring villages had lost all trust that the fruit would do well!”
Just this month, the watermelon farmers in nearby Verna witnessed a devastating loss, as their crops got infected by an unidentified insect. The farmers noticed dew formation on the crop. After a couple of days, they saw the insects infesting the grown watermelons during the fruiting period.
Speaking to Gomantak Times, Janere Braganza, a watermelon farmer said, “This is a unique kind of insect that has damaged our watermelons. We did not know how this had happened.”
Others added how they noticed a decline in the sale of watermelons compared to last year, losing thousands of rupees.