Nov 24, 2020, 00:34 am
(This post was last modified: Nov 24, 2020, 00:34 am by Resurgence. Edited 1 time in total.)
Sijo Zachariah holds tapioca roots harvested from the farm that he and his father started during the coronavirus lockdown.
The garden that Sijo Zachariah and his father planted was a desperate measure in response to the pandemic.
But it became so much more: sustenance for a community and a great inspiration for Mr Zachariah to make a major change in his life.
A 22-year-old aircraft maintenance engineer living in Dubai, Mr Zachariah was visiting the south-west India state of Kerala for a family wedding when a lockdown was declared.
Store shelves were emptying and plant nurseries were closed. So Mr Zachariah and his father collected seeds from whatever fruits and vegetables they could find at the grocery store and planted them on their family’s plot of land. Coconuts, jackfruit and rambutan, a lychee-like fruit, were already growing there.
Using YouTube videos and techniques Mr Zachariah’s grandfather had passed down to his father as a guide, they began a garden that eventually helped feed 20 neighboring households during the pandemic.
The tropical climate of Kerala provided plenty of rain and sun, making farming relatively hands-off until it’s time to harvest.
That laissez-faire style of farming jibes with Mr Zachariah’s growing interest in permaculture, a movement that promotes working with nature instead of imposing man’s will on the land.
Mr Zachariah said he learned permaculture techniques by watching YouTube videos and by listening to the lessons his dad passed down from his grandfather, who once owned rice paddies.
He remembers having to adapt to a few cultural differences when he was studying and working in Wales. The easiest adjustment, he said, was to the food.
Somehow the meals were tastier than the food he had eaten as a child, he said.
Mr Zachariah came to grasp that the food was fresher — it was local and didn’t need to be treated with preservatives before travelling by truck or plane to a faraway destination.
What he didn’t realize was that a seed had been planted – one that would eventually lead him to rethink his career in engineering and consider one in farming.
Online, Zachariah connected with others who were thinking of a future in farming.
Mr Zachariah has left the farm in the hands of his neighbors since returning to Dubai.
He’s decided to switch careers, from serving the skies to working the soil.
The time they’ve spent together has also helped bring Mr Zachariah and his father closer.
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/fa...r-BB1bhGA8
The garden that Sijo Zachariah and his father planted was a desperate measure in response to the pandemic.
But it became so much more: sustenance for a community and a great inspiration for Mr Zachariah to make a major change in his life.
A 22-year-old aircraft maintenance engineer living in Dubai, Mr Zachariah was visiting the south-west India state of Kerala for a family wedding when a lockdown was declared.
Quote:“That’s when the whole thing struck me… What’s going to happen?” he said. “You know, how are we going to feed ourselves?”
Store shelves were emptying and plant nurseries were closed. So Mr Zachariah and his father collected seeds from whatever fruits and vegetables they could find at the grocery store and planted them on their family’s plot of land. Coconuts, jackfruit and rambutan, a lychee-like fruit, were already growing there.
Using YouTube videos and techniques Mr Zachariah’s grandfather had passed down to his father as a guide, they began a garden that eventually helped feed 20 neighboring households during the pandemic.
Quote:“We started teaching others how to grow their own crops so that everyone can have some sort of crop growing in the land,” he said.
The tropical climate of Kerala provided plenty of rain and sun, making farming relatively hands-off until it’s time to harvest.
That laissez-faire style of farming jibes with Mr Zachariah’s growing interest in permaculture, a movement that promotes working with nature instead of imposing man’s will on the land.
Mr Zachariah said he learned permaculture techniques by watching YouTube videos and by listening to the lessons his dad passed down from his grandfather, who once owned rice paddies.
Quote:“My dad would say, ’Your grandfather used to do this. When I was your age, I used to do this,’” Mr Zachariah said as he mimicked gardening.
He remembers having to adapt to a few cultural differences when he was studying and working in Wales. The easiest adjustment, he said, was to the food.
Somehow the meals were tastier than the food he had eaten as a child, he said.
Mr Zachariah came to grasp that the food was fresher — it was local and didn’t need to be treated with preservatives before travelling by truck or plane to a faraway destination.
What he didn’t realize was that a seed had been planted – one that would eventually lead him to rethink his career in engineering and consider one in farming.
Online, Zachariah connected with others who were thinking of a future in farming.
Quote:“I’ve been making videos. I’ve been trying to educate others,” he said.
“(There are) many people like me who are genuinely curious or genuinely want to do something but they are stuck somewhere, with their work or in a city life.”
Mr Zachariah has left the farm in the hands of his neighbors since returning to Dubai.
He’s decided to switch careers, from serving the skies to working the soil.
Quote:“It’s a big change for me,” he said.
“But this is what makes me happy — helping others and being in nature.”
The time they’ve spent together has also helped bring Mr Zachariah and his father closer.
Quote:“We started bonding and I think that’s why I got into gardening,” Zachariah said.
“All of these things used to spark curiosity in me and then I was getting quality time with my dad as well, so it was like a win-win.”
https://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/uknews/fa...r-BB1bhGA8