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    The cloudNutrition & Food SecurityHealthy Mahua CuisineTraditional & Local FoodsTraditional Food & HealthCultivating Local CropsTraditional Crop Cultivation
    🌱

    A dimension within Cultivating Local Crops

    Traditional Crop Cultivation

    This theme explores the methods and heritage of cultivating traditional crops like millets and pulses.

    150 voices speak to this

    Dimensions within this theme

    Each dimension splits this theme further — keep drilling to see how it breaks down.

    Community Voice Analysis
    An AI-powered summary of 100 submissions for this prompt.

    Neutral

    Overall Community Sentiment

    The Voice Summary

    In your area, citizens express a deep connection to ancestral farming practices, highlighting a concerning shift away from traditional methods towards modern techniques. Many submissions lament the loss of diverse native crops like millets and pulses, and the decreasing use of organic fertilizers like cow dung, which they believe sustained healthier lives. There's a clear desire to address the scarcity of traditional seeds and the impact of chemical pesticides on health. 📉 However, there's also a strong positive movement towards reviving these sustainable practices. Communities are actively preserving heirloom seeds and advocating for a return to organic, zero-irrigation farming, recognizing the immense nutritional value and environmental benefits of these ancient methods. 💡 This presents a clear opportunity to support community-led efforts for agricultural heritage preservation. 🌱

    Dominant Themes

    Ancestral Farming Practices
    Preservation of Traditional Seeds
    Organic and Zero-Irrigation Farming
    Decline of Indigenous Crop Cultivation
    Health Benefits of Traditional Foods

    Actionable Recommendations

    • 🌱 📦 🤝Establish community-based seed banks and distribution programs to ensure the availability and accessibility of traditional and indigenous crop varieties.
    • 🧑 🏫 🌾Develop educational initiatives and training workshops for farmers on ancestral organic farming techniques, including natural fertilization and zero-irrigation methods.
    • 📈 🛒 🍎Explore policies and market linkages that promote the cultivation, consumption, and economic viability of traditionally grown, nutritious crops.
    Voice Reports

    By Socratus

    Voice Reports turns spoken civic voices — in any language, from anywhere — into a living, searchable chorus of collective wisdom.

    Speak — Share your voice

    From the Socratus Lab

    • LOKA
    • wystem.ai
    • Voice Reports · you are here

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    How it works
    The Pulse
    Today

    Part of Socratus

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation

    “Midwives for collective wisdom — surfacing the latent capacity within communities to survive and flourish.”
    Visit Socratus

    Join the commons

    A quiet note when the chorus has something worth hearing.

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    Where these voices come from

    ODISHA, INDIA51 voices UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA33 voices MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA9 voices JHARKHAND, INDIA8 voices RAJASTHAN, INDIA3 voices CHHATTISGARH, INDIA2 voices GUJARAT, INDIA1 voice

    Voices here

    👴 🌱 🌾

    Our ancestors used to cultivate Bhadi kodra, jowar, pulses, and oilseed crops.

    — Kachala Choudhary

    🌱 🫘 🌾

    The things we used to cultivate before were black gram, green gram, cowpea, horse gram, etc.

    — Batakrushna Sahoo

    🧑‍🌾 🚜 🌾

    In ancient times, we used to cultivate with ploughs. We used to cultivate black gram, horse gram, green gram, paddy, etc.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 💩 🌾

    Our fathers and grandfathers used to cultivate traditional crops earlier, fertilizing them with cow dung, and grew pulses like moong, urad, kulthi, along with millets such as ragi and bajra.

    — Parikshit Majhi

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Our ancestors were cultivating. They grew urad and moong. The soil gave them a different kind of produce, and they nurtured the seeds for it.

    — Mukunda Majhi · Udulibeda, Malkangiri, Odisha

    👴 🌱 🌳

    Our ancestors used to cultivate mung bean, urad, horse gram, ragi, and mustard. At that time, it used to rain, and there were forests.

    — Anirudha Marai

    🌱 🌾 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

    We used to cultivate various crops extensively. Additionally, I cultivated mustard, moong bean, guava, horse gram, etc. All these seeds are important for my family.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🤲 🌾

    The rice crop we cultivate, the valuable horse gram of our family; our ancestors have provided us with green gram, black gram, horse gram, and finger millet.

    — Basanti · Nayagarh, Odisha

    🌱 🌾 🕰️

    Previously, we ourselves used to cultivate moong, Didhan Lar Golandi, Mahipal paddy, red paddy, Kalachu paddy, and Sarai paddy.

    — Padmini Bhoi

    👴 🌾 🤲

    Our ancestors have been cultivating Kodo, Barnyard, Foxtail, Finger millet, Horse gram, and Barley since ancient times, which are very nutritious. We always preserve their seeds and cultivate them every year.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 🤲 🌱

    We cultivate a second crop. The valuable seed of our family is Horse gram. Our ancestors have given us Green gram, Black gram, Horse gram, and Finger millet. We follow the farming methods of our ancestors.

    — Basanti · Nayagarh, Odisha

    👑 🌱 💎

    Our royal forefathers used to cultivate Birahi, Kulut, Mukh, Deshoris, and Badam in their lands. And all these seeds are very important for us.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌾 🐂 🏡

    Sawa, Medo, Mijhri are our traditional crops, which our ancestors used to cultivate by plowing with bullocks and a plough. They consumed these crops throughout the year and saved seeds in their homes for the next year's sowing. We still practice farming today.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🔄 🌾

    Previously, we used to cultivate all crops like moong, urad, and kulthi, and we want to continue doing so in the future.

    — Jyoti Senapati

    🚜 🌾 😔

    From the time of our ancestors, they used to cultivate with a plow. Immediately after paddy cultivation, they would grow mustard, groundnuts, horse gram, black gram, and green gram. Our subsequent generations have forgotten this practice.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🤲 🌱

    I cultivate pulse crops without irrigation. We save pulse seeds, among which horse gram, black gram, and pigeon pea are the oldest varieties. We save these seeds for cultivation every year. Our ancestors used to cultivate using manure and traditional ploughs.

    — DASHARATH SINGH

    👴 🌱 😋

    Our ancestors used to cultivate millet without mixing any chemical pesticides; they used cow dung as fertilizer. And those foods were very good.

    — Sastensh khura

    🌱 👴 🌾

    Here, we cultivate Sawa, Medon, Mujhri, Kodo, and pulses using the 'Batririri' method. We also store the seeds at home for the following year and then re-sow them in the field; this practice is a legacy from our ancestors.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🌱 🌾

    In our village, earlier, people used to cultivate fields with ploughs and oxen and worked very hard. At that time, they would sow Kodo, Sawa, Medo, and Mizri, and grow them without fertilizer. They used to sustain themselves with that, from which individuals...

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👨‍🌾 🌿 🌾

    I am a farmer. Our father, grandfather, and uncles used to cultivate using traditional methods. They used to farm without fertilizer and without chemicals. And that farming was good for crops like horse gram and ragi.

    — Parikshit Majhi

    🌾 🌱 🧪

    The oldest seeds like Kodo, Mejdri, Sawa, Maize, Bajra, all these crops were cultivated with agricultural fertilizer.

    — Kamleah Kumar · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🐂 🌾

    Before, all of us tribals used to plow the fields with a plow and bullocks. We would sow medo mujri and also kurthi, which was very nutritious food. It was sown without fertilizer and would grow readily.

    — Babulal Ayam · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    📜 🌱 🫘

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulse crops as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. I also store black gram and horse gram seeds and cultivate every year using this method.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We do farming. We save some seeds beforehand and then cultivate. This way, we get many crops, including green gram, black gram, and pigeon pea.

    — Ulapi Sahu · Balangir, Odisha

    🚜 🌱 📜

    Our plows and bullocks till the fields, we sow millet, maize, make furrows, and plant small seeds, and also save seeds for the next year. This is a legacy from our ancestors, which we still have today and which we utilize.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 💧 🤲

    We cultivate seeds such as chickpea, lentil, mustard, and horse gram using traditional, possibly rain-fed, farming methods. We preserve these seeds and cultivate them using this traditional agricultural practice.

    — Laxmi Sahu

    👨‍👩‍👧 🚜 🌱

    We are a tribal community, we farm using ploughs and bullocks, and we sustain our lives. We clear forests and bushes to make fields, and we cultivate sawa, medo, mijhri, and maize, which were grown by our ancestors, and we also preserve their seeds.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 🌱 🤲

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. And I also cultivate every year using this method, by saving black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan · Bhojpur, Sambalpur, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 ✨

    We save stable seeds and kuluth seeds are valuable for our family. We have old seeds like millet, kuluth, moong. We sell them and use them as food.

    — Basanti · Dashapalla, Nayagarh, Odisha

    👴 🌱 🫘

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. I also cultivate every year using this method by saving black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — DASHARATH SINGH · Jamunkira, Sambalpur, Odisha

    🕰️ ☀️ 🌾

    Before, we used to cultivate crops without water: bajra, maize, kodo, mezhri, and arhar (pigeon pea).

    — Kamleah Kumar · Ormaura, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌾 🧪 📉

    People of the past used to cultivate saawa, kodo, menjhari, bajra, and maize, and their bodies were strong. But today, by eating grains grown with fertilizer...

    — Kamleah Kumar · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 🌱 🌰

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop using organic methods without irrigation. I also cultivate every year using this method by storing black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan · Bhojpur, Sambalpur, Odisha

    💩 🌱 🌾

    We used to farm using cow dung and goat manure; this was the fertilizer for the crops, and all crops like Kodo, Menjhari, Barley, and Saawa were grown with this agricultural fertilizer.

    — Kamleah Kumar · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 🌱 🌰

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. And I also cultivate every year using this method, by preserving Urad and Kulthi seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We save and sow our traditional seeds. Such as chickpea, sorghum, Bhadi, pearl millet, etc.

    — Vijay kanesh · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh

    🤲 🌱 👨‍🌾

    I am saving it. Yes, I have been saving it from before. Yes, green gram, yes, chickpeas, yes, now it looks like peas. I am seeing all of it being cultivated. Your ancestors were indeed tied to the yoke (of farming) before. Yes, in the past, everyone used to plow and cultivate. Yes.

    — Santosh Pradhan

    🐂 🌱 🏡

    Even today, we farm with a plough and oxen and earn our livelihood. Since ancient times, our ancestors have ploughed fields with a plough and oxen, and sow only the seeds preserved at home, such as kurthi, sawa, medo, and mijhri.

    — Ram Kumari

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We have inherited the seeds of Bhaadi, Kodra, Bati, Jowar.

    — Kachala Choudhary

    👑 🌱 🌍

    Bhaji leafy greens seeds, cluster beans, taro, turmeric, and Jani are all ancestral seeds. All these grow in fertile soil.

    — Anirudha Marai

    🚜Organic Cultivation Methods37 voices
    🌱Traditional Seed Practices29 voices
    🏺Heritage Seed Preservation27 voices
    🫘Pulse Crop Cultivation26 voices
    🍚Millet Farming & Grains18 voices
    🌾Seed Scarcity Concerns13 voices