Forward of the bustling vacation season, 27 extension officers from throughout Dominica gathered on the One-Mile Agricultural Station in Portsmouth for intensive coaching on Built-in Vegetable Crop Administration led by the Meals and Agriculture Group of the United Nations (FAO).
The coaching was a part of the continuing undertaking “Bettering Livelihoods by Diversified Excessive-Worth Vegetable Crop Manufacturing,” in addition to by a Letter of Settlement (LOA) with the College of the West Indies (UWI).
This coaching marks the second of a sequence of coaching initiatives designed to reinforce the capability of extension officers to assist native farmers in adopting sustainable agricultural practices. The primary coaching, held in Could 2024 in Saint Lucia, centered on regional collaboration and the significance of built-in crop administration.
The four-day programme offered each theoretical data and hands-on expertise within the built-in administration of vegetable crops and cropping programs. Individuals discovered about a wide range of superior applied sciences and practices geared toward enhancing agricultural productiveness and sustainability. Key subjects included protected agriculture, local weather administration and its affect on crop yields, soil and substrate administration, water conservation, pest and illness administration, plant vitamin, and different important cultural practices.
The coaching additionally emphasised sensible, cost-effective applied sciences to optimize crop manufacturing all year long, even within the face of the altering local weather and fluctuating climate patterns that problem Caribbean smallholder farmers.
A number of Small Island Growing States (SIDS) face important agricultural challenges as a consequence of local weather change, together with elevated water variability, soil degradation, pest and illness outbreaks, and rising prices of agricultural inputs. These points exacerbate meals insecurity and threaten the livelihoods of smallholder farmers. By equipping extension officers with new data and sensible instruments, the coaching goals to construct resilience within the agricultural sector and assist the transition to extra sustainable farming practices.
Melvin Medina Navarro, Lead Technical Officer for the undertaking, acknowledged, “This coaching is an instance of nice collaboration between regional companions and has outfitted Dominica’s extension officers with superior data and sensible instruments to assist farmers in adopting sustainable applied sciences and practices that increase crop yields, improve resilience to local weather challenges, and strengthen the agricultural sector’s sustainability.”
Dr Gaius Eudoxie, Deputy Dean Outreach, College of Meals and Agriculture, UWI, highlighted, “The College of the West Indies is proud to collaborate on this initiative, empowering extension officers with progressive options and sustainable practices that deal with the distinctive agricultural challenges confronted by SIDS international locations like Dominica.”
In the meantime, Norman Alexander, an extension officer and a coaching participant gave his suggestions on the coaching. He expressed, “As an extension officer and most significantly as a greenhouse farmer, I discovered this coaching extraordinarily necessary, refreshing and well timed. Significantly, subjects that stood out for me included local weather sensible farming, built-in pest administration, finest cultivation practices, propagation, and many others. As an extension officer and farmer, I intend to implement and go on the data gained to others within the farming communities.”
The participation of the UWI crew within the supply of this coaching strengthens regional collaboration, making certain that knowledge-sharing throughout Caribbean nations results in the event of sturdy, region-specific options. This effort aligns with the broader purpose of enhancing agricultural productiveness and selling meals sovereignty within the Caribbean.
The success of this coaching initiative underscores the significance of continued funding in agricultural schooling and innovation within the Caribbean. Because the area faces growing local weather challenges, the necessity for adaptive and resilient farming practices has by no means been extra pressing.