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Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria - Agriculture - Nairaland

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Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by maxipharo(m): 1:21am On Jul 13, 2018
Backyard farming in Nigeria is still at the in fact stage due to the enactive approach to growing crops and rearing of animals within the neighbourhood. Increased urbanization and rising food prices are pushing more people into poverty, increasing their vulnerability to insecurity and malnutrition. Backyard farming can play a very big role in alleviating food insecurity and poverty in Nigeria by boasting local and household food production.
What is backyard farming?
Backyard farming refers to a mini or micro landscape farm, usually within a person’s neighbourhood or backyard just for personal consumption, it can either be crop or livestock farm, with the main objective been to produce food crops and rear animals for family/personal consumption.
Benefits of backyard farming
Nutrient value
It is impossible to know or to be sure of the quality of food crops one buys from the market. Fresh, homegrown food crops have higher nutrient value and superior flavor, compare to the ones gotten from the market. Most produce bought from the market are less nutritious because of the form of preservation, pesticides, and fertilizer used reduces the essential nutrients that are meant to be derived from them. Most crops especially vegetables start losing their nutrients immediately after harvest.
It saves cost
Easy access to food crops and meat from your backyard saves money at the market which can be diverted into other things. Backyard farming gives the comfort of growing and rearing animal right from your backyard which is way cheaper than purchasing from the market.
Health safety
Backyard farm gives you the opportunity to keep an eye on most of the things you consume. You harvest food crops and meat from your backyard free from toxins and other harmful pesticides and fertilizers which are harmful to the body.
All Year Round food/meat
Backyard farm gives room for round the year food crop production as different types of food crop can be grown, likewise, animals can be reared.
It serves as a means of exercise
Harvesting, feeding or weeding of your backyard farming also serve as a way of keeping fit, it also helps to also detoxify the mind.
How to utilize your backyard for farming
Vegetables
starting a backyard vegetable farm is one of the simplest form of farming. Vegetables are very suitable for backyard farming because they grow very fast in almost all the soils.
Turkey Rearing
Unlike chickens and other birds, turkeys are bigger birds that are usually allowed to move freely within a confined area for safety purposes.
Rabbits
Rabbit does not compete with humans for food, as kitchen leftovers, cut grasses and formulated or compounded feed can sustain them. Rabbit keeping does not require much capital for investment and maintenance. As little space is needed.
Sheep and Goat
Sheep and goat are a good source of protein, they don’t require huge capital to set up, they feed on grasses and kitchen waste. This also serves as a source of income for the family, because the sheep and goat can still be sold.
Fish farming
As the population is increasing and protein needs are far surpassing the available supply. Before now, people think it hard to rear fish at your backyard, but in recent time fish farmers can comfortably rear fish at your backyard. All you need to get started is a space, tanks or ponds, fingerlings and fish feeds e.t.c.
Grasscutter Farming
In recent times, it is now much easier to breed grass cutters in cages, unlike when hunters would have to go hunting for grass cutters.
Banana and Plantain Plantation
There is a high demand for ripe banana and ripe and unripe plantain both within and outside Nigeria. You can convert any unused land at your disposal into a banana or plantain farm.
Yam farming
Yam is another staple food that is in high demand in Nigeria. You can start a small or medium scale yam farming at your depending on the availability of land.
Spice Cultivating
There is a high demand for spices like curry, thyme, scent leaves, nutmeg. You can cultivate these spices, dry and package them for sale.
Quail Farming
You can start a quail farm business with as little as N30, 000. You can earn passive income from selling the quail birds and supplying quail eggs.
Snail farming.
Snail meat can be used as a healthy alternative to red meat. Those people suffering from health issues or those who are on a diet can opt for snail meat. Snails require less start-up capital and less space.
Red Pepper: Red pepper farming is easy to set up. That’s because red pepper grows very fast in any kind of soil. They are rich in potassium, riboflavin, vitamins A, B6 and C. They do well in deep containers, pots, and drums.
Maize: Maize is easier to plant because it requires is a small space and a few maize seeds depending on the size of the farm. It works best with adequate sunlight and good water supply.
Tomatoes: Nothing compares to eating a perfectly ripe home-grown tomato fresh within minutes of harvest. With a good fertile soil, adequate water supply, and sunlight, tomatoes will do well. They can be grown in containers, polythene bags, pots, and drum.

Conclusion: backyard farming serves as an effective tool for increasing food production and alleviating poverty in Nigeria.
http://www.agricincome.com/backyard-farming/

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Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by MANNABBQGRILLS: 1:22am On Jul 13, 2018
This is a very very good way to go.
We do this too.
For the ENTREPRENEURS among us,
May God bless our hustles.

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Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by Pavore9: 6:11am On Jul 13, 2018
Growing up in Lagos, we rarely bought bitter leaf, uha, ugu, scent leaf and Plantain as we had them on our property. Plantain, palm oil and ukwa (breadfruit) were also regularly sent to us from our farms in the village as it was loaded in trucks that used to transport drums of palm oil to Lagos for sale.

That is why till this day, I feel "somehow" buying plantain as my mind is kind of stuck to my childhood experience of harvesting plantain in our compound! cheesy
Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by maxipharo(m): 10:17am On Jul 13, 2018
Nice one
Pavore9:
Growing up in Lagos, we rarely bought bitter leaf, uha, ugu, scent leaf and Plantain as we had them on our property. Plantain, palm oil and ukwa (breadfruit) were also regularly sent to us from our farms in the village as it was loaded in trucks that used to transport drums of palm oil to Lagos for sale.

That is why till this day, I feel "somehow" buying plantain as my mind is kind of stuck to my childhood experience of harvesting plantain in our compound! cheesy
Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by maxipharo(m): 10:17am On Jul 13, 2018
Nice one
Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by Kalusam(m): 10:13am On Jul 25, 2018
Pavore9:
Growing up in Lagos, we rarely bought bitter leaf, uha, ugu, scent leaf and Plantain as we had them on our property. Plantain, palm oil and ukwa (breadfruit) were also regularly sent to us from our farms in the village as it was loaded in trucks that used to transport drums of palm oil to Lagos for sale.

That is why till this day, I feel "somehow" buying plantain as my mind is kind of stuck to my childhood experience of harvesting plantain in our compound! cheesy
Same here, we had virtually everything on our backyard then...tomato, peppers, scent leaf, bitter leaf, plantains, oranges, avocados, pawpaw, pineapple, sour sop...in fact many years after leaving home, I found it very hard to ever buy some of these things!
Re: Backyard Farming In Nigeria: A Way Of Alleviating Poverty In Nigeria by jidestroud(m): 10:48pm On Jul 30, 2018
Quite an article and i really do appreciate it but, do you really think backyard farming as you rightly put it is also a tool in alleviating food insecurity/Poverty in Nigeria? I beg to differ (my opinions anyways). Backyard farming to me tends more to the health conscious and eating lifestyle than being one of the tools to eradicating poverty in the very least. A few questions I keep asking myself; how does my garden translate to profit making if I grow solely for my kitchen? How does it reduce the poverty level of a home if it doesn't translate to money at the end of the day?
One of the major issues I have against this government is wanting people to go back to farming yet, leaves everyone who decides to go into it to find his or own market with little or no assistance. Backyard farming as a poverty alleviation tool is If I can in the very least make profit out of it and not just growing what I eat. Then again, the argument becomes if I can grow what I eat, it helps in saving cost.

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