Denn's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Denn's Profile › Denn's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 (of 78 pages)
colossus2:this picture was taken in edo state...not ibadan |
clean...cleaner than most tokunbos on NL. honest seller. cheers |
bore hole now working yipeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee |
It is possible. Theoretically, if you plant x number of crops that will give you a guaranteed output of 10000 balls this week and plant the same number of crops the following week etc, you will be able to harvest weekly assuming you have irrigation facilities. That implies having 52 planting cycles in a year. Watermelon is around 90 days plus or minus. That is 12 weeks. You can re-plant the land by the 14th week assuming ploughing and tilling takes place immediately. You are talking about a mega-super-scale farm. You will own tractors, ploughs, delivery vans, processing centres, labour with computer assisted work plan scheduling and very strict farm management practice. 100 hectarces of full cultivation 5 to 10 Massey Ferguson tractors each 120 HP A large office building to handle logistics. 5 delivery vehicles 2.5 tons each 10 industrial bore hokes A Cessna aeroplane for spraying pesticides A landing strip Preservation room Ripening room 20 farm hands 5 farm managers 1 admin officer The list goes on |
julibaba:Sure. Dry season farming is where the money is. The northern farmers have identified this secret years ago. |
aminucyrus:My greenhouse Oga. I remain loyal. Thanks sir |
Johnnyessence:My farm is in Ogun state. Very good you are doing your research. You can read jasper's thread... Thanks sir |
shema101:Thanks sir. I will respond to the mail now |
ogb5:I appreciate criticism but not judgement. First, your comments are full of assumptions. I will shed more light. 1. I made beds and not ridges. I planned to do furrow irrigation and commissioned a bore hole chap. I could not have known from the onset that the guy would mess up. Beds are best for vegwtables. This is an internationally accepted practice. If I planted on bare soil, how would I have irrigated? 2. Top dressing fertilizer for cucumber is NPK 15.15.15. At least, jasper and co have been adherents of this. If you say the nitrogen in 15.15.15 is too much, what would you say about 46.0.0? I had big fruits because of the seed variant I planted. In fact my fruits are still relatively small compared to her 'sisters' on Jasper's farm. In summary, I really am more confused with your fertilizer analysis. Nitrogen leached away and still too much? 3. The bore hole guy was well referenced. He dug the bore hole in a friend's place. How did you know he was learning on the way? Where you there? The bore hole man collected 100% of funds....with an extra N50,000 water bill which I paid for. Who is unfair? Why would you assume his cost was the cheapest? 4. My land is bigger than 2 acres. Remember I still have water melon, bell pepper, chilli pepper, musk melon, tomatoes and maize. In addition, I still have an extra 5 acres on fallow. Another assumption. 5. You want me to rent land and wait for rain. Its a good advise but I prefer to own my land, have facilities for all year round farming and produce as efficiently as possible. If everyone farms during rainy season, who will provide the fresh fruits during dry season? I don't need 20 acres of rain fed land when I can have 10 acres of fully irrigated farm with a drip fed greenhouse. This is 2015. Remember I was able to sell despite the flaws in my fruits....because supply was limited. If I had those flaws during full rainy season planting, I would have ate all the cucumbers my self. In fact, I would be making recipes on cucumber squash, cucumber smoothies and cucumber flavoured pounded yam in the food section by now. Once again, I appreciate your comments. |
smallblow:I am not at liberty to disclose her username. Remember, she is silent on certain matters. |
Pavore9:Thanks boss...great resource |
Austin234:Answers. 1. No. I have not recouped as most expense was capital in nature. Seven figures currently. Revenue is still N200k. If I look at only the variable costs of the cucumber project, I made a positive contribution. 2. Advice has been free and pro bono. I cannot afford to have 'experts' on my payroll for now. 3. I sold over 100 bags of cucumbers. Farming is not easy to plot on a graph especially when there is a learning curve involved. |
sunboy:Control. Control most variables necessary for optimum growth. Then product differentiation. I will be able to sell quality to the higher end markets. |
sunboy:2 acres approximately |
At the moment, we are expecting sales from our watermelons. Hopefully, we would sell during the Muslim fast. Wonderful timing. Bell peppers and tomatoes coming up.... We are planting white maize this week. This is not for sale but to be harvested, shelled and stored as food for my farm hands next year. Contributions, advice, criticisms, abuses etc are welcome. I AM STILL A LEARNER |
Much appreciation to every single person that has contributed to helping me. I look back and I always thank God for this NL agric forum. World1 Jethro Soloxam Aminucyrus Olamimo Sedulus Farmtech Jasper7 Also, some silent Nairalanders who will not comment or talk online but just read....silent but mighty....they discreetly add you on WhatsApp and give advice...I thank you To my best farm neighbour....a female banker with a fanatical craze for agriculture... My support in times of dire straits. When I wanted to dust my CV and dump the whole process, she promised to support....and she did....thanks |
My greenhouse plan. I designed it myself using a CAD software. I have done some research on cost saving techniques in construction of greenhouses. I have a Nairalander, an angel in Jos, who has a magnificent prototype. Some of my inspiration comes from his greenhouses. He is a big timer. Copyright. All rights reserved.
|
What will I do differently? I intend to complete the bore hole project. I have hired a new bore hole contractor who is trying to repair the bore hole at the moment. I will complete my irrigation project. Just a few things remaining . I will build a greenhouse for my cucumbers. I will source for new markets. Those market women are not from this world when it comes to haggling. I will improve my process using the learning points I have noticed |
I did not plant only cucumbers. I planted the following crops in addition: Water melon Bell peppers Tomatoes Cabbages Carrots Chilli pepper Muskmelon I got my seeds for the above crops from Soloxam. His delivery was impeccable and he also gave me the muskmelon seeds as a gift. My thanks to him too. My carrots and cabbages did not grow at all. I will write more about these later. I got my cucumber seeds from 'the source'. |
So many lessons learnt. The revenue was way small and not comparable to my salary as a banker. Could I have made more? Yes. Will I still do cucumbers? Yes. |
In total, I sold over 100 bags of cucumber despite the fuel scarcity and my attendant problems. I could have sold twice easily if I was problem free. I made a little over N200,000 as revenue before expenses. |
My harvests kept coming in sacks. I had the capacity to sell 50 sacks a week. I wasn't however selling that much because of the problems I listed above. There was a woman who wanted to play a fast one on me. She ordered for 10 sacks and I went to deliver. When I got there, she started rambling about how the cucumbers were not selling due to the problems noticed. She now said she would pay only N1000 per sack. It was a Sunday evening. There was petrol scarcity. I bought fuel at N250 per liter just to fulfill that order. I was annoyed. I told her I was not selling and drove off. She tried to call me back but I didn't pick. I looked for the nearest bush and dumped the 10 bags. The next day, her friend called me and told me to bring at our earlier agreed price. We then resumed business. Some people might term my action as irrational but it makes perfect business sense. If I had sold at N1000, then she would have kept buying at N1000 from me through the season. I lost ten bags but retained my cash flow.
|
I knew the reasons for the challenges. Bitter taste was as a result of low water absorption by the plants. In fact, its a miracle they survived. The uneven colour was as a result of the non staking. |
My customers kept complaining but there was little I could do. The partial staking I did at the late stage helped...but it was too little, too late. They kept buying however but at a discount.
|
I got calls from my customers....two main complaints. The colour The taste. But I had an advantage. My cucumbers were early and big. They were able to sell off the 5 sacks despite the complaints. I got an order for 10 sacks. Went back to the farm and got 15 bags... Delivered and made my money. |
Not perturbed, I took some to my market locations and gave samples to my customers. They were amazed at the sizes. I got orders for delivery next morning. I went back to the farm and harvested 5 sacks. Took the sacks to the market and made my cool first N10,000. |
Soon the fruits were big enough for the market... I harvested one and took a bite...for quality control ![]() The lower portions tasted heavenly...like manna. There was a burst of freshness and life all at the same time. However, the parts close to the stalk had a bitter taste...peeling the skin solved the bitter taste....but who peels cucumbers ? Those boys are eaten raw- skin to skin. Secondly, the fruits on the ground had a non-uniform colour. The side on the floor was lighter. |
Soon the fruits became bigger...and bigger...and longer. I had giant sized cucumbers. They were the biggest I have ever seen...and long. But I had a challenge...a serious challenge. The cucumbers were turning light and almost yellow on the sides placed on the soil. I tried to correct this anomaly by using small stakes with ropes intertwined. This helped only a little
|
We could have at least staked. However, we had around 250 long beds (each bed approximately 5 metres long) of cucumber plants. By our estimates, we would have needed over 1000 bamboo plants for the staking. That would imply either buying ( no fund) or cutting. Cutting would have been extremely tasking. Nearest bamboo shrub was some kilometres away. So I took the risk and did not stake. Upon further consultation, I decided to increase my pesticide application routines. The plants grew and soon covered the soil. Flowering and fruiting began. I had bees visiting in the mornings ( a lot of bees) so pesticides were applied in the evening. Rain came and went as it pleased....like a government worker. |
Agricexpert:Thanks |
abuyuunus:Now |
FarmTech:Thanks sir |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 (of 78 pages)

