Radel Matibag is a young tenant farmer who was sent to Japan to learn about cultivating fruit trees. He’s currently working towards tending his own citrus fruit tree farm.
Radel Matibag, 25, from Brgy. San Isidro in Candelaria, Quezon is one such farmer. Matibag grew up in the fields. The son of tenant farmers, he has seen firsthand the monetary opportunity farming can bring. Now a tenant farmer himself, he currently grows rice, coconut, bananas, and vegetables like okra on a medium scale. The rice is grown on almost two hectares of land. The coconut and bananas are intercropped on three hectares, while the bananas occupy ¼ ha.
A LEADER IN THE MAKING
His interest in continually improving his craft caught the eye of local mentors. He joined the 4H Club, an international youth organization aimed at equipping young people with skills gained from real-life experiences, and was elected municipal 4H president.
In 2017, he attended the4-H Leadership and Young Farmers' Program: Binhi ng Pag-asa Summit, a leadership training seminar organized by the Agricultural Training Institute (ATI). “They taught us how to make fertilizers and how to align your product with your market,” he narrates in Tagalog. “They also taught us leadership skills.”
His enthusiasm for learning new things and his willingness to apply them on the farm led to his being encouraged to apply for what is called the Young Filipino Farmer Leaders Training Program in the Philippines and the ASEAN Young Farmer Leaders Training Program in Japan. Accepted applicants will be sent to Japan for 11 months to work in a farm that produced the commodity of their choice. Participating countries include the Philippines, Indonesia, and Thailand.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May - June 2021-Ausgabe von Agriculture.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May - June 2021-Ausgabe von Agriculture.
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