| INTENSIVE PLANTATION AND SCATTERED PLANTATION
THE CAP PROJECT ON CANTALOUPES
With a view to promote intensive plantation in the
Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, the Technical Mission
of The Republic of China (Taiwan) is cooperating with
the Community Achiever Project (CAP) for the Cantaloupe
Program. Organized by CAP, a group of 50 primary
students from Tucker Clarke and Irishtown participate
in the Cantaloupe Project to learn intensive plantation
skills and experience professional farmer's lifestyle.
As a cooperation project between the Taiwan Mission
and a non-governmental civil society, the Cantaloupe
Project is a pioneer program.
Addressing the students at the opening ceremony of
the Cantaloupe Program, Ambassador Wu of the Taiwan
Embassy stressed that farming is a full-time job and
requires professional management. With the comparative
advantages of fertile land and abundant rainfall in
this Federation, Ambassador Wu assured the attendees
that the Taiwan Embassy shall spare no effort to encourage
and assist young farmers in devoting their careers
to a profitable future in agriculture through scholarship
and loan programs.
Cantaloupe, one of the species of cucumis melo L.
family, is congruous with the sunny weather and lose
sandy earth in St. Kitts, as pointed out by Mr. Huesh,
Chief of the mission. Chief Huesh explained the advantage
of intensive plantation and letting cantaloupe climb
vertically on sticks instead of scattering cantaloupe
seedlings over the ground. The missions technician,
Mr. Huang Chien Cheng, taught students to plow land
and to embed irrigation dipping pipes and fertilizer
before covering the whole thing with plastic sheeting.
Then, in the span of about 65 to 70 days, CAP Director
Ms. Victoria Bacum, her partner Mr. Sydney Berkeley
and volunteer Ms. Alice Plichtaa continued to work
with students to care for the cantaloupes until they
grew bore fruit. Cap staff and students are enjoying
the steady, visible growth of their cantaloupes.
As part of the project, students have to demonstrate
their labor, such as strapping each knot of newly
grown stems each day and extirpating unnecessary branches
and buds so as to concentrate nutrients for the fruits.
Mr. Berkeley described how thrilled he was when guiding
students to carefully tie stems to sticks while being
cautious not to break young and fragile stems. Proper
irrigation, fertilization, daily branch and bud care,
and disease prevention techniques are key factors
for successful cantaloupe plantation.
Farmers in this Federation have gotten used to scattered
plantation and rain-fed agriculture, which is uneconomical
and inefficient. Intensive plantation results, in
terms of fruit-bearing, have proven to exceed scattered
plantation at the rate of 20 to 1. The Taiwan Mission
and CAP student project on cantaloupe aims to educate
a new generation of farmers with skills and management
techniques worthy to prove that intensive farming
is far more profitable than scattered farming. We
also want to alert St. Kitts and Nevis policy-makers
of the need to further assist farmers in improving
their competitiveness in this critical stage of global
food crisis.
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