Grain
Amaranth
Amaranth is popularly known in
Kenya as mchicha in the local language or terere. The crop
is associated with the poor, but that is slowly changing as locals are
realizing the value of the crop. It is grown for its leaves and also for the
grains.
Advantages
of the Amaranthus crop:
- Low
inputs are required for cultivation; these can be grown by the rural poor.
- Easy
to harvest.
- Early
ripening and high seed/grain production
- Extremely
drought tolerant
- High
quality, high in protein (lysine and methionine) and high levels of
vitamins and fiber.
- Grains
are very tasty and can be used raw, boiled, crushed, or ground.
- Other
uses include green leaves as vegetables, amaranth oil extract, and animal
feed.
Grain
Amaranth plant.
Amaranth Cultivation Opportunities
- Seed production: contract farmers produce seeds.
- Animal feed: cultivation of amaranth for animal feed and
manufacturing of animal feed
- In industrial use, squalene is used as an important component of
amaranth oil found in skin cosmetics.
- Lubricants used in pharmaceutical industry and computer
maintenance.
- Manufacture of household cooking oils.
Ecological
Requirements
·
Grows best in loamy
or silt clay soils with good water retention.
·
Soil pH ranges from
4.5 to 8.0.
·
Avoid waterlogging.
·
Optimal
temperatures are 22–30 degrees C. The crop thrives in hot climates.
·
Altitude requires 0
to 2400 m above sea level.
Rainfall/Water
Requirement
·
Grows
well under rain-fed and irrigation. It has deep roots that reach up to 2 meters
in search of water and is therefore drought tolerant.
·
Irrigation
should be stopped 15-20 days before maturity.
·
Tall
varieties are suitable for areas with high rainfall, while the short varieties
are for areas with low rainfall.
Propagation
·
Amaranth is planted by direct sowing or transplanting. The choice of planting
method depends on seed and labor availability and may vary by growing season.
·
The
average seed requirement is 1 kg per acre.
·
In
direct sowing, the plants grow in rows. Make ridges 0.5 to 1.0 cm deep. For short variety-45cm x 10cm/75 x 90cm while the tall
variety-60cm x 20cm
·
Planting
should be done when the soil is waterlogged or moist. Spread the compost along
the furrows and mix it well with the soil so your plants can get the most out
of it.
·
Amaranth seeds were mixed with dry sand or soil in a ratio of 1:10–15 (1 part
seed to 10-15 parts sand or soil, volume ratio) to avoid wastage of seeds and
sow evenly.
·
The seeds require very
little soil cover because if deep planted, germination is delayed, or the seeds
may rot.
·
Ashes are used to scare
away pests that carry the seeds away before the rain.
·
Germination occurs in 3–6
days, depending on soil moisture and planting method.
Fertilizer
application
- Use organic fertilizers to increase yields.
- Use
50 kg of DAP/acre or fertilizer at 6 tons/acre.
- Use
100 kg of DAP per acre on infertile soils. The market prefers organically
grown Amaranth.
Weeding
- Amaranth
grows slowly in the first two weeks after germination, but weeds grow
faster and overtake it if left unattended.
- First
weeding should be done two weeks after seed germination to reduce weed
competition.
- The
second weeding is best done as soon as weeds emerge after plowing (2-3
weeks after the first weeding).
- Do
not use herbicides to control weeds, as amaranth is in the weed
family.
Pests
and diseases
These include defoliants; leaf worms; cutworms;
aphids; flea beetles; weevils
Maturity
and Harvest
- Matures
after 7-8 weeks.
- Early-ripening
(short) varieties mature in 45–60 days; late-ripening (tall) varieties in
70–120 days.
- Average
yields are between 800-1200 kg per acre.
Harvesting
Done at 60-120 days.
Cost of
production per acre
|
Item
|
Cost
Kshs.
|
|
Land lease
|
5,000
|
|
Ploughing
|
3,000
|
|
Cost of seeds
|
2,000
|
|
Farmyard manure
|
1,000
|
|
Planting labor
|
1,000
|
|
Watering
|
6,000
|
|
Watchman for two months at the rate of 3,000/-
|
6,000
|
|
Pest and disease control
|
3,000
|
|
Harvesting
|
3,000
|
|
Transport costs
|
6,000
|
|
Contingency
|
4,000
|
|
GRAND
TOTAL
|
40,000
|
|
Gross
profit analysis
|
|
|
Yields Per acre
|
1,000kgs
|
|
Price per kilogram in Kshs.
|
200
|
|
Gross income in Kshs.
|
200,000
|
|
Less expenditure in Kshs.
|
160,000
|
Assuming
the farmer plants 4 seasons in a year since it is under irrigation, the farmer
can generate up to Kshs. 640,000(USD 6,400) annually.
Grain
Amaranth production can be considered
as a high-value crop just like dragon fruit farming, discussed in earlier
blogs How to make Kshs. 10M per year through Dragon fruit farming in Kenya (modernfarming101kenya.blogspot.com). This is a viable venture that young people and women can engage in to
earn a living. Youths can make use of the ‘Hustler Fund’ promised by our
President to implement such projects.
Really informative!! I love
ReplyDeletethanks Aziza
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