Lâm Đồng sericulture farmers find livelihoods steady
LÂM ĐỒNG — Increasing the sericulture area is optimal for restructuring agriculture in Lâm Đồng Province since it provides farmers with a steady income, local officials said.
Breeding silkworms in Lâm Đồng Province’s Đam Rông District. — VNA/VNS Photo Đặng Tuấn
The Tây Nguyên (Central Highlands) province has around 14,000 sericulture farming households who have total 6,800ha of mulberry, or nearly 70 per cent of the country’s total, according to the province’s Department of Agriculture and Rural Development.
Lâm Đồng produces around 9,000 tonnes of silkworm cocoons a year to produce nearly 1,200 tonnes of silk.
K’ Tiêu, a Cơ Ho ethnic minority in Lâm Hà District’s Đinh Văn Town, has turned his 4,000sq.m rice field and 2,000sq.m coffee plantation into mulberry farms to breed silk worms.
He earns more than VNĐ12 million (US$517) a month from selling cocoons, he said.
“Growing mulberry and breeding silk worms do not need much investment or tending like coffee and rice, and they can be harvested in a short time.”
Đinh Văn Town has favourable natural conditions for sericulture, and so local authorities have provided training to farmers and financial support to grow mulberry and breed silkworms.
A 1,000sq.m mulberry farm can provide enough leaves for breeding silkworms hatched from one box of eggs containing 15-25 grams of the eggs, enough to produce 50kg of cocoon.
It takes around 24 days from hatching to producing cocoons.
K’Bin, deputy chairman of the town's Farmers Association, said previously most Cơ Ho people used to grow rice and coffee, but Đinh Văn’s soil is not suitable for coffee and only one rice crop could be grown a year.
“With the State’s support in terms of farming techniques and seedlings, many Cơ Ho people have abandoned coffee and rice, and switched to growing mulberry and breeding silkworms.”
Nearly 1,000 Cơ Ho households have made the switch.
In Di Linh District, one of the province’s largest mulberry growing areas, many ethnic minority households have steady incomes from breeding silkworms.
K’ Xuyên, an agricultural official in the district’s Gia Nghĩa Commune, said the commune has sought economic development for ethnic minority areas in recent years by focusing on sericulture.
“Sericulture [provides an] income year round. The income enables families to plant long-term crops and breed animals.”
The commune has hundreds of ethnic minority households growing mulberry and breeding silkworms on an area of 200ha, he said.
Silk processors now buy cocoons at VNĐ130,000-150,000 ($5.6-6.5) per kilogramme and farmers earn VNĐ30,000-50,000 per kilogramme, according to agricultural officials.
Under the five-year plan for sericulture it unveiled in June, the province aims to have 9,500-10,000ha under mulberry, including 8,100-8,500ha of new and hybrid trees with high yields, by 2023.
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