COCONUT TREE CLIMBING
Keshavan returned to Pattambi two years ago after spending 17
years in the Gulf and soon realised that life wasn’t going to be a cakewalk. He
tried his luck in business, drove an autorickshaw, but gave up both, for lack
of regular income. Then, he hit up on a ‘lofty’ idea.Keshavan underwent a
week-long training in machine-assisted coconut-tree climbing under the ‘Friends
of coconut trees’ scheme of the Coconut Development Board at the People’s
Service Society in Dhoni. His wife, Rajitha, and her sister Lakshmi followed
suit. “We found that there was none to pluck coconuts. The traditional climbers
have vanished, and their next generation is not interested in the occupation,
which has stigma and risk associated with it,” he says.
Rajitha says the decision was easy for her since she hails from
a farmers’ family at Varode near Ottappalam.“We have coconut trees in our farm
but there are very few coconut pluckers. Even for our cooking we have to go
without coconut though there are plenty of trees. This gave me the idea of
learning coconut-tree climbing using machines.”Lakshmi, whose husband is in the
Gulf, says the training made her self-reliant. “Now I can pluck coconut from my
garden. There is no strain,” she says.The other youngsters in the training
camp, Baiju of Nemmara and Sharafudeen of Nattukal, are traditional climbers.
However, they welcome mechanisation, through which they earn more and climb up
to 100 coconut trees daily as against the 60 manually. The risk is also less
while using the machine.
Prof. John Kurakar
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