spot_img
28.4 C
Philippines
Sunday, November 24, 2024

KSK farmer exhibits resilience

Les Buena Lee is a farmer-graduate of SM Foundation’s Kabalikat sa Kabuhayan (KSK) program Batch 147 in Tacloban.

SUCCESSFUL FARMER. KSK farmer Les Buena Lee takes pride in his Chinese cabbage crops at his  rooftop based urban garden  to adapt during the ECQ in Tacloban.

Not only has he used his knowledge to improve his life, he is also a great example of resilience.

- Advertisement -

Through the knowledge he acquired from the program, Les was able to expand his agri-production, enabling him to supply fresh produce, high value crops such as Chinese cabbage, kangkong, bell pepper, and sweet pepper, to a number of restaurants and big grocery stores in Samar.

“After my KSK training, my harvest became bountiful, reason I had more customer at the west market, restaurants and supermarkets,” Les said.

Misfortune struck when typhoon Ursula hit the country in December 2019. Les’ standing crop and all his farm inputs (seedlings, his formulation of organic pesticides and fertilizers and farm materials) were wiped out.

With his savings from previous harvests, Les traveled all the way to Manila to buy seedlings and other farm inputs to start anew.

However, upon his return home to Tacloban, the enhanced community quarantine (ECQ) was imposed throughout the country.

Knowing that this will affect his agri-enterprise, he thought of ways to make the lockdown less stressful and potentially profitable for him and his parents.

The entrepreneurial spirit in Les prodded him to convert the rooftop of his parent’s four-story lodging house in Tacloban into a container-urban garden. Through this, he was able to supply food for his family, friends, and other relatives during the ECQ.

Les also shares his knowledge on agricultural technologies and urban farming with his community and advocates agribusiness as an alternative livelihood.

According to him, it’s better to start small and just grow their farms rather than starting with a big farm right away running the risk of mismanagement.

Kabalikat Sa Kabuhayan (KSK) is SMFI’s Social Good program focusing on sustainable agriculture. The program aims to uplift the lives of Filipinos in grassroots communities through sustainable agriculture, technology transfer, product development, and farm-market linkage.

To date, the program has trained more than 26,700 farmers, SMFI said in a statement.

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles