Yesterday (March 26, 2022) was a historical and memorable occasion as we had the launch of HOCO Farming at Shiratoki.
Shiratoki is a village in the Zari Jamani region of Yavatmal district in Maharashtra. What made it truly memorable was that the 65 families in this remote village came together to make history. Forty farmers from the Kolam tribe broke silos and pooled 225 acres of land for Holistic Collective (HOCO) Farming.
I am proud to be a part of this fine example of Design Thinking in action. The first aspect was that they had broken the Rembrandt Silos by coming together. This requires all the farmers to have boundaryless thinking.
The second remarkable aspect was that they questioned assumptions. Thus far, they have practiced rain-fed agriculture that limited their produce to just a few crops a year. Average productivity resulting in meagre incomes had been the norm. This was now broken. They are now considering forty types of Kharif crops, Rabi and summer crops – all to be grown on the 225 acres of land with the direct involvement of 40 farmers.
This took dedicated and consistent effort by all the stakeholders. Gramin Samassya Mukti Trust, supported by Mission Samriddhi, was continuously supporting the seed that was collectively sown in conjunction with the farmers themselves. The seeds sprouted in two years. In the meanwhile, 18 farm ponds of 30m by 30m by 3m in size, many recharge pits, hundreds of meters of CCTs, farm bunds and dug wells are taking concrete shape, again with the direct involvement of the farmers.
Agriculture depends on effective water management. The tribal farmers saw the big picture (we call it L0) by mapping the terrain and then designing 18 water ponds of 100ft by 100ft by 10ft that are being dug using five JCBs. Bhartiya Jain Sangh supported in designing the excavation operation and loaning the JCBs. The design team has been meeting every week on Mondays with 10 experts to plan and execute the activities. I am happy to note that the government is playing an active role.
HOCO Farming! Holistic because it integrates Personal, Social, Economic, Ecological and Institutional Development (the 40 farmers have formed an FPO and selected a 10-member Board of Directors). And of course, Collective in its truest sense wherein all the stakeholders are coming together aligned to the purity in this purpose.
This launch is proof that going beyond limiting beliefs, collaboration, co-creation and innovation is the way forward. I am confident that this experiment will put Shiratoki village on the global map where people from different corners will come to visit, stay and understand the concepts of HOCO Farming.
#MissionSamriddhi #designthinking #ruralindia
