Show Media Item - Gambia’s
cashewnut production will rise to 5,000 metric tons by 2010 - ACA Gambia
boss
Gambia’s cashew nut production will rise from 10,000 metric to 15,000 tons by the end of 2012 -say ACA Gambia boss.
Ram Mohan, head of the African Cashew Alliance for the Gambia National
Committee, has disclosed that The Gambia’s raw cashew nut production is expected
to increase up between ten thousand to fifteen thousand (1000--15000) metric tons by the end of cashew nut season 2012.
He disclose this report during the recent concluded workshop on the importance of cashew nut production to the cashew nut farmers at the Baobab hotel in the Gambia.
ACA is a major industry body that promotes the
African cashew sector from production to consumption, and aims at helping
the cashew stakeholders to capitalize on the sector’s potential for economic
growth and employment.
The US embassy representative to The Gambia, told the participants that the US Department of State for Agriculture along with IRD, funded
the demonetization project to support capacity building in the cashew sector.
Since then, he went on, IRD has been providing training for farmers with the
goal of maximizing the income and capacity of 50,000 cashew farmers and their
families, indirectly benefiting an estimated 350,000 people. “To stress the
United States government’s efforts to continue in supporting this rapidly
growing crop in Africa, USAID has recently given the ACA U$146,000 to improve
access to finance for cashew businesses in the region,” he added.
Other participants highlighted some of the constraints that they encountered in cashew nut production and farming that includes lack of fencing for young cashew farm plantation ,cutting immature cashew fruit or nut by some illegal dealers and lack of storage facility with bush fire are their main problems.
The Gambia cashew nut farmers pledge to share their knowledge with prospect cashew farmers the benefit of the cashew farming both for cash and food security
How To Grow Cashew Trees, Nuts And Apples
Growing cashews is the
easy part. Cashew trees grow like weeds. Roasting cashews, now there's a challenge...
what do cashew plants
look like and how and where do cashew trees grow?
What Do Cashew Plants Look Like?
cashew tree
Cashew trees are attractive trees with large leaves and pretty, pink
flowers.
Cashews, as you know
them, are nuts. But the cashew nut is not the only fruit of the cashew trees.
Or rather, the cashew nut is only a part of the cashew fruit.
The other part is called the
cashew apple. (Although pear would suit it much better...) And if I wanted
to be super accurate then I'd have to point out that the cashew apple is
actually the swollen stem of the fruit.
Anyway, you can see some
ripe cashew apples in the picture.
The cashew apple looks very attractive with its red cheeks. It's high in Vitamin
C, refreshing, very juicy, but a bit acidic. And it leaves a furry feeling in
your mouth...
I use it together with
other fruit in juices or blended into fruit yogurt etc. It's also very nice
when dried. In fact, I grow cashew trees more for the apples than for the
nuts...
The cashew nut is inside the funny looking, kidney shaped shell that is
attached to the bottom of the cashew apple. Also inside that shell is a very
nasty, caustic liquid that causes severe burns, so be careful when handling it.
More on processing and shelling cashews later.
Where Can You Grow Cashew Trees?
You can grow cashew trees
anywhere in the wet/dry tropics. The
main producers of cashew nuts are Brazil, India, Vietnam, Africa (Tanzania and
Mozambique) and South East Asia.
Day temperatures for
growing cashews should not drop below
10°C (50F), and cashew trees handle temperatures above 40°C (105F) well. An
average day temperature of around 25°C (77F) is ideal.
As long as they have some
water cashew trees grow like weeds. They are fairly draught resistant and grow
well even on marginal soils where other fruit trees would fail. The best soils
for growing cashews are sandy soils.
Growing Cashew Trees
Wild birds and bats are
attracted to cashew apples. Especially the fruit bats carry them off and drop
the left overs, and that's how I ended up with cashew trees in my garden. I
didn't plant them, the bats did.
The cashew tree in the
picture is on the very edge of my garden. It doesn't get much water, it never
saw any fertilizer, and it's as healthy as they come.
It's three years old and
it's fruiting. (Grafted cashew trees can fruit within 18 months!)
What can I say, in my
experience growing cashews is super easy...
However, since not everybody
has bats to plant their cashew trees for them...
How To Plant Cashew Trees
Fresh seeds germinate
readily, so if you know of a cashew tree in your
area, or have another way of getting hold of fresh seeds (that's the whole thing,
shell and all, not just the nut!), you can grow cashew trees from seed. But be
aware that cashew seeds don't grow true to type, meaning, the plant you get is
not identical to the parent. (It may not fruit as much or taste as nice.)
Some fruit tree nurseries
stock seedling or grafted trees. Commercial growers usually propagate their
own. If you have a grower in the area you may be able to buy stock of him.
If you want to grow your
cashew trees from seeds you can start them in pots or put them straight in the
ground. Keep them moist and they should sprout within four or five days.
Best planting time? When you can get hold of fresh seed. The sooner you plant it,
the better.
Select a well drained
spot (cashew trees don't like wet feet or heavy clay soils), preferably a place
that has some protection from strong winds.
Mature trees need about
10 metres distance between them, and they grow to 12 metres tall.
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