Now what to do with all these seeds? Fortunately, SNET has MotiRam supervising the landscaping and gardening for Fire Mountain Retreat Center who has many years experience of agriculture and farming in the Tansa Valley.
Based on Dr. Bhore’s suggestions, we bought 5000+ plastic bags, soil, and organic matter which we had our staff fill all of these bags for seeds. For over four weeks, our staff filled and planted these precious seeds.
Ananda and Shuresh filling the 5000+ plastic bags.
Once the seedlings started popping up out of the soil, we started feeling protective of them. An occasional cow was still finding away into our compound through our plastic fence. Last year we had cows coming into the compound on an almost daily basis. We knew we had to do something to keep them out this year but we didn’t really have a budget for building a fence out of stone or brick. So we tried something new: we bought enough shade netting to cover the entire boundary. And it worked: only two or three cows figured out that they could break their way through the thin veil of plastic.
The drumstick plants shot out of the ground quickly and strongly but the papaya were very slow to emerge. We were a little concerned that we might lose all those papaya seeds. We were aiming for a mid-June plant give-away and had begun to tell our neighbors to get their holes ready to receive the plants. We certainly wanted to have viable seedlings available for the give away.
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