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Growing Organic Sweet Potatoes in Costa Rica – P1/2 (In Spanish)
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Today’s Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
will be presented
in Spanish,
with subtitles in Arabic,
Aulacese (Vietnamese),
Chinese, English,
French, German,
Indonesian, Italian,
Japanese, Korean,
Malay, Mongolian,
Persian, Portuguese, ,
Russian, Spanish
and Thai.
Halo, good friends and
welcome to our program.
Organic supermarkets
are proliferating
in Costa Rica
and around the world.
This growth is occurring
in response to
the high public interest
in organic products, due to
a new consciousness
that links the health
of the body
with that of the planet.
To supply such markets,
more and more farmers
are growing organic crops.
To learn about
these farmers and
the organic farming process
we’ll examine
in a two-part series
the cultivation
of the sweet potato
in Costa Rica.
This vegetable is
a marvel of nature
that reflects the richness
of Earth’s bounty.
Did you know
that the sweet potato
was first grown
in Central America
and then spread
throughout the world
mainly in the 17th
and 18th centuries?
Corn, tomatoes,
and potatoes
have been the Americas’
main contributions
to the global diet.
Sweet potatoes are tubers
that are rich in nutrients
and are a wonderful food
for all ages.
They are ideal for babies
beginning to
consume vegetables.
They have
a sweet, smooth flavor
that makes them
beloved by infants,
but they are also
easily digested and thus
prepare little ones
for more complex foods.
The sweet potato
has many vitamins,
because of the color it has.
This color, a color
close to orange, that is
a very valuable thing,
because the vegetables
or fruits we eat,
the more orange color
they have, the more rich
they are in the vitamins
that we need, because
nowadays there is a big
problem with blood sugar
and diabetes in the world
and that is due to
a lack of carotene.
Let’s now meet
María Eugenia
and Eliecer Rodríguez.
The farming couple
enjoys growing
organic sweet potatoes
and other splendid
organic produce.
When you cultivate
the sweet potato,
what do you feel?
Do you feel
that you’re collaborating
with the environment?
Yes, that’s what we feel
with all the crops,
because for several years
we have been
taking care of the land.
We do a lot of things
to avoid the erosion
of the soil and also
make many compost walls
in order to merge
the organic material
into the soil.
How did you start
with organic crops?
It was because in 1994
a Japanese man came
to present organic
agriculture nationwide,
sort of a pilot program.
And then I belong to
an organization of women
and we looked for
the Japanese man
so he would teach us
how to do bokashi,
(organic fertilizer),
compost and foliar
and all that.
And that was when
my husband got interested.
He used to cultivate
in the traditional way.
He used to do
the entire process
with chemicals
and when he noticed that
the organic agriculture
did work, he decided
to change to this system,
because he said that
he was already worried
about picking up cabbage
full of chemicals
and toxic things,
with toxic substances and
taking that to the family.
So he started to change
the way he cultivated
towards organic agriculture.
We had been
having problems already
using chemical products.
By then, I had had
a sort of toxic reaction
or more like
a strong toxic reaction.
That made me think
that I had to change
to another type of
agriculture, meaning not
using chemical products.
In those days,
I´m talking around
the years 1995-1996,
I started to hear about
organic agriculture.
Organic farming,
in order to be considered
as such, requires following
a series of specific rules,
the first and foremost
of which is to avoid
the use of herbicides,
insecticides and
artificial fertilizers.
An organic crop is one
that is planted in soil
that is enriched
with organic materials.
Flowers, weeds
and insects in the field
are considered
the allies of humans.
Thus, organic farming is
a sustainable,
environmentally-friendly
process that
reflects compassion
for all sentient beings.
Ms. María Eugenia, I see
that here in the middle of
the cabbage crops, and
the sweet potato crops
there are a lot flowers.
Why is that?
The first Sunday
of each month
we have a fair,
and we are visited
by a lot of people,
so the people come
to see the plants.
And those flowers,
especially women,
we like them a lot,
but also the flowers
have many functions.
For example,
they help with pollination,
because many insects
arrive and go
from here to the crops,
and also the insects are
distracted by the flowers
and do not eat the crops.
At the same time
one changes from
chemicals to sustainable,
organic agriculture
and also changes
many ways of thinking
to the view that the soil is
always part of the existence
of human beings
and it is not for us
to exploit for a while
and nothing else.
And then, one starts
to love the Earth,
starts to love the insects,
starts to love everything
around us, which is
the most important thing
in this type of agriculture.
If one as a farmer
in the past thought:
well, we are guilty
because we cut the wood,
burned the soil so much,
we did not protect the soil,
I mean,
we had little concern
for whether the water
was eroding the soil away,
and nowadays
we are trying to do
the exact opposite.
Let’s now cover
the beginning stages
of how sweet potatoes
are grown.
Every form of agriculture,
all agriculture
depends on good soil.
It does not depend on
how many chemicals
I put into it
or how much I spray it
or how many fungicides
I have put in.
But instead
it depends on good soil
in order to counteract
many of the diseases.
For example,
with the sweet potato,
let´s say, before we sow it,
what we do is
incorporate a lot of
organic material. Why?
Because the organic
material is what gives...
it’s the life of the soil.
Soil without
organic material
is dead soil.
This is the tip of
the sweet potato stalk
and this is what you sow.
Even though
the sweet potato
is this long,
the stalk is not necessary.
What you use is this tip;
I put it here
right next to my finger
and I just stick it
into the ground.
Straight into the soil.
That is it;
that is the system for
sowing sweet potatoes.
It is manual;
it is not mechanized.
No, it is manual,
that´s it and it stays there.
This is the system
used for the sweet potato.
One thing
about the sweet potato
is the plant itself.
You see them like this,
but when they grow
and extend a lot, the tips
start growing longer;
then you cover the tips.
You cover them with soil
in order to keep them
from growing too much
and that action causes them
to produce tubers.
And in organic agriculture,
no bad weeds exist;
every weed, each one
has a role in the soil
and especially
they produce compost.
Because when there are
weeds among the crops,
whether there are insects
or not, the aphids
or any other insect
that is in the soil
who also affect the roots,
will have other roots to eat
and will not affect
the crop alone
if the area is clean.
And also when we take
away “bad” weeds
as people call them,
these are not bad weeds
because it will become
compost for the soil.
The more “bad” weeds
like this we have,
the better the soil will be,
because we are going to
feed the microorganisms
that live in the ground,
and we will
have them protected,
because an uncovered soil,
an unprotected soil
is like a desert.
The Sun will hit it
and therefore
there will be no life,
because it is burning.
Every microorganism
that is above,
on top of the ground
is going to die.
But if there is a place
where they can live or
something to protect them,
those microorganisms
will live longer
and they will make
this process much faster.
That is really interesting!
Producing organic crops
involves
much more than just
environmentally-friendly
planting and cultivation.
The process is also one
in which farmers
awaken a consciousness
that goes beyond
environmental protection.
All organic farmers come
to realize that humankind
is part of a whole.
Soil, plants, climate,
animals, insects
and human beings
all form a marvelous and
harmoniously balanced
entity wherein each object
and sentient being
has a place and role, and
that when all are respected,
abundance, beauty and
well-being are the result.
The sweet potato is also
very delicious, because
my companion here says
that from the soup
his mom used to make
for him, he would only
eat the sweet potatoes,
because they are sweet.
Yes, actually
it is very nutritious.
You can give it to kids
to start teaching them
how to eat,
because it is a tuber that
is not going to harm them,
and since it is sweet,
they like the flavor.
But besides that,
with the sweet potato,
many experiments
have been done;
here in Grecia a few boys
from the university
invented several things
with the sweet potato.
They even made
a sweet potato punch
and it is delicious.
They did it, and we now
have access to the recipe,
but we can also use it
as part of the vegetables
in the soup.
You can
make them mashed,
you can do it fried, well,
in many ways, and yes,
it is very tasty
and very healthy
to eat sweet potatoes.
The sweet potato,
with its simple
cultivation requirements,
flavor, great nutritional
value and versatility
produces tranquility
and happiness in those
that grow it
and consume it.
Please join us tomorrow
for the second part
of our program
where we’ll see
how the sweet potato
is used in a wide variety
of dishes, including
salads, appetizers,
casseroles, fricassees,
baby foods, and desserts.
Finally, our appreciation
María Eugenia,
Eliecer Rodríguez, and
Juan Luis Salas, for setting
a wonderful example
on how to treat the Earth
gently by practicing
organic farming
and introducing us
to the delightful crop
that is the sweet potato.
Thank you
for your company
on today’s program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
following
Noteworthy News.
May you be blessed
with fruitful harvests,
bringing abundant joy
and fulfillment
to all those around you.
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