Filipino remedy
Step inside a clinic anywhere in the Philippines and the chances are that many of the patients seek treatment for similar complaints. Chest
infections, coughs and other respiratory problems are amongst the commonest conditions seen by health workers but now the traditional herbal remedy
for these ailments may prove just the right tonic for the ailing agricultural economy of an island in the far south of the country.
From the air, northern Palawan - a narrow forested island that stretches
for 400 km between the Sulu and the South China Sea - looks green and
productive. But looks can be deceptive. Most of the five hundred families
who till the mountain slopes and flat land beside the sea lack even the
simplest of tools to make working the land easier and are unable to afford
inputs to improve yields. The forest that cloaks the hills and protects
the water catchment is being cleared at the rate of 5 hectares per year
per farming household in order to get fertile land. And it is not just
the trees that are falling. Average farm incomes have reached an all-time
low prompting a local development organization to look for alternatives
for this potentially productive area. "We wanted to find sources
of cash that farmers in northern Palawan can depend on," says Lawrence
Padilla, Executive Director of Palawan Centre for Appropriate Technology
(PCART ).
Walk up behind many a village and it is not long before you come across a straggly delicately-leafed shrub known locally as lagundi (Vitex
negundo). An infusion to treat coughs is prepared from boiled lagundi leaves but a less bitter and more convenient remedy is marketed throughout
the Philippines in tablet form. Now proven scientifically to be an effective and safe treatment for a range of respiratory problems, sales of the
tablets are increasing pushing up demand for dried lagundi leaf.
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| credit: Susie Emmett |
Farmer Bonifacio Navaroza speedily snips his way around a lagundi shrub and the leafy branches fall straight into a large woven basket. He manages
the first lagundi farm established to test how much each bush can produce and to interest farmers in the surrounding area in growing it themselves.
One of the main attractions is that to establish a lagundi plantation there is no need to completely clear the land. Ring weeding around each young
plant is all that is necessary until it is well established and the first cut of leaves can be just 8 months after planting and then every 4-6 months
after that. "I like growing a plant that is made into medicine," says Navaroza, "But the main advantage to me is that it is not
like other crops where you have to plant every season. This you plant once and then just keep of harvesting it for years."
Fresh-picked leaves are taken to a central sorting shed to reject any that
are damaged or diseased and then tipped onto large metal trays. Nick Aldridge,
a British volunteer with Voluntary Service Overseas has brought his skills
as a herb farmer in southern England to help PCART develop a hot air drier
which has reduced the drying time from 48 hours to just 16. In each of
three chambers 30 kilos of fresh lagundi leaves lose 50% of their weight
and are ready for milling. Lower down the valley, in the new purpose-built
semi-processing plant a cloud of green dust billows out as the hammer
mill pounds the dried leaves to a fine powder ready for shipping to the
pharmaceutical company in Manila that will press it into pills. In the
corner the first order of 100 kilos is packed and ready to go.
Although the company they supply has offered to buy all they can produce, PCART is well aware that they only have a narrow advantage on farmers on
neighbouring islands who are also interested in growing lagundi. "That's why we are looking into the commercial cultivation and processing
of 27 medicinal plants" Lawrence Padilla explains. Growing lagundi amongst a range of other food and herbal crops is what is recommended.
"That's why we advise farmers never to be married to one crop alone" adds Beatrice Dioso, PCART agricultural officer, who often uses
the Filipino love of gambling to get her advice to farmers. For some of the poorer farmers of Palawan, going into lagundi growing could be one gamble
that does pay off.
Article written by Susie Emmett
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