<
https://reasonstobecheerful.world/kashmir-lotus-stems-rise-again-climate-change/>
"In Kashmir, where apple orchards often dominate conversations about
climate-driven crop losses, a quieter agricultural shift is unfolding in the
wetlands of this Himalayan region.
Farmers are reviving
nadur, or lotus stem, a crop that once sustained
families across the region and nearly disappeared under pollution, floods and
erratic weather. What is bringing it back is not a program or new technology,
but farmers working with water instead of trying to force it away.
For generations, lotus stem was harvested in winter from the shallow marshes of
lakes such as Dal and Wular. Pulled from soft silt and slow-moving water, it
was woven into daily life, cooked as a vegetable, fried into the street snack
nadur monji, or preserved in pickles. The crop also anchored livelihoods.
Women often handled processing and sales, providing households with steady
winter income.
But this system has fallen apart over the past decade. Urban encroachment,
sewage, rising temperatures and floods such as the disastrous ones that the
region suffered in 2014 have clogged wetlands with debris and silt. Water
levels have become erratic, aquatic life has declined and lotus cultivation has
slowly faded. By the late 2010s, many families had stopped harvesting lotus
altogether, turning away from the water that had long sustained them.
Ghulam Nabi Dar, 68, watched this unfold along the edge of Wular Lake in
Bandipora, a town on the water’s northern banks. His two-hectare patch once
yielded enough lotus stem to feed his family and supply local markets. By 2020,
repeated crop failures had left his lake plot unproductive. “The water
changed,” Dar says. “It became thick, dark. Lotus wouldn’t grow.”
Instead of waiting for large-scale restoration projects, Dar turned to
knowledge passed down from his grandfather, who farmed lotus in the same waters
decades earlier. In early 2021, Dar began cleaning his section of the lake
himself.
Using handmade reed nets, shovels and family labor, he spent months removing
silt and waste from shallow waters. He revived an old technique of stirring the
lakebed with long poles to oxygenate the soil and help roots take hold. No
chemicals. No machines. Just patience and repetition. “It was slow work,” Dar
says. “But the water started responding.”
Aquatic plants returned first, followed by small fish. By winter, lotus roots
had re-established. Dar harvested 12 quintals (a unit used in agriculture for
measuring crop yields, one quintal is the equivalent of about 100kg) that
season, earning about 1.5 lakh (approximately $1,600)."
Cheers,
*** Xanni ***
--
mailto:xanni@xanadu.net Andrew Pam
http://xanadu.com.au/ Chief Scientist, Xanadu
https://glasswings.com.au/ Partner, Glass Wings
https://sericyb.com.au/ Manager, Serious Cybernetics