Showing posts with label India. Show all posts
Showing posts with label India. Show all posts

Saturday, November 14, 2020

Scythe Project in Nepal -- 2020 update

 

2012 at Nepal Agriculture Research Council (NARC)


After a few years of dormancy, Alexander Vido's Scythe Project in Nepal (SPIN) is making further progress. The video from his 2012 SPIN trip can be viewed here:

Scythe Project in Nepal 2012 (SPIN)

It was this SPIN video which inspired Anant Chaturvedi and his father to contact Alexander in 2015 while he was coincidentally in India promoting the use of scythes (and looking for potential collaborators there). Alexander returned to India in 2016 with Sy Shotz, to do demonstrations arranged by the Chaturvedis. The video he made during this trip went viral on YouTube, amassing more than 18 million views, and helping to generate an ever-increasing demand for scythes in India.

Since 2016, Alexander has made several more trips to India to consult on the scythe equipment design and procurement, and the Chaturvedis (through their company VIKALP) have continued the demonstrations and training, putting thousands of scythes into the hands of farmers across India. The VIKALP scythes are being used to harvest paddy rice, wheat, berseem clover, and other crops, with great success. The number of scythes in India is growing from season to season, especially since the government recognized its benefits and began promoting scythes by offering a subsidy which reduces the cost to farmers.

And now, because the success with scythes in India has been noticed elsewhere, we have come full circle back to Nepal. 

Santosh Pandit and Ravi Prasad Choudhary, two agricultural engineering students at a university in Nepal, became interested in scythes for local use and were disappointed to learn that SPIN wasn't active at the time. They reached out to Alexander about what could be done to continue the SPIN project. Alexander suggested that their best option would be to contact Anant Chaturvedi to purchase VIKALP scythes and arrange for some training in Kanpur. Santosh and Ravi made a trip to India later that year, and they talk about their successful introduction to scythes in this video from VIKALP (with English subtitles):




Alexander has been corresponding with Santosh and Ravi since they first contacted him, and they have been collaborating with his contact at the Nepal Agricultural Research Council (NARC), who had also noticed the successful use of scythes in India. Alexander returned to Nepal in January 2020 to discuss scythes with Santosh, Ravi, and NARC officials. NARC's plans to move forward with scythe trials in Nepal have been hampered by the Covid-19 situation, but we are all hopeful that they are able to reap the benefits from scythes in the near future.


at NARC, 2012

at NARC, 2020

at NARC, 2020

at Kathmandu with Santosh and Ravi, 2020


Photos provided by Alexander Vido, and used with permission.

Monday, August 6, 2018

Combine vs Sickle vs Scythe




The scythe is the clear winner for harvesting grains in India, according to calculations by the Vikalp team (costs listed in Rupees):


Combine
Rent = Rs 1,500/acre
Labour = Rs 500/acre
Threshing costs = Rs 0 
Straw wastage = Rs 15,000 worth of straw wastage 
(roughly 30 quintals per acre)
Grain wastage = Rs 3,000-4,500
(roughly 2-3 quintals per acre)
Total cost of harvesting an acre = Rs 21,000 

Sickle
Rent = Rs 0
Labour = Rs 3,000-3,500/acre
Threshing costs = Rs 3,500/acre 
Straw wastage almost zero 
(entire straw available as fodder)
Grain wastage almost zero 
(grain loss due to shedding is negligible)
Total cost of harvesting an acre = Rs 6,500-7,000 

Scythe
Rent = Rs 0
Labour = Rs 600-1,000/acre
Thresing costs = Rs 3,500/acre 
Straw wastage almost zero 
(entire straw available as fodder)
Grain wastage almost zero 
(grain loss due to shedding is negligible)
Total cost of harvesting an acre Rs 4,000-4,500 

Furthermore, the above calculations don't include the social and environmental costs, which make the scythes even more advantageous:
Add to this the fact that harvesting with the sickle involves a lot of drudgery and harvesting with combines leads to social evils like unemployment and environmental hazards like “straw burning”.






Source:

Photos, calculations, and quotations are from Vikalp
http://vikalp.tech/the-scythe/why-scythe/









Friday, November 24, 2017

Scythes are a solution to Delhi air pollution



Screenshot from NDTV Prime Time program, November 9, 2017


"Delhi has earned the unenviable distinction of becoming the most polluted city on Earth this month, as air quality has reached epically bad proportions... merely breathing the air was, at its worst, like smoking 50 cigarettes in a day..."
-- Vox, November 23, 2017


"Why this spike in pollution?...Farmers in the neighboring states are burning straw from their last rice crop to clear fields for planting the wheat crop... The state of Punjab alone produces about 20 million tons of paddy straw. Roughly 85 to 90 percent of that is burnt in the field."
-- The Washington Post, November 11, 2017


"Stubble burning is the ‘main villain’ behind the severe pollution in Delhi and neighbouring areas, the Delhi High Court said on Tuesday."
-- The Hindu, New Delhi, November 7, 2017


The NDTV news program "Prime Time" looked at how the air pollution is linked to the use of combine harvesters. As seen in the following video (an unofficial translated version), host Ravish Kumar suggests that instead of scapegoating the farmers, we try to understand their plight. He describes how scythes could be part of the solution to India's air pollution problem:



NDTV Prime Time program, November 9, 2017
(unofficial translated version - English)







Sources:

Delhi's off-the-charts smog, explained
Vox, Nov 23, 2017, Updated by Umair Irfan
https://www.vox.com/energy-and-environment/2017/11/22/16666808/india-air-pollution-new-delhi

Delhi is blanketed with toxic smog. This is why.
The Washington Post, November 11, 2017
By Aseem Prakash, Nives Dolšak, Thomas Bernauer and Liam McGrath 
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/monkey-cage/wp/2017/11/11/delhis-been-hit-with-toxic-smog-why-its-political/

Stubble burning the main reason for poor air in Delhi: HC
The Hindu, New Delhi, November 7, 2017
http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/Delhi/stubble-burning-the-main-reason-for-poor-air-in-delhi-hc/article19999044.ece

"Vikalp" on NDTV Prime Time
Unofficial English Translation of the PrimeTime news coverage on the scythe
Published on Nov 22, 2017
[translation of original broadcast on Nov 9, 2017]
https://youtu.be/9J2eUoRD8NY

Ravish Kumar Prime Time ; 9nov17 |
Air Pollution किसान है जिम्मेदार ? Vikalp Machine, Delhi Odd Even
Published on Nov 10, 2017
[original version as broadcast on Nov 9, 2017]
https://youtu.be/dky88Lf21PY














Friday, March 3, 2017

Harvesting Rice with a Scythe




"Using the scythe, we could easily manage to harvest between half to one acre of paddy in 6 hours of working thereby saving a considerable amount of time and effort."




Source:









Harvesting Paddy with a Scythe






Tuesday, January 17, 2017

Scythe instruction videos -- in Hindi





Anant Chaturvedi of Kanpur, India, is producing a series of scythe tutorial videos with narration in the Hindi language. Here are the first five videos of the series:




#1: Unboxing your new Scythe (HIndi)





#2: Assembly of Snath and Blade (Hindi)





#3: Cradle Assembly (Hindi)





#4: Peening with the Jig (Hindi)





#5: Edge Treatment following Peening (Hindi)








Source:

YouTube Channel Vikalp




















Wednesday, June 8, 2016

Scythe Initiative in India - Video


"Contest" between scythe and sickle (from the video)


Here's a new video by Alexander Vido about his Scythe Project in India:














Wednesday, June 1, 2016

Sowing seeds for a scythe revolution




The following report was written by Sy Schotz about the recent introduction of scythes to India (population 1.25 billion). Some background: 80% of the farms in India are considered “Small” or “Marginal". The average size of land holdings is 1.3 hectares, and manual labor plays a large role. More than 50% of India's working population is involved with agriculture (compared with 2% for the USA, and 4% for Western Europe), and there are still shortages of agricultural labor.


Sowing seeds for a scythe revolution
by Sy Schotz

For one month in the spring of 2016, I had the opportunity to join Alexander Vido (of Scythe Works) in demonstrating the use of the scythe to harvest wheat in India, where the tool has been practically unknown. That country perhaps stands to gain more from the use of scythes than any other, because of the hundreds of millions of its farm workers who still harvest wheat and rice with sickles.  Replacing the sickle with the scythe would make it possible for crops to be harvested in a fraction of the time, besides being much easier on the bodies of the users. 

The seed of this scythe mission was sown in Alexander's heart ten years ago, when he first visited India. Moved by the living conditions of the lower classes, it struck him that the application of scythes could greatly improve many lives.  In 2011, he made his first attempt to introduce the scythe to farmers who'd only used sickles: the Scythe Project in Nepal (SPIN).  Despite his focus and dedication, SPIN failed in its purpose of putting the scythe to widespread use, due to a lack of common vision between Alexander and the local co-organizers
.  

The redeeming value of SPIN came in the form of videos from that trip, which Alexander posted on youtube.  Three years later, one of those videos came to the attention of Vivek and Anant Chaturvedi, of Kanpur, India.  This father and son team are committed to rejuvenating the life of India's villages and helping to reverse the current trend of migration into cities.  They have already developed two appropriate technologies which could contribute to the quality of village life: a rice hull-powered generator, and an animal-powered deep well pump/fodder chopper.  They had nearly completed a third technology: a solar powered, hand-held, grain harvester.  This contraption was intended to be an alternative to the sickle, that is until Vivek saw a video of Alexander mowing wheat in Nepal, and dropped the 'solar harvester' project.  Instead, they tried to have a few scythes made, but none of the models were satisfactory.

Eventually, the Chaturvedis contacted Alexander when they learned that he and his son Gabriel were already in India.  Alexander and Gabriel were by then only a few days away from their flight home, having already spent six weeks visiting folks who had reached out in the aftermath of SPIN.  Impressed by the Chaturvedis attempts at manufacturing a scythe, Alexander decided to fly back to Delhi in order to leave time to travel another 500 km by car, through the night, to spend but one day at the Chaturvedis' farm in Kanpur.  It turned out to be the most fruitful day Alexander had yet spent in India or Nepal.


What followed, three months later, stands out as a dramatic success amongst other recent attempts to introduce this tool to third-world countries.

After Alexander returned to Canada, he remained in contact with the Chaturvedis, who hurriedly began preparing for an introduction of the tool during the upcoming wheat harvest.  Their ambition was to demonstrate the utility of the scythe to a select audience who might become trainers and distributors in their own regions.  While Anant waded into the bogs of Indian bureacracy, setting up a company to import scythes, Vivek arranged a full schedule of demonstrations across Northern and Central India. 

Our schedule began with an official 'launching' of the tool on the Chaturvedi farm. The press was lured to the event by the presence of Palikarji, a natural farming guru with more than 5 million followers, who endorsed the scythe and suggested its inclusion in his program of 'zero budget farming.'  The launch was covered in major Indian newspapers, and the scythe would be covered by the press a few more times over the course of the month-long tour. During demonstrations, thousands of people witnessed the tool in action, and many had a chance to try it out themselves.  On the last day of our trip the Minister of State of the Indian Department of Agriculture hosted a demonstration at the Indian Agricultural Research Institute.  A number of video clips from this trip have ‘gone viral,' including one of the minister excitedly trying out a scythe for the first time. Needless to say, the scythe is turning lots of heads in India, and elsewhere.

Alexander's dedication notwithstanding, this scythe introduction in India would not have taken place without the contribution of the Chaturvedis to our common vision, nor without Vivek's personal connections across Northern and Central India.  Finding similarly motivated partners in other 'scythe-needy' countries will be the key to reenacting this success story elsewhere.


-- Sy Schotz, 2016




Below is an excerpt from a follow-up email sent by co-organizer Anant Chaturvedi:

Now a month has passed since the extensive demos, and exhausting as the whole 'scythe tour' was, in hindsight it was necessary. The scythe received much deserved attention and respect as "the tool of the future" -- and we have been contacted by enthusiastic people from all over the country. Many, by the way, express dismay at the fact that it took so long for it to reach India...
 

Clearly, the hopes and excitement have been generated and now it is our responsibility to come up with a package which meets people's expectations and is easy on their pockets. For this to happen, much of the material has to be made with local materials and by local craftsmen. You will be happy to know that we have almost finalised prototypes of quite a few things like the snaths, jigs, ...and small items like the rings. These will be made locally and it is just a matter of time before things start rolling. This, we anticipate, will also take off as much as 25-30% of the costs. I must again thank Alexander for all the tips and guidance regarding the same.
 

I hope that we will keep building on the somewhat auspicious beginning to this venture and that the needy and marginal farmers of India reap the benefits of a tool which should have reached them decades ago.

-- Anant Chaturvedi, 2016

 











Sources:

Statistics on India's agriculture from Mechanization Trends in India, by Sanjeev Goyle, Mahindra and Mahindra, December 2013. 

Photos by Alexander Vido, used with permission.











Friday, April 29, 2016

Scythes go viral in India


Screenshot from recent video with 1.3 million views.

Scythes got a lot of attention this past month during the wheat harvest in northern India, thanks to Alexander Vido and Sy Schotz, who travelled there to demonstrate the cradle scythe at numerous villages. This short video was posted on April 1, and got over 1.3 million views in less than a month!

Link to the video





Sunday, February 28, 2016

Scythe Initiative in India




Alexander Vido (of Scythe Works) was contacted by a number of enthusiastic people from various parts of India in response to his Scythe Project in Nepal, so he arranged a trip to "lend a hand" where he could. While there, he found that a cradle scythe could successfully harvest paddy rice, as long as it wasn't too ripe. He plans to return in the Spring for the wheat harvest in northern India, where he was invited to assist with the local adoption of scythes (instead of sickles) for the task.

A slideshow of his recent trip can be found at his Scythes in the Developing World site. Here are some samples:

















Sources:
All photos from Alexander Vido, used with permission.