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Cheptoo in her passion fruit farm in Bureti. PHOTO | COURTESY
By TIMOTHY KEMEI
It is a warm Thursday afternoon when Seeds of Gold arrives at Grace Cheptoo’s farm at Ng’oina Road area in Bureti Constituency.
We find the mother of two humming to some music while harvesting passion fruits.
We visited the farm to find the root of her love for passion fruit farming, her story having travelled far and reached us.
Grace,
60, established the fruit farm on her 0.2 acre land on the advice of a
friend in March 2010, investing Sh64,000 into the venture
She
says that it was without doubt one of the best decisions she ever took
as it has earned her good returns through export to Uganda, Guatemala
and Belgium.
On a good month, Grace, harvests 480 kilos of passion fruit, making Sh33,600.
“When I started this project, it was meant to give me something
to do part time but it has becoming more profitable than any other
farming activity I have done including tea and pineapple growing,” she
says.
Although she can claim success today, it has not
always been a walk in the park. She recalls that when she harvested her
first crop in August 2011, she had to hawk it in person and sell the
fruits at the local market as she did not have a stable market.
Things
turned for the better in March 2012 when a business colleague informed
her that there was a huge demand for passion fruits in Uganda and within
no time, she was selling her fruit at Sh40 per kilo to an exporter who
would transport the produce to Uganda.
As she went
about her business, word about the success of her venture spread and
several aspiring passion fruit farmers went to her farm for lessons.
As
the numbers grew, she registered a company – Cool Breeze Horticulture –
through which she has been enlisting the services of experts in the
agricultural sector to train individuals willing to join the passion
fruit growing and export business. So far, 375 farmers from Kericho and
Bomet counties have been trained.
PESTS
Last
year, Grace and her group found a new buyer who has been exporting
fruits to Guatemala and Belgium at Sh70 per kilo. The farmers deliver
6,000 kilos every month, making a combined monthly income of Sh420,000.
According
to Carole Mutua, a crop expert at Egerton University’s Crops,
Horticulture and Soils Department, passion fruit farming can do very
well in areas with an altitude of between 1,200m and 1,800m above sea
level in the east of the Rift Valley and up to 2,000m above sea level
west of the Rift Valley.
“The optimum temperature for
purple passion fruit is between 18 and 25 degrees celsius and well
distributed rainfall of 900mm to 2,000mm per year is suitable. Excess
rainfall causes poor fruit set and encourages diseases,” she said.
According
to Ms Mutua, there are six common pests and two common diseases that
attack passion fruits and which farmers should be wary of.
The
pests include the red spider mites which suck sap from the leaves
causing them to dry, mealy bugs which also reside on the leaves, the
fruit fly, which lay eggs on the fruits causing the occurrence of brown
spots and allow maggots to develop within the fruit.
Others
are the stink bugs which pierce the fruits and suck sap out of them
lowering their quality by causing them to look sunken, aphids which suck
sap from the leaves and transmit the woodiness virus and nematodes
which are found in the soil and which cause stunted growth and wilting.
“Depending
on the pest involved, there are several ways of dealing with them. They
include weeding, use of pesticides, uprooting and destruction of the
infected plants or hand picking and killing of the pests.
Farmers can also grow resistant passion fruit varieties,” advises Ms Mutua.
PASSION FRUIT DISEASES
The
common diseases are fusarium wilt, which causes discolouring of
vascular bundles and could kill the entire plant, and the woodiness
virus which causes fruits to be woody and leads to reduced yields and
stunted growth.
Fusarium wilt can be controlled through
grafting, while the woodiness virus can be handled through weeding,
proper disinfection of pruning tools and burning of the affected plants.
Best practices in passion fruit farming can ensure an optimum yield of between 15 and 20 tonnes per hectare.
These
include trellising, which is the use of raised wires to support the
passion fruit vines. If left unsupported vines will fall to the ground
and decompose or make the fruits vulnerable to disease.
Horizontal
trellises have cross-pieces at the top of each post with 2-4 wires
strung horizontally 60 cm apart along the top of each cross-piece.
Vertical
trellises consist of heavy posts without cross-pieces, with two or
three wires strung along the row like barbed wire fencing, attached to
the posts from the top down at intervals about 30-40cm apart.
Farmers
are required to apply 175g of Triple Super Phosphate (TSP) and about 20
kilos of farmyard manure which are well mixed at planting and apply
300g of Calcium Ammonium Nitrate (CAN) per plant per year in two
applications of 150g each.
Weeding is important when
the plants are first transplanted and efforts should be taken to ensure
that the orchard is kept weed-free to prevent a buildup of pests and
diseases. Mulching can help prevent weed growth and conserve moisture.
“Passion
fruits should be watered immediately after transplanting and during the
dry season. Pruning encourages growth of new vines resulting in high
yields. Old and dead branches should be removed. Pruning is done after
harvesting,” added Ms Mutua.
She noted that passion
fruit can be grown from seed, grafting and tissue culture. The seed is
germinated after removal of the pulp and drying and germination requires
up to four weeks.
ENOUGH PASSION FRUIT MARKET
Production
of seedlings in plastic bags is the most frequent method of producing
seedlings. Up to three seeds are planted in each bag and then thinned to
one after emergence.
Seedlings will require up to four
months to reach a suitable transplanting growth stage. After about
seven weeks of growth following transplanting, each plant should have up
to four healthy lateral stems.
Ms Mutua advises that
transplanting should be done at the beginning of the rainy season. Since
passion fruit has deep roots, soils should be well tilled and the
transplanted seedlings planted along a fence or a wire trellis to
provide support.
Once the crop has been established, its vines grow rapidly and the plants should flower after about seven months.
If
a farmer decides to plant passion vines, this should be done early in
the panting season when there is no danger of a drought. Passion fruit
vines are planted two metres apart in rows which are three metres apart.
Potential passion fruit farmers are advised to ensure
that they grow seedlings that have been developed from seeds that have
been certified by the Kenya Plant Inspectorate Service (Kephis) and the
Horticultural Crops Development Authority (HCDA) to get higher yields.
When it is ready for harvesting, the skin of the fruit turns deep purple or yellow.
For
sale in the fresh fruit market, the passion fruit is picked when the
colour changes are seen while those meant for processing are allowed to
drop to the ground and be picked on the second day.
The
off-peak season is January to August while the peak season is between
August and December. Yields decline gradually over a period of four
years.
Grace is convinced there is enough market for
passion fruits. “Our current production cannot meet the demand for the
fruit in the foreign market.” She also grows passion fruit seedlings
which she sells to farmers at Sh30 each.

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