Milk collector testing the fat content of milk before purchasing from women dairy farmers
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Authors
Mehrab ul Goni
Issue Date
30/01/2015
Type
Language
en
Keywords
Economic Development
Alternative Title
Food and Nutritional Security for the Resource Poor Farmers in Jamalpur and Faridpur Districts (FoSHoL) IA12100304BAN
Abstract
This project focuses on small dairy producers and the market chain associated with milk. I was able to meet with a group of women dairy farmers as they attended a class on recognising a particular bovine illness give by their local paravet / private service provider. The women talked about how they had learnt how to recognise disease or illness in their animals and to treat it or call in the paravet for help, how they had planted better fodder grasses and improved their animal feed with supplements, and introduced new breeds of cattle or used artificial insemination to start to improve the quality of their livestock. They also talked of how, by grouping together, they had been able to come to a more effective relationship with the milk collector, who now visited their village daily, at a fixed time, to collect their milk and who paid them directly at the end of each week. This, they said, was an improvement on the old situation where, because their supply was erratic, the milkman didn’t come regularly and they had to rely on their husband’s selling any surplus milk they had in the bazaar (with the possibility that some of the income then never found its way back to their hands!). As a result of this, they reported that they estimated their income from milk sales had already gone up by 25% in the 18 months or so that the project had been running.
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