Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage
TOP NEWS
BREAKING NEWS
HOME | ASTROLOGY | CHINESE ASTROLOGY | NUMEROLOGY | RECIPES | SELF HELP | PHOTO GALLERY | YOGA | TRAVEL | EDUCATION | PINCODES | BABY NAMES
NEWS CHANNELS
  • Kerala News
  • India News
  • World News
  • Business India
  • Sports News
  • Cricket News
  • Travel News
  • Health News
  • Technology
  • Literature News
  • Education News
  • NRI News
  • Spec. Features
Entertainment News
  • Bollywood News
  • Hollywood News
  • Malayalam Film
  • Tamil Film
  • Kannada Film
  • Telugu Film
Regional News
  • Andhra Pradesh
  • Gujarat News
  • Karnataka News
  • Maharashtra
  • Orissa News
  • Punjab News
  • Rajasthan News
  • Tamil Nadu
  • West Bengal
  • More India News
Best Of NewKerala

  • Festivals of India
  • Self Help
  • India Travel Maps
  • Temples of India
  • Kerala Info
  • Indian Dance Forms
  • Music of India
  • Bollywood Photos
  • Make Up Lessons
  • Weight Loss Tips
  • Top Destinations
  • World Travelogues

Home > News > special-features

Persimmon fruit harvest quite a treat in Himachal

By Vishal Gulati, Shimla, Oct 25 : Himachal Pradesh is expecting a bumper harvest of the exotic persimmon with the trees literally drooping under the weight of the luscious fruit even though unfavourable weather through the season hit other crops like apple and cherry.

Locally called "Japani Phal", or the Japanese fruit, persimmon looks like a bright red-orange tomato, and is full of subtle fragrances and rich in sugar, as well as vitamins A, B and C.

"We are getting a bumper persimmon crop this time despite hostile climatic conditions in the flowering and fruit-ripening seasons. Field reports indicate a good yield," joint director (horticulture) R.S. Thakur told IANS.

He said unfavourable weather had failed to affect persimmon production.

"Less chill in the last winter and deficient rain in the monsoon have little impact on the yield of persimmon, whereas the production of apple and other stone fruits has been severely hit in the state," he said.

The temperate zones of Shimla, Kullu, Mandi, Chamba and Solan districts are ideal for persimmon cultivation. As per horticulture department estimates, at least 10,000 farmers grow the fruit over 397 hectares.

Said Anil Mahajan, a farmer from Kullu district: "Farmers are opting for persimmon as apple production has declined due to climate change. Moreover, persimmon bears regular, rich crop and requires less management."

According to him, the abundant persimmon crop this time helped compensate for the losses incurred by apple growers.

"One kilogram of persimmon sells at about Rs.20 in the wholesale market. On an average, a fully-grown tree yields up to 200 kilograms of the fruit in a year," Mahajan said.

In 2008-09, the production of persimmon in Himachal Pradesh was 224 tonnes.

Fruit commission agent Tek Chand Gupta said persimmon is selling between Rs.50 and Rs.60 per kilogram in the retail market. "Its price is quite high in Chandigarh and Delhi where retailers and fruit vendors often sell it as imports from China and Japan."

Persimmon starts arriving in the market at the beginning of October and is available till mid-November.

"Persimmon is available when other citrus fruits are not common in the market. So it's much sought after. Secondly, its resemblance with tomatoes attracts buyers. Most of the high-quality fruit is sold in Delhi's Azadpur Mandi and Chandigarh," Gupta said.

In India, the fruit was introduced by European settlers in early 20th century.

Ramesh Chaudhary, grower from Narkanda in Shimla district, said the fruit is also fast catching up as an alternative commercial crop.

"We planted persimmon in the early 1940s along with apples. This year, we got a bumper yield," he said.

Horticulture joint director Thakur said two varieties are generally cultivated in Himachal Pradesh.

"The heart-shaped astringent variety, Hachiya, is dominant in the state. It is deep orange-red with glossy skin. The flesh is deep yellow and sweet when ripe. Other varieties such as Fuyu and Hyakuma are also grown. They are generally eaten when ripe," he said.

According to Thakur, the demand for persimmon is quite high in fruit processing units due to its succulence.

The fruit is also grown in Uttarakhand, Jammu and Kashmir and Tamil Nadu.

Approximately 200,000 hectares in Himachal Pradesh -- mainly in Shimla, Kullu, Mandi, Solan, Lahaul and Spiti, Kinnaur and Chamba districts -- are under horticulture cultivation.

Besides persimmon, apples, pears, peaches, cherries, apricots, kiwi, strawberry, olive, almonds and plums are the major commercial fruit crops of the state, which boasts of a horticultural economy of around Rs.2,000 crore a year.

(Vishal Gulati can be contacted at vishal.g@ians.in)

--IANS

Post your comment

Read other special-features stories

Visit Home Page for fresh content


 

PHOTO GALLERY
  • Bollywood Photos
  • Hollywood Photos
  • Fashion Photos
  • More Headlines:
    Pak compiling hard evidence of Indian involvement in Balochistan: Qureshi
    Despite unpopularity, Zardari immune to possible ouster
    Explosives seized in Chhattisgarh
    Dark galaxy may be crashing into Milky Way
    Jharkhand police foil Maoist attempt to disrupt assembly polls
    Mercury drops to minus 23.5 degrees in Leh
    RSS chief says our borders aren't safe even after 60 years
    Vaccines effective against H1N1 virus mutation, say experts
    Dalai Lama urges Indian youth to adopt Gandhian principles
    NASA astronaut becomes father while in orbit on Atlantis
    Death toll in Indonesian ferry accident rises to 27
    Lok Sabha adjourned again over Liberhan row
    Airwaves likely to power plane, car batteries
    Cow feeds baby goats in Orissa
    Radical new design of electrical generator promises power revolution
    Meena community in MP demand reservation of jobs
    Rupees five lakh looted from seed corporation officials
    Turtle-'incarnation of Lord Jagannath'-handed over to Forest dept
    Modi refuses to resign on corruption charges
    Pakistan likely to expand military operation in tribal area
    Rajya Sabha adjourned again over Liberhan report
    Reliance Industries drives Sensex rise
    Landmine targeting army convoy detected in Assam
    Make report public: L K Advani
    Unfavourable weather conditions can impact wheat production
    Shakira desperate to start a family
    Deep-sea census reveals treasure trove of species that have never seen sunlight
    Warne calls for young blood in Australian side
    Dignity of House lowered by Liberhan report leak: Jaitley
    Two fathers kill their own progeny
    Berlusconi escort claims attacks, threats after sleeping with him
    Liberhan probe was India's longest running inquiry commission
    Visa clampdown on Chinese affecting Himachal projects: Chief Minister
    Now, a 'massaging' bra to give women's busts a boost!
    With its blood, terror, valour, 26/11 spawned books, movies
    New Zealand glaciers melting away, survey shows
    Working women nag hubbies to feel more feminine: Study
    LS adjourned till 1200 hours over Liberhan Commission Report
    Unfavourable weather conditions can impact wheat production
    Campaigning for first phase of Jharkhand Assembly elections ends
      Home | Recommend Us | Contact us | Make NK your default homepage
      © 2001-2008 NEWKERALA.COM. All Rights Reserved.