Tue, 26 May 2026 · LIVE
Updated May 26, 2026 · 11:46
Maharashtra News Updated May 26, 2026

Gujarat Farmer’s Shift to Natural Farming After Father’s Cancer Death Inspires Many

Kalpesh Patel, a Gujarat farmer, transformed his life after his father Ramanbhai died of cancer, vowing to avoid chemical fertilisers. He now cultivates over 50 banana varieties on 3.5 bigha, achieving record yields like a 73 kg bunch. By adopting natural farming, he saves Rs 15,000-20,000 per bigha annually and earns Rs 10-12 lakh. His story gained national recognition, with Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan sharing it on social media.

Gujarat: Young Farmer gives up chemical fertilisers after father's cancer death, emerges as role model

Surat, May 26

Kalpesh Patel, a resident of Saras village in Olpad taluka of Surat district, transformed his life after his father's death. Since 2019, he has been practising natural farming and now cultivates more than 50 varieties of bananas.

Kalpesh works as a chemical operator in a private company. After his father, Ramanbhai, passed away due to cancer, it became a turning point in his life. He resolved never to use chemical fertilisers on his farm again. Giving up toxic pesticides, he adopted natural farming.

Being a nature lover, Kalpesh fully committed himself to natural farming. He underwent training provided by the Gujarat government's agriculture department, learned to prepare Jeevamrut (a natural fertiliser), and began a new chapter in his life.

Kalpesh inherited around eight bigha of land. On three and a half bigha land, he cultivates over 50 varieties of bananas, including Puvan, Adhapuri, Rasthali, Red Banana, Blue Java, Basrai, Mahalaxmi, and Elaichi bananas.

He has also achieved record production. In 2025, one bunch of bananas from his farm weighed 73 kilograms, whereas the average weight of a banana bunch is around 20 kilograms. On his farm, the average weight exceeds 30 kilograms.

Explaining his journey, Kalpesh said, "When my father was diagnosed with cancer, I felt we must free ourselves from the poison of chemical fertilisers and adopt natural farming. My father used a lot of pesticides, and his body would carry their strong odour. I never interfered as I wasn't involved in farming then, but after he developed cancer and passed away, it changed my life."

"I have been practising natural farming for the last seven years. I have also adopted the forest model. I do value addition to my farm produce and follow the principle of 'my product, my price.' Due to natural farming, I save Rs 15,000 to Rs 20,000 per bigha of land annually on chemical fertilisers and pesticides. As soil health improved, banana production increased significantly. From three and a half bigha, I earn Rs 10 to Rs 12 lakh annually," he added.

Under Chief Minister Bhupendra Patel, natural farming has gained momentum in the state. Several schemes have been implemented to encourage farmers to give up chemical fertilisers and pesticides. Governor Acharya Devvrat has also been actively promoting natural farming across the state by personally visiting farms.

The Gujarat government has introduced natural farming markets in various cities, allowing farmers to sell their produce directly. Kalpesh Patel sells bananas and other produce at the agricultural market in Vesu, Surat.

If raw bananas remain unsold, he processes them into products like banana wafers, banana fig (dried product), and banana powder, thereby increasing his income through value addition.

Kalpesh Patel's natural banana farming has gained nationwide recognition. Union Agriculture Minister Shivraj Singh Chouhan even interacted with him and shared his success story on social media.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Anjali F

Heartbreaking that his father's death from cancer was the catalyst. But what a positive change! The Rs 15,000-20,000 savings per bigha on fertilisers alone is a game-changer for small farmers. Hope more people learn from him.

Michael C

As someone from abroad, I find this fascinating. The integration of traditional wisdom with modern value addition (banana chips, powder) is smart. But shouldn't the govt do more to subsidise natural farming inputs? Just my thought.

Karan T

Great to see Gujarat leading the way! But I'm a bit skeptical about 'my product, my price' model reaching everyone. Middlemen might still exploit farmers in remote areas. Still, Kalpesh Bhai is a true role model. Jai Kisaan! 🙏

Sarah B

This is the future of farming we need globally. My family in Punjab still struggles with pesticide-related health issues. Seeing a farmer earn Rs 10-12 lakh from just 3.5 bigha with natural methods gives me hope. More power to him!

Rohit L

Honestly, while this is inspiring, I worry about scalability. The Gujarat govt's natural farming push is good, but what about states like Maharashtra or Bihar where extension services are weak? Kalpesh had personal tragedy as motivation—most farmers need more systemic support. Still, hats off to him! 👏

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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