Slide 1 ____ __ ____ _____ ____ ______ _____ _____ ____ _____ _____ _____ ____ _____ Click to edit Master text styles Second level Third level Fourth level Fifth level Slide 1 www.avrdc.org Global Strategic Planning 2012 Global Technology Dissemination Contributors: Mandy Lin, Willie Chen, Lydia Wu, Pamela Huang, Jackie Hughes, Dyno Keatinge, Victor Afari-Sefa, Jaw-Fen Wang, Peter Hanson, Andreas Ebert, Joko Mariyono, Suz Neave, Warwick Easdown, Robert Holmer, Abdou Tenkouano, Maureen Mecozzi , Ravza Mavlyanova, Chih-Hung Lin, Takemore Chagomoka and more Gregory C. Luther
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Global Strategic Planning 2012
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Global Strategic Planning 2012
Outline
1.A new framework for Global Technology Dissemination (GTD): What, why, who, and how?2.Capacity building and technology dissemination accomplishments by GTD and AVRDC over the past year
distribution, proposal with CRS and budget• CWANA: conducted grafting training in Abu Dhabi and Qatar• All four regions: more comprehensive indicator data collection
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Technology Dissemination Methods / Approaches• Training of Trainers (ToT)• Farmer Field Schools (FFS)• Field days• Publications: Fact sheets, booklets, leaflets, posters, etc.• Demonstration plots• Radio or TV programs, videos• Internet• Communication forums• Dramas• Campaigns to spread simple messages• School gardens• Lessons in curriculum for school programs• Mobile teaching laboratories• Cell phone messages/ broadcasts• Plant health clinics• Training and visit
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Recommendation for increasing impact
• Follow up after training activities, to enable technology adoption
• Check if trainees have encountered any obstacles, and help them overcome the obstacles
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Training of Trainers in
Bangladesh
Date: 3-5 April 2012
Venue: Regional Agricultural Research Station, Bangladesh Agricultural Research Institute, Jessore, Bangladesh
Participants: 34
Objectives: Train a core group of trainers to demonstrate the summer tomato production techniques and its profitability, and successfully expand summer tomato production into new sites
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Bangladesh: New summer tomato farmers in Jessore who attended AVRDC/BARI training in May 2012
Outcomes/impacts:• Each farmer harvested 120-500 kg tomatoes and sold them to
the nearby markets (2-3 km from the fields) for a price of BDT 30-60/kg (USD 0.37-0.74/kg).
• All the new summer tomato farmers were happy with the price and would like to plant summer tomato again at a larger scale (4 to 33 decimals) by their own support next year.
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Bangladesh: New summer tomato farmers in Jessore who attended AVRDC/BARI training in May 2012
Opportunities:• Around 50-60 neighboring farmers observed the
summer tomato production and inquired about it, and expressed interest in planting summer tomato.
• Many farmers reported that bacterial wilt is emerging in tomato production areas and they would like to plant grafted tomato if grafted seedlings are available.
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Bangladesh: Women farmers who attended AVRDC/BARI training on grafting and seedling raising in June 2012
Opportunities• In 2013, the project plans to
enable 25 more women to establish their own grafted seedling nurseries.
• Locations of the nurseries are at or near the tomato production areas, which provides good marketing opportunities for women farmers to sell the grafted seedlings to tomato farmers.
Grafted seedling nurseries established by the project in 2012
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Global Strategic Planning 2012
Feedback from the FieldIssue 12 (December 2011)The expanding impact sphere of Farmer Field Schools in Aceh, IndonesiaScreening heat tolerant vegetables in BahrainSuccessful homestead vegetable garden in Jessore, BangladeshCreating an integrated pest management vegetable garden in the Solomon Islands
Issue 13 (March 2012)Simple innovations successfully applied to grow summer gourds in winter for higher prices in Jharkhand, India‘Cut-and-come-again’ method for harvesting spinach in BangladeshMicroirrigation for addressing water scarcity and improving livelihoods in West Africa
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Feedback from the FieldIssue 14 (June 2012)Summer tomato production brings high profits and improves farmers’ livelihoods in BangladeshEfficient natural enemies to manage the legume pod borer, Maruca vitrata on food legumes in tropical Asia and AfricaAVRDC’s tomato grafting technology widely adopted by nursery operators in southern
Issue 15 (September 2012)Indian farmers expand production and create new uses for vegetable soybeanGac means business to a Thai grower-cum-processorVegetable cultivation in the monsoon season in Bangladesh
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Indonesia: Outcomes/impacts from grafting training
Opportunities:• Farmers have already observed the difference between tomato
grafted onto eggplant rootstock and non-grafted tomato. • They found that grafted tomato survives longer than non-grafted. • They expect that if their rootstock is replaced with ones from
AVRDC, the tomato will be much better.
Grafted tomato Non-grafted tomato
Mr. Susanto, a lead farmer and innovator, planted a
small trial in his own field to compare grafted and non-