Tag: cultivation

  • Farming in Romania, past and present

    Farming in Romania, past and present

    A
    surface area of over a hundred thousand hectares of arid land stretches in
    southern Romania, nearby Dabuleni, a locality known as the motherland of sugar
    melons. The area is dubbed Romania’s Sahara. It already covers the greater part
    of Dolj County’s eastern side, while silviculturists and NGOs have been trying
    really hard to stop the advance of sands, mainly with the help of acacia plantations.
    In the commune of Carcea, close by Craiova’s Internationals Airport, over the
    summer, the farming cultivations are ailing. Not to mention the fact that summers
    in Oltenia are long and hot.


    However,
    The Forest of Tomorrow Foundation has come up with a new idea and performs an
    experiment. We have a brown-reddish soil, a semi-clayish structure Marian Mechenici
    explains, who is employed by a company that contributes to the setting up of
    that experimental plantation. It doesn’t have a satisfactory response in the
    dry season. It cracks a lot. His teams
    have already prepared 1.3 hectares of land that were sown with cereals and
    vegetables, just like the surrounding fields. What makes this parcel different,
    though, is the fact that it was simultaneously planted with fruit-bearing shrubs
    and trees.


    Always
    in search of new solutions for climate fight, the Forest of Tomorrow Foundation
    has purposefully financed a research study on the performance of agroforestry
    systems.


    We
    want our fight to be as active as possible, against climate change and also in a
    bid to enlarge Romania’s afforested surface areas, the director of the Forest
    of Tomorrow Foundation, Mihai Caradaica, explains. Mostly for the plains region,
    where we can find around 6% of Romania’s forests, the benefits of the agroforestry
    systems are multiple: the reduction of the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere,
    the increase of the farming cultivations’ economic potential through the humidity
    provided by the trees and the fertilization of the soil, protection for the
    livestock there where the agroforestry systems are implemented in farms, Mihai
    Caradaica also said.


    But
    what is an agroforestry system? We’ve found that out visiting the site of the Forest
    of Tomorrow Foundation. The definitions provided by literature are many, yet
    all of them highlight
    the integration of trees and other wood species (in various combinations) in
    the farming cultivations, in pastures or in zootechnical activities, in a bid
    to have extra benefits from the same surface area. The shelterbelts protecting
    cereal cultivations, or the trees, be they isolated or in groves, that have
    been preserved on livestock grazing land are the handiest examples for Romania,
    yet the concept is a lot richer when it comes to the applied side. It is, perhaps,
    the oldest model of long-lasting land management, dating from the Neolithic
    period, when human being began to cultivate plants under the shelter provided
    by forests. However, in the 20th century, the agroforestry systems were
    almost completely replaced, in the West, by intensive farming: cultivations
    planted on uninterrupted areas, using mechanized means and supported chemically
    in order to cope with pests or to become more productive. Notwithstanding, in the
    last forty years the perspective has begun to change. As for the role of the
    forestry structures integrated in farming cultivations or in animal farming, it
    has been better and better understood and implemented.


    According
    to the European Association for Agroforestry Systems, EURAF, in Europe there
    are more than 8 million hectares cultivated according to that method. The trees
    provide wood for constructions or energy, they also provide edible fruits,
    shade and food for the livestock. Concurrently, trees stabilize the soil, also
    balancing its chemical composition, they offer protection for cultivations
    against the weather or pests, they purify the air and preserve the quality of
    waters in a given surface area. Forests or shelterbelts support farming cultivations,
    render them more productive and increase their resilience towards climate change.
    Our research is, we hope, one first step we have taken towards a large-scale development
    of Romanian agroforestry, according to the specialists working for the Forest
    of Tomorrow Foundation. The project’s head researcher is Mihai Enescu, a senior
    lecturer with Bucharest’s University of Agronomical Sciences and Veterinary
    medicine:


    Mihai Enescu:

    We have a plot of land we have divided into 20 square-shaped farm
    parcels with a 24-meter-long leg, where we will plant both common forestry species,
    such as the oak-tree, the ash-tree, the Sycamore maple, the maple-tree, and many
    others, but also some that are less used in Romania today. These are mainly xerophyte
    species, resistant to the droughty conditions, indigenous species, such as the
    downy oak, or allochthonous species, with origins in other countries, such as
    the honey locust or the Siberian elm. We will also plant fruit-bearing shrubs.
    Here, behind me, we can already see the European red raspberry, densely cultivated.
    We will also plant blackberry trees, but also agricultural species, on our farm
    parcels. There will be parcels with corn and sunflower, with various densities
    and modern technologies. We will also test other suggestions that have already
    had good results in countries located mainly in central and western Europe,
    that is farther afield. We shall also come up with irrigated rows, unirrigated
    rows, fertilized rows, unfertilized rows, so they can respond to more than twenty
    research questions. I place my stakes on fast results, well, not for the very
    first year, but for years two, three and four, as it is a project with a
    four-year duration. I’m counting on results that are at least interesting, results
    we can’t wait to promote.


    The
    eventual aim of the project is the compilation of a good practice guide, or the
    use of Romanian farmers and forest workers. A handbook teaching people working
    in the field how to use agroforestry systems in our country, at once taking the
    local specificity into account, explaining what species goes with what species,
    where, when and how, and what the effects of that are.

  • Romania’s exotic fruits

    Romania’s exotic fruits

    Rich
    in vitamins, above the usual standard of the local fruits, resistant to
    variations in temperature and suitable for ecological cultivation since they
    have no pests, the exotic fruits have been gaining ground on Romanian
    territory.


    I found out the story of several such sorts
    from Florin Stanica, a teacher of pomiculture with the Horticulture Faculty as
    part of the University of Agronomical Sciences and Veterinary Medicine in
    Bucharest. The story begins in 1992, when a university team went to the University
    of Perugia in Italy, via a Tempus program, where they studied the kiwi,
    noticing its has development conditions which are similar to the peach tree.
    And that is how the idea occurred to pilot the cultivation in Ostrov, on the
    banks of the river Danube, where conditions are perfect for the peach tree, but
    also for vine growing.


    Florin
    Stanica:

    Easier said than done. In 1993, in spring, we had a cultivation, with the
    support of Ostrov IAS, of two kiwi hectares. Concurrently, from Italy, we
    brought more than hybrids of Actinidia Arguta, which is the Kiwi berry or baby
    kiwi, a species of kiwi which is much more resistant to freezing than the peach
    tree, so it can be cultivated even in the areas of the plumtree cultivation.
    Since 1993, practically, with the Faculty of Horticulture in Bucharest, among
    other activities, we have carried a survey on the possibility of
    acclimatization of the kiwi species. Because there are three species we are interested
    in, food-wise, the kiwi with trichome, familiar to everybody on the market,
    kiwi with yellow pulp and the kiwi which is frost-resistant. All along we have
    succeeded to see how to multiply the kiwi plants, to see what the cultivation
    technologies are and, through selection works, we succeeded to certify two
    Romanian sorts, the result of the Romanian-Italian cooperation, which were
    registered with the EU under the name of Vip Green and Vip Red, two sorts of
    frost-resistant kiwi, with green and red fruits..


    We found
    out that for almost 10 years now, selection works have been conducted as
    regards the hybrids between the kiwi with yellow pulp and the kiwi with green
    pulp, with four very interesting selections existing already, with big fruit,
    with special tasty qualities, with a great preservation capacity, likely to be
    homologated in the near future. Professor Florin Stanica once again.


    Kiwi can be cultivated in Romania. There is a rather limited area
    suitable for the cultivation of big-fruit kiwi, I ‘m speaking about the areas
    favoring the cultivation of the peach tree, the southern and the western part
    of the county, but we also have quite generous possibilities for the
    cultivation of the resistant species, that is the baby kiwi or kiwi berry,
    which can be cultivated in almost all Romanian orchard areas. It takes a little
    bit of courage on the part of the cultivators.


    « Simina »
    is another species recommended by professor Florin Stanica, for which
    homologation is in progress. It can be cultivated with no problem, there where
    winter temperature readings do not exceed 25 degrees below zero, with no
    special treatment needed.


    As I was in Italy, of course I found out about another cultivation, known
    as Asimina Triloba. In the year 2000 I also brought to Romania the first sorts
    of northern banana or pawpaw, a plant originating from the eastern side of
    North America, so it s frost-resistant, it can resist to temperature readings
    of minus 25 degrees which yields some
    extraordinary fruit, of about the size of a mango, it just that they have brown
    seeds on the inside, double-filed. The pulp of the fruit is creamy, it can be
    served with the teaspoon, it has the taste of vanilla cream when the fruit is
    ripe, it has a specific scent and a specific flavor when the fruit has been
    freshly plucked. After that, the taste evolves to caramel cream if it is kept
    in the fridge for about ten days. And after three weeks, the taste evolves to
    coffee cream. So here we have a special fruit. No phytosanitary treatment is needed in this case, the plant is very resistant and very beautiful,
    decoratively, it has big leaves, the flowers are beautiful.


    We
    found out these fruits have a very high percentage of minerals. In terms of potassium
    percentage, the fruit I second only to the Guava fruit. In fact, on Romanian
    territory, the species was brought to Pianu Nou, Alba County, in 1926, by the
    family of Suciu Ioan, Transylvanian
    migrants who returned from Ohio. Another special species Florin Stanica
    mentioned was the jujuba or the Dobrogea date tree.


    It can be found in Dobrogea, in Ostrov, nearby the former fortress of
    Durostorum, lying in Silistra in Bulgaria, but we also found plant species of
    Dobrogea date in Jurilovca, nearby the fortress of Argamum or in Mahmudia, near
    the fortress of Salsovia. These plant species are always found nearby former
    Roman or Greek settlements. But we know they were rough to Europe some time
    during emperor Octavianus Augustus’s reign. The plants on our territory yield
    smaller fruit, the size of a grape, with no special taste qualities.


    About
    them, we found out they have a special ecological adaptability, being resistant
    to temperature readings ranging from 40 degrees below zero to 40 degrees
    Celsius, they prefer areas in southern Romania being very resistant to drought.