Monday, June 15, 2026

Grow drought-resistant crops,
Work with, not against nature

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol (PIA)—Work with nature, not against it. Grow drought resistant crops.

This sums up the wisdom that advocates of the natural kind of agriculture that understands the cycles of life shares, amidst the impending threat of agricultural failure with El Nino at the thresholds.

Sharing age-old wisdom passed on from generations, time-tested drought resistant agriculture practitioners Reginaldo Balatayo and Bonifacio Javier brought forward the option of permaculture in response to the waning interest in agriculture and the struggle to make farming work using modern technologies that demand more effort.

Permaculture is a way of designing farms, gardens, and communities so they work like natural ecosystems, they segment on the internet-streaming program would later show.

It is a way of agriculture that looks at how nature works, making the farmer and his crops resilient, making sustainability work as it does not alter the environment, adds Javier, who sits as an active member of the Movement for Liveable Cebu.

As most struggling farmers would go directly into the strenuous task of land preparation, permaculture practitioners would plan based on the core ethics of earth stewardship: care for the earth, care for its people and sharing the bounty of the land.

Permaculture is a sustainable design approach that mimics nature to produce food, conserve resources, and create self-sustaining systems, Balatayo, who is a civil engineer by education, summed.

Using the principle that water seeks its own level, permaculturists understand that everything is planned around water or rainwater and its management for potential farm use, planting different crops together so they support each other, growing fruit trees, vegetables, and livestock in the same area, composting by recycling kitchen and farm waste into fertilizer, and with the forecasted dry season ahead, picking drought-tolerant crops to reduce water use and increase their survival.

Let us practice a culture that is permanent, because our culture now is for the temporary, he said.

For Balatayo, who resides in rocky Punta Cruz in Maribojoc, it is unlikely for him to grow rice.

Og asa ka nahimutang, ayaw paghimo og kanang dili nimo mahimo, (wherever you are, don’t go for things that you have to struggle to do.) came as his advice to farmers who dream of creating pockets of food paradise in communities.

We will produce what we want to eat and eat what we can produce, he shared what his family practices in life.

Bringing this micro wisdom into the national level, he illustrated that not all grow rice and as rice eaters, it is but just natural for the country to import rice.

Also inherent in the permaculture practice is consuming less of rice and instead going for extender crops rich in proteins, like camote, ubi, gabi, banana, apale, and even breadfruit.

In fact, assistant provincial agriculturist Larry Pamugas went further to suggest eating wild yams like boot, coot, palaw, and the go-to-food for the Ati tribesmen: wild cross breed of the gabi and palaw called baliakag.

Nutrition, can also be attained from other sources, that is why, instead of planting rice in areas that are not suited, that does not have water, plant the substitutes for it instead.

“Taga Maribojoc man ko, walay basak, walay tubig, so nananum kog saging, ubi, kamote, apale, that kon manginahanglan ta og rice, gamay na lang. (As somebody from Maribojoc which does not have rice fields and water sources, we plant bananas, ubi, sweet yam and apale, that when you would need rice, you do not have to need as much.

To the impending drought which PAG-ASA said could extend as far as the first quarter of 2027, the Office of the Provincial Agriculturist urged families to bring the food security issue at home.

With the threat of a long dry spell, families are also facing the consequences of rising costs and unavailability of agricultural inputs and even seeds.

With most of agricultural research and development deeply tied to the petro funds, Pamugas instead said the option for organic agriculture using drought resistant crops is the best thing.

That means producing the family’s needs in pots, in any available space, producing own seedlings and using organic fertilizer from compost kitchen refuse, and using kitchen vegetable washing, to conserve water which is still available. (PIABohol)
AGRI, THE EASY WAY. Engr. Reginaldo Balatayo and Bonifacio Javier brought the idea of permaculture, which works with nature and not against it, as a sustainable response to the threatened food security in the drought season issue, at the Kapihan sa PIA. Plant drought resilient crops, conserve water and recycle kitchen refuse for fertilizer, both suggest. (PIAbohol)
DICT to give Bayanihan SIM
to 13,000 students, teachers

TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol (PIA)—At the opening of classes and the gradual shift into wider educational resource base, this year some 13,000 Boholano student learners, teachers and faculty members, beneficiaries of the government flagship social welfare program and identified individuals in geographically isolated and depressed areas to allow them internet access via mobile data.

This too as the government through the Department of Information Communication and Technology (DICT) activates 132 more free public wireless fidelity (WiFi) access points in 60 locations in Bohol by July, reports DICT Bohol chief Victor Magallanes at the Kapihan sa PIA.

This brings to Bohol a total of nearly 500 active points where everyone can connect for free in 200 locations as the “DICT Free WiFi Access to All” continues its services here.

Free wifi access to all is a DICT flagship initiative which goal is bridging the digital divide across the country fragmented by its archipelagic nature.

Mandated by the Free Internet Access in Public Areas Act or RA 10929, it provides for free internet access in public venues: plazas, schools, hospitals, government offices and geographically isolated and depressed areas to jumpstart digital inclusion and provide access to the world information superhighway and open up the markets for micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) to showcase their products, Magllanes explained.

However, with still limited areas with wired and wireless access, the next best thing is the Bayanihan Subscriber Information Module (SIM) Project or JuanSIM ng Bayan Program, explains DICT project development officer Engr. Jimmy Ratilla.

The Bayanihan SIM Project is another flagship initiative of the DICT aimed at expanding internet access for under-served communities, Magallanes summed.

A project which forms part of the government’s digital Bayanihan, and which supports the dictum that No Filipinos would be left without internet access, the project is implemented in partnership with the Department of Education (DepEd), Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG), Department of Health (DOH) and private telecommunications companies in the bayanihan concept.

The project empowers people with internet access by mobile data allocated for the SIM cards, instead of relying on the public WIFI hotspots.

During its initial roll-out in Bohol, DICT distributed 2,600 Bayanihan SIM to students and faculty members of Alicia, according to Magallanes.

The SIM packs would be loaded with 25 gigabytes worth of data connection per month, for one year, added Engr. Ratilla.

The data can not be carried over to the following month, so that they have to consume the data before the next data allocation, otherwise the remaining data is lost.

For minors, while the SIM can only be entrusted to subscribers with email addresses, the Bayanihan SIM would be temporarily given to their parents or guardians, but for the student’s use in online research and other school tasks.

The DICT has also blocked access to certain applications which students are not allowed into.

Aside from Alicia, DICT said SIM packs have been distributed to Garcia Hernandez, Dimiao, Valencia.

Phase 2 of the project expands the coverage to 13,000 SIM for 61 identified schools. (PIAbohol)