Page 30 - Islands Business March 2022
P. 30

ENGLISH NAVIGATOR AND THE
                   ‘KURU’ STORY                                                                                           Centre for Pacific Crops and Trees in Suva, Fiji, although border
                                                                                                                          lockdowns  triggered  by  the  COVID-19  pandemic  had  delayed
                                                                                                                          the shipment.
                                                                                                                           That delay has not stopped TTE from using other methods to
                                                                                                                          build up its nursery of young breadfruit trees.
                                                                                                                           “What we have been doing in the meantime is to identify good
                   COOK ISLANDS RETRACE ITS BREADFRUIT ROOTS                                                              breadfruit trees, those that bear fruits in abundance.
                                                                                                                           “From these trees, we dig out parts of its roots, the size of your
                                                                                                                          thumb, about 3⁄4 inches long and you grow them in pot plants,”
                                                                                                                          explains Mataroa.
                                                                                                                           “As  long  as  they  are  watered  and  looked  after,  they  should
                                                                                                                          grow in 2 months time.
                                                                                                                           “Once they grow to about 5 feet tall, these are then transplanted
                                                                                                                          to the breadfruit orchard.”
                                                                                                                           That the stakes are high are not lost on the community leader.
                                                                                                                           He  realised  this  when  he  attended  the  Pacific  Breadfruit
                                                                                                                          Roundtable in Tonga in September 2016.
                                                                                                                           With  an  annual  import  food  bill  of  around  NZ$30  million,
                                                                                                                          Mataroa told the conference that there was so much to be done
                                                                                                                          if local crops like breadfruit were going to make a dent on the
                                                                                                                          Cook Islands’ economy.
                                                                                                                           “Breadfruit is everywhere in the Cooks, but we eat imported
                                                                                                                          food.
                                                                                                                           “If the ships stopped coming to the Cooks, we would be the
                                                                                                                          first in the world to all die.
                                                                                                                           “We spend upwards of $30 million a year on imported food,
                                                                                                                          yet we have breadfruit right on our doorstep, and do not know
              Fruit bearing branch of breadfruit tree                                                                     the potential that it has.”

                                                                                                                          This is one of a series of impact stories featured in the Pacific
                                                                                                                          Islands Farmer Organisations Network (PIFON) undertaken by
       The  Cook  Islands  and  kuru  (breadfruit)  share  a  long  and   island itself, Te Tango Enua felt the need to embark on a public   members  of  the  Network  in  9  Pacific  Island  Countries  under
      interesting history.                                    awareness programme first.                                  the Farmers’ Organizations for Africa, Caribbean and Pacific –
       It was the English explorer Captain James Cook who was the   “Breadfruit  is  a  traditional  crop  in  the  Cook  Islands  and  is   fo4acp programme – which is managed by PIFON and funded
      first European to navigate through these groups of islands in the   not  looked  at  from  a  commercial  perspective,”  explains  TTE   by  the  European  Union    (EU),  the  African,  Caribbean  and
      eastern Pacific Ocean, and it was on one of those voyages that   President, Daniel Mataroa.                         Pacific (ACP) group of countries and the International Fund for
      Cook stumbled upon the humble tropical food crop in what is   “The  awareness  programme  aims  to  change  the  mind-set   Agricultural Development (IFAD).                A breadfruit tree
      now Tahiti, and recommended it as an energy food for British   of  the  community  by  advocating  about  its  health  benefits,
      colonies in the Caribbean.                              including the processing of its flour into gluten free flour that is
       As  the  history  books  tell  us,  through  Captain  Cook’s   marketable globally.
      recommendations, another equally famous English sea captain   “The  idea  is  to  take  this  awareness  workshop  across  the
      William  Bligh  set  sail  for  the  South  Pacific  aboard  the  HMS   country.”
      Bounty  in  1787  to  collect  breadfruit,  only  to  be  met  with  the   As part of the awareness drive, TTE identified Cook Islands’
      infamous ‘mutiny on the Bounty’ fate.                   eastern island of Mauke as best suited to drive the resurgence
       If only Captain Cook or Bligh for that matter would have known   of breadfruit farming.
      that over 200 years after the mutiny, a breadfruit revival of sorts   “Mauke was selected as the venue for this programme as it
      would begin on the island nation that now bears Cook’s name.   is  only  45  minutes  by  air  from  the  main  island  of  Rarotonga,
       This green renaissance if we can call it that, is not so much   whereas some of the other islands involve a return flight of 8
      about shipping young breadfruit trees from Tahiti westward to   hours.
      the Cook Islands, but more about revitalising, or re-popularising   “The volcanic origin of Mauke, which is the easternmost island
      breadfruit orchards on the archipelago.                 of the Cook Islands, makes it ideal for agriculture, and with its
       Behind the initiative is the local farmer organisation Te Tango   population of 927 people, the potential for expansion is huge
      Enua,  which  secured  funding  from  the  Farmer  Organisations   and can be accommodated by the land mass.”
      for  Africa,  Caribbean  and  Pacific  (FO4ACP)  project,  a  joint   All  told,  47  new  farmers,  17  of  them  women  and  6  young
      partnership  between  the  European  Union  (EU),  the  African,   people attended the training on Mauke.
      Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) group of states, the International   Running  parallel  to  this  has  been  the  construction  of  a
      Fund  for  Agricultural  Development  (IFAD)  and  the  Pacific   breadfruit tree nursery, as well as the production of a breadfruit
      Islands Farmer Organisations (PIFON) to get a group of farmers   manual.
      interested in farming the food crop.                      In addition, TTE with the help of PIFON had placed an order
       While breadfruit has been an island staple for as long as the   for 2,000 tissue-cultured plants with the Pacific Community’s   Breadfruit slowly roasted on the open fire  Breadfruit ready to be enjoyed
        30 Islands Business, March 2022
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