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----- Original Message ----
From: taufik roman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: agromania@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 9, 2008 8:21:17 PM
Subject: Re: [agromania] Panduan Tanam Padi SRI Organik Akan Disebarkan Gratis


--- On Tue, 6/24/08, bambang kusharyono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
From: bambang kusharyono <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [agromania] Re: [agronursery] Panduan Tanam Padi SRI Organik Akan 
Disebarkan Gratis
To: agromania@yahoogroups.com
Date: Tuesday, June 24, 2008, 11:58 PM

Maaf, ikutan urun-urun masalah padi SRI.
Semoga berkenan (I)

HOW TO HELP RICE PLANTS
GROW BETTER AND PRODUCE MORE:
TEACH YOURSELF AND OTHERS
Prepared by Association Tefy Saina, Antananarivo, Madagascar, and
Cornell International Institute for Food, Agriculture and Development
INTRODUCTION
The system of rice intensification (SRI) has already helped many hundreds of
farmers in Madagascar
to at least double their yields. With good management of plants, soil and
water, yields can be
increased possibly to 6, 8, even 10 tons per hectare, or even more.
• This self-help book will share with you the basic ideas and practices that
can make this
improvement possible. This information is not presented as a recipe to be
followed
mechanically, but as a guide for farmers' own testing and evaluation of new
ways to help rice
plants grow more productively.
• If this book and this method of production help you, we hope that you in
turn will share these
ideas and practices with other farmers, so that families and communities
throughout
Madagascar can become more prosperous and secure.
SRI was developed in Madagascar by Fr. Henri de Laulanié, S.J., who between
1961 and 1995
worked with Malagasy farmers and colleagues to improve the possibilities of
rice production in this
country. He wanted Malagasy people to have happier and more secure lives. It is
now being studied
and evaluated by scientists and rice growers in other countries.
SRI begins with a philosophy, that rice plants are to be respected and
supported as living creatures
that have great potential. This potential will only be realized if we provide
plants with the best
conditions for their growth. If we help plants to grow in new and better ways,
they will repay our
efforts several times over. We do not treat them like little machines to be
manipulated and forced to
do things that are not natural for them to do.
• Some of the things that have been done for hundreds of years by farmers in
Madagascar and in
countries around the world to make rice plants grow have unfortunately reduced
their natural
potential. This new system of rice intensification changes these traditional
practices to bring
out of the rice plant significant possibilities for increasing production.
• The yields that can be achieved by each individual farmer will depend on
many things: on the
careful and timely transplanting of seedlings, on the preparation and
management of the soil in
the field, on the control that is maintained over water, on the quality of the
soil itself, on
whether the variety of rice that is planted is really suitable for the growing
conditions.
• No purchase of new inputs -- neither new seeds nor chemical fertilizers --
is necessary for
farmers to get much increased yields. The increases can be very great as rice
plants grown
with SRI methods have a very different structure than usual, with several times
more tillers
and much larger root systems that can absorb more nutrients from the soil.
2
• The plants also have many times more grain per panicle. It has always been
possible to get
this different structure and this much greater productivity from rice plants.
But this potential
has not been elicited by the most appropriate practices to manage the plants,
soil, water and
nutrients.
HOW SRI CAN IMPROVE A FARMER'S PRODUCTION AND LIFE
One of the first farmers to make use of SRI methods was Honoré Randrianarasana
near Ranomafana,
who started working with Tefy Saina in the 1994/95 season, planting just 25
ares (.25 ha) using SRI
methods. He got a yield of 9.5 tons/ha the first year, compared to his previous
yields of 2 to 3 tons/ha.
The next year he expanded his SRI area to 1.25 ha and got 10.95 tons/ha, which
encouraged him to
expand further his use of SRI methods, to 2 hectares and then 4 hectares, with
still higher yields (12.7
and 13.7 tons/ha). In 1998-99, he planted 5 hectares, but his yields were
around 7 t/ha because the
season was bad for all farmers in the region.
In 1999-2000, Honoré planted 8 hectares with SRI, and by this time his
economic situation had
improved enough to buy 9 hectares of paddy land (he started with rented land)
and three houses, one
of them in the regional capital of Fianarantsoa. Not all farmers will be this
successful or able to
manage such large extents with this methodology. But Honoré has shown the
potential that SRI can
have to improve farmers' lives.
THE BASIC IDEAS
The system of rice intensification has discovered and demonstrated some
important methods for
helping rice plants to achieve their real potential. This potential has been
obscured by previous
practices. We begin by presenting the ideas on which SRI is based.
• Farmers should first understand these ideas. Then they should choose and
evaluate specific
practices that are most beneficial for their own conditions. Every farmer is
already -- or
should become -- an experimenter.
• SRI changes the structure of rice plants -- the density and number of their
roots and tillers --
by changing the practices used to manage rice plants, the soil they grow in,
and the water they
receive through irrigation, so that the plants can become more productive
For rice plants to be more productive, they need to have:
• More tillers per plant,
• More fertile tillers (panicles) which form from the tillers that a plant
puts out,
• More grains per fertile tiller, and
• Larger grains.
If rice plants are spread out and not planted very close together, they have
more room to grow. They
will get more sunshine and air and can produce more tillers. More of these
tillers will become fertile
and produce grains of rice. With more space in which to grow, rice plants'
roots become larger and
3
are better able to draw nutrients from the soil. This enables rice plants to
produce more grains, which
is the reason for growing rice.
• Although it may be surprising, it is possible to get many more grains of
rice from a field by
planting fewer plants and by putting them farther apart, so that each plant is
healthier and
more vigorous in its growth. That "less" can be "more"
seems strange, but it is true.
• For the plant to grow successfully above ground, it needs a healthy and
vigorous root system
below ground. The "trick" of SRI is to have both a larger root system
for each plant below
ground and more growth of tillers, leaves and grains above ground.
Planting rice plants densely and close together wastes seeds. The individual
plants will be smaller and
less productive. Having more rice plants is not as beneficial as having fewer
plants that are very
productive. Transplanting older seedlings also wastes potential.
• With SRI methods, you can easily get 50 tillers on a single rice plant, and
some farmers using
these methods well have been able to get over 100 tillers from a single
seedling.
• Farmers can get 200 grains per fertile tiller, and the very best farmers
have gotten as many as
400 grains on a single tiller. One farmer in Sri Lanka says with SRI he has had
one panicle
with 600 grains.
This is not a miracle. It results from good management of the plant and of its
soil and water
conditions, so that the plant's potential for growth and production gets
fully expressed.
HOW CAN WE GET PLANTS TO PRODUCE MORE TILLERS?
The key to success with SRI is the early transplanting of seedlings, as
explained below. This usually
means transplanting seedlings before they are 15 days old, and as early as 8 or
10 days -- when only
the first small root and tiller, with two tiny leaves, have emerged from the
rice seed. When you plant
older seedlings -- 3, 4, 5 or 6 weeks old -- they have already lost much of
their potential to produce a
large number of tillers.
• When seedlings are planted with much delay after being removed from the
nursery, they suffer
a lot. Once removed from their seedbed, seedlings should be replanted in the
field within half
an hour, and preferably within 15 minutes.
• When seedlings are pushed into the ground, rather than gently laid into the
soil, they also must
expend a lot of energy to resume root growth. This disturbs their development.
Transplanting rice seedlings early and carefully helps plants resume their
growth in the field without
reducing their potential for high yields by harvest time. But more must be done
to capture that
potential. It is especially necessary to promote strong root growth.
HOW CAN WE GET RICE PLANTS TO GROW STRONGER ROOTS?
The first thing is to plant single seedlings, one by one, rather than to plant
them together in bunches
of 3 or 4 seedlings,or even more, as is usually done.
4
• When several seedlings are planted together, their roots must compete with
each other. This is
a similar problem for rice plants as when they grow close together with weeds
and must
compete with them for nutrients, water and sunlight.
It is important, as discussed below, that the seedlings be spaced wide apart,
usually at least 25
centimeters from each other, and preferably in a square pattern. This
facilitates weeding at the same
time it gives the rice more access to sunlight and air above ground.
• When the rice plants are set out far from each other, and if the soil
conditions are good, their
roots will have plenty of space to spread out into, especially when they are
not competing with
each other.
• With wider spacing and with single planting, there will be many fewer
plants in a field.
Indeed, there may be only 10 or 16 in a square meter instead of 50 or 100. The
highest yield
has been achieved with only 4 plants per square meter, spaced 50 cm by 50 cm so
the plants
grow like bushes. Wide spacing saves seed -- as much as 100 kilograms per
hectare -- at the
same time that it contributes much greater production at harvest time because
the rice plants
produce many more tillers and grains.
Planting seedlings with precise spacing can be one of the more difficult
aspects of SRI at the
beginning, when farmers are not used to this. Two different methods have been
developed.
• Farmers can stretch strings across their field, tied to sticks stuck into
the bund at the edge of
the field, spaced at 25, 30 or more centimeters, with the strings marked
(knotted or painted) at
whatever interval has been chosen (25, 30, or more centimeters), and then these
sticks and
strings (parallel to each other) are moved across the field; or
• A kind of "rake" that has teeth the desired distance apart (25,
30 or more centimeters) can be
constructed simply from wood. It is pulled across the surface of the prepared
muddy field,
scratching lines onto the surface at desired intervals. Drawing the rake across
the first set of
lines perpendicularly (at a right-angle) to them creates the desired square
pattern, on which
seedlings are planted at the intersections of lines.
The first method is more precise but the second is quicker and saves
considerable labor time.
A very important influence on the size and health of the roots is how the tiny
seedlings are placed
into the soil when they are transplanted.
• When seedlings (or the clump of several seedlings) are thrust straight
downward into the soil,
the tips of their roots will be pointed up toward the surface. The shape of the
transplanted
seedling will be like a J, with its root bent upward.
• The rice plant root grows from its tip. If the tip is pointing upward, the
root must change its
position in the soil to get the tip pointed downward before it can resume
growth. This requires
a lot of energy and effort from the tiny root, at a time when it is still weak
after transplanting,
especially if it has been allowed to dry out by delay in getting it from the
nursery and into the
field.
5
• With SRI, one does not thrust seedlings downward into the soil. Rather,
each seedling is
slipped sideways into the soil, very gently and close to the surface, so that
its root lies
horizontally in the moist soil. This makes the shape of the transplanted
seedling more like an
L than like a J.
• With this shape, it is easier for the tip of the root to grow downward into
the soil. When the
plant is shaped more like an L than a J, less energy is necessary for the
plant's root to start
growing quickly downward and to begin putting out more roots at the same time
that it is
sending tillers upward.
A major departure from usual rice-planting practice -- an innovation as
important as transplanting tiny
young seedlings -- is to grow rice in soil with no continuously standing water.
The rice plant during
its growth stage only needs to have soil that is moist, but not saturated.
Indeed, the field should
occasionally be dried even to the point of cracking. This goes against what
most people believe about
rice, but it is true.
• An important discovery of SRI is that rice is not an aquatic plant.
Although it can survive
when its roots are continuously submerged under water, it does not thrive in
this situation.
Rice does not grow as well underwater as when its roots are able to get oxygen
from direct
contact with air.
• Rice plants that grow in standing water will adjust to this environment..
Their roots develop
small air pockets (known as aerenchyma) that permit oxygen from above ground to
reach the
roots. But this is not an ideal condition for plant growth. It interferes with
transfer of nutrients
from the soil to the plant's tillers and leaves.
• With SRI, we have discovered that the soil only needs to be kept moist
during the period of
growth when the plant is putting out tillers and leaves, before it begins to
flower and to
produce grains. During this reproductive stage, the rice plants should be given
a thin layer of
water (1-2 cm) on the surface of the soil.
• Surprisingly, rice plants' growth will benefit if occasionally, even
once a week, the soil is
permitted to dry out, at least on the surface. This permits more oxygen to
enter the soil and
reach the roots. When the soil is not saturated, the roots need to grow longer
to seek out water.
When the soil around rice plants' roots has abundant water, they can be
"lazy" and need not
grow very much. This limits their ability to acquire nutrients from the soil
• Once the rice plant reaches its flowering stage, as note already, farmers
should maintain a thin
cover of water (1-2 cm) on the field to support grain formation. The field
should be dried
completely about 25 days before harvest.
When rice fields are not kept flooded continuously with water, this will give
weeds a chance to grow.
So efforts must be made to eliminate weeds, so that they do not compete with
the rice plants and
cannot take away nutrients and water from the rice.
• A very simple mechanical weeder, called a rotating hoe, pushed by hand has
been developed
to enable farmers to eliminate weeds easily, quickly and early. It reduces the
hard labor of
pulling up individual weeds by hand once they emerge. The weeder by churning up
the soil
6
destroys weeds before they absorb many nutrients. By leaving them in the soil
to decompose,
it returns their nutrients to the soil
• This weeder, which has rotating wheels mounted vertically in the metal
plate that is pushed
along the ground, is not expensive. It can cost as little as 25,000 FMG (US$5)
if locally
made. It may take as much as 25 days of labor to weed a hectare of rice.
However, each
weeding can add one ton or even two tons of production to the yield, so that
the payoff to the
farmer from each additional weeding can be very great.
• The first weeding should be within about 10 days after transplanting, and
at least one more
weeding should follow within two weeks. This will dig up weeds at the same time
that it puts
more air into the soil for the roots to utilize.
• Doing one or two additional weedings (3 or 4 weedings in all), before the
plants have
completedtheir growth and begin flowering, will provide still more oxygen to
the soil. This is
more important than removing any remaining weeds. Extra weedings can greatly
increase
yields.
Because chemical fertilizer is often not available in villages when the farmer
needs it, or is available
only at a price that farmers cannot afford to pay, SRI recommends using compost
or manure to add
nutrients to the field.
• Because the yields from SRI methods are so great, most soils need to be
enriched by the
addition of nutrients. But healthy rice plants with large roots can access much
better the
nutrients already in the soil as well as those added through compost or manure,
and thus the
plants can get more benefit from these.
• Soil that is enriched with compost or manure will usually have better
structure so that plant
roots can grow more easily in the soil. Compost releases its nutrients more
slowly than does
fertilizer so plants get more benefit from this source of nutrients.
• Making compost and working it into the soil of the field is usually a lot
of work. But
experience shows that this is a good investment for the farmer because the
better quality soil
supports better root growth and performance. Adding chemical fertilizer if it
is available and
the farmer can afford this can often add to yields. But fertilizer is not as
good as adding
organic material to the soil.
These are the basis ideas for transforming the production of rice. Once you
understand how to help
plants product more tillers as well as how to get a larger root system, the
natural result will be to
produce more grains from your fields.
TECHNIQUES
With an understanding of the potential of rice that we want to achieve, and of
the ideas behind this
strategy for growing more productive rice, specific techniques make more sense.
As we stated in the
7
introduction, these techniques should not be implemented mechanically. Instead,
farmers should
always keep in mind the principles discussed above, such as:
• Help the small seedling to achieve its great potential by getting it
established in the field at a
young age -- quickly and in an L shape from which the root grows easily.
• Prepare the soil so that it has a good supply of nutrients and keep the
soil well aerated. SRI
soil management practices -- no flooding, and the use of compost -- help
microorganisms in
the soil to produce more nitrogen for the rice plants, and it is well known
that plant roots
require oxygen.
• Avoid competition between rice plants so that each can grow efficiently
because it has good
access to air, sunlight, nutrients, and water.
Preparing the Nursery and Starting Seedlings
Fr. de Laulanié emphasized that the nursery for growing seedlings not be
regarded as a miniature field
-- to be kept flooded -- but rather it should be treated like a garden, where
the soil is kept moist but
not saturated. Watering by hand is sufficient if there is not enough rainfall
to maintain moisture in the
soil and for the seedlings. With SRI, the nursery is quite small. It can be
only a small fraction of the
size of the field to be planted. The following steps are recommended for a
modified "dry bed" method
of nursery development for SRI seedlings.
• Rice seeds should first be soaked in temperate water for 24 hours. Any that
are irregular or
float should be discarded.
• Next, put the seeds in a sack (burlap or other) and place it in a warm
compost pile or in a hold
in the ground that has been warmed by fire. Cover the sack completely with
either compost or
soil and leave it for 24 hours for slow warming of the seeds.
• The seedbed should be prepared as closely as possible to the field that
will be planted, so as to
minimize transport time between seedlings' removal from the seedbed and
their transplanting
in the field.
• Compost should be mixed into the soil of the seedbed at a rate of 100 kg
per are (10 m x 10
m). Prior to seeding, lay down a fine layer of "ripe" compost or
black soil in the seedbed to
give the seeds good nutrient-rich material to begin their growth in.
• Farmers in Sri Lanka have found that building up the seedbed, about 10 cm,
with lengths of
bamboo, putting in compost or animal manure (chicken manure is very good) along
with soil,
gives the seedlings an excellent start and makes them easy to remove. Also, the
organic
nutrients are contained within the seedbed better this way.
• Broadcast the pre-germinated seeds onto the bed at a rate of about 200
grams for every 3
square meters, and then cover the seeds with a fine layer of soil.
• Water the seedbed every day in the late afternoon, or as often as needed to
maintain a
moderate level of soil moisture. The soil should not be saturated or kept
continuously wet. If
there has been rain during the day, no watering may be needed. How much to add
to the bed
depends on whether the soil has become dry.
8
• Transplanting should be done when the seedlings have just two leaves -- and
before they have
more. This usually occurs between 8 and 15 days.
• Seeds should not be sown all at the same time. Rather, appropriate batches
of seed should be
sown on successive days, so that the plants when they are put into the field
can be all a
uniform age, all between 8 and 12 days.
Field Preparation
The land preparation does not require special steps, though the soil should be
well worked as it would
be to get the best results from any method for growing rice.
• Make sure that there are adequate drainage canals either through the center
of the field or
along the edges of the field to ensure proper water control. With SRI, one does
not want to
have standing water in the field or saturated soil.
In general, we have found that compost is quite sufficient as a source of
nutrients. Chicken manure,
for example, is very rich in nutrients, but sometimes too rich. Farmers have
found that they get best
results by working compost made from diverse sorts of biomass into the field
during the preceding
cultivation season, when they are growing a crop between their rice crops, such
as potatoes or beans
or onions. The compost applied then helps that crop grow better, and the
further decomposition of the
compost provides adequate nutrients for the rice crop that follows.
The steps for preparing the soil for planting seedlings are not described here,
including how best to
work the compost or (if available) manure into the field. SRI does not require
any special preparation,
only good normal preparation for having best results. Having cattle trample the
soil when it has been
puddled both breaks up clods and forces air into the soil for later plant use.
Leveling the field is important but need not be as precise as when one is
trying to maintain a uniform
layer of water on the field. It is more important to ensure that the soil can
be well drained, by
constructing channels or furrows around sections within the field and around
the whole field. Simply
putting furrows in a fishbone pattern across the field does not evacuate water
as evenly from the
whole area. Keeping root zones moist most but not all of the time is the main
requirement.
Taking Seedlings from the Nursery
Seedlings should be lifted out of the seedbed gently and WITH A TROWEL, rather
than being pulled
up. It is important that the seed sac remain attached to the infant root.
Seedlings should be removed
from the seedbed as one would cut sod for landscaping purposes. The sod cutting
should then be
moistened, and a single seedling (with two leaves) should be gently removed
from the cutting with
the thumb and forefinger.
When transplanting the seedling, the root should LIE HORIZONTALLY, so that the
plant's shape
(including the root) is like the letter L, with the root tip able to grow
downward easily and quickly.
Planting the seedling with a vertical motion, plunging it into the soil in a
downward movement, is
liable to leave the root tip inverted upwards. This will delay the root's
resumption of downward
growth, a delay that must be avoided if the plant is to reach its full
tillering potential.
9
• Seedlings should always be transplanted from the nursery into the field
within half an hour,
and preferably within 15 minutes. The roots should never be allowed to dry out.
They should
also not be handled roughly or slammed or hit with the palm of the hand (as
some farmers in
Madagascar do before transplanting the seedlings).
Transplanting
To plant in a uniform square pattern, with regular spacing, one method is to
use lines (strings or
ropes) tied between sticks on the edge of the field, spaced 25 cm apart -- or
30 cm, or 40 cm, or
possibly 50 cm if the soil is very fertile and well managed. The lines should
be marked (or knotted)
at similar intervals to match the width of the rows so that there will be
uniform spacing that facilitates
weeding. Or one can use a specially constructed simple "rake" that
has teeth spaced the desired
distance apart.
• Spacing is a variable to be tested and evaluated. It is usually best to
start with 25 x 25 cm
spacing, possibly increasing the distance between plants as farmers' gain
skill and confidence,
and as soil fertility is enhanced by compost.
An alternative is to use a special rake to score the surface of the field in a
"grid" with a square pattern
for planting seedlings at the intersections of the lines. Farmers find that
this can be a faster method
than using strings or ropes. Opinions differ as to whether this method of
transplanting takes more time
or not, and whether it is more difficult. At first it make take more time, but
because so many fewer
plants are put into the field, once some skill and confidence have been gained,
SRI transplanting
should be quicker. Some farmers have also reported that it is less arduous,
with little or no back pain.
Farmers are often worried, when planting, about some seedlings dying. In fact,
with SRI methods
well used, we find very little mortality, maybe 2%, so that it is not worth the
effort t replace them, as
surrounding plants grow a little larger to take advantage of the open area.
Farmers who are concerned
should plant some seedlings along the edge of the field that they can
transplant into any vacant spaces
at the time of the first weeding.
Water Control
Little has been written about water application and management for SRI,
possibly because there has
been little systematic experimentation and evaluation of this. The importance
of keeping the soil
unsaturated to get more air to plant roots is evident. But how long can a field
be left without water?
How dry can they become? What is the role of rainfall in providing water for
field? What differences
in practice will be necessary with different kinds of soil?
The addition of water should occur on or about a week after transplanting, and
then the first weeding
(using the rotary hoe) should be done after soil is sufficiently moist, within
the first 10 days. If there
is intermittent rain, sufficient to keep the soil moist, no water additions are
needed. The best time to
add water is before the periodic weedings.
During the growth phase, roughly the first three months, water should be
applied only to the fields for
weeding purposes, being left to dry out even to the point of surface cracking.
This will contribute to
10
soil aeration. This drying should be done at least 3 or 4 times before the
phase of flowering and
panicle initiation.
We find that an increasing number of farmers who practice SRI are following an
alternating schedule
for water application. Instead of trying to keep the soil continuously moist
but aerated (well-drained),
with some periods of complete drying, one can flood the field for 3-5 days and
then drain it and keep
it dried for 3-5 days. We do not have any research to show what is the best
length of time for wetting
and drying under such an alternating pattern of water application, and in any
case, what is best for a
particular field will depend upon soil texture and other factors.
• If farmers want to save labor, they may adopt such an alternating wet-dry
schedule. We do not
know whether or how much this might lower yield below an optimum with moist but
aerated
soil. We encourage farmers and others to experiment with different water
application methods,
noting what serves best the plants' growth needs.
The physical design of fields for good control over water -- drainage as well
as inflow -- needs to be
considered, matching design to soil, water and topographical conditions, as
well as methods for
getting greater aeration of water, e.g., applying water to the field through a
bamboo pipe that lets
water fall onto the field. Farmers are encouraged to experiment with water
management according to
their understanding of the desirability of ensuring aeration of the soil for
better root growth. Rather
than recommend a specific schedule, we emphasize the principle for farmers to
adapt to their needs.
Weeding
The justification for this has been discussed already, but the techniques need
to be made clear. How
does one use the weeder to get best effect for both weed removal and for soil
aeration? The practice
of planting seedlings in a square pattern (25 by 25 cm or wider) permits
weeding in both directions,
up and down rows and across them. This should be done until the growth of
plants' canopy makes it
difficult to pass the weeder between them.
We can showing the benefits of weeding from the resulting yields for farmers
using SRI in
Ambatovaky during the l 997-98 season, comparing yields with the number of
weedings done. Under
the growing conditions in that community (high elevation, well-drained soils),
there were dramatic
benefits from doing more than two weedings, adding about 2 tons/hectare for
each additional
weeding. Two farmers did no weedings and got 6.0 tons/ha.; eight farmers did
one weeding only and
got 7.7 tons/ha.; the 27 farmers who did two weedings got about the same (7..4
tons/ha.). But the 24
farmers who did three weedings averaged 9.1 tons/ha., and the 15 farmers who
did four weedings got
11.8 tons/ha. This information gives justification and encouragement for doing
more than the
minimum recommended number of weedings.
Pest and Disease Control
Pest and disease problems appear to be less with SRI methods, perhaps because
the fields are kept
less humid. It is known that healthier, more vigorous plants have more capacity
to resist pest and
disease attacks. Farmers in Bangladesh, Cambodia, the Philippines, Myanmar and
Sri Lanka, as well
as Madagascar, have reported fewer pest and disease problems with this method,
making use of
agrochemical not necessary or economical. More needs to be known about how
farmers using SRI
can best deal with any pest or disease outbreak affecting crops.
11
Management after Flowering
SRI focuses most of its efforts on getting the rice plants well established in
the soil and on
encouraging their active increase of roots and tillers during the vegetative
growth stage. The water
management strategy changes once flowering begins, with a thin layer of water
(1-2 cm) being
maintained continuously on the field, though there can be some interruptions in
this. It is
recommended that farmers drain their fields about 25 days before harvesting, to
let the soil dry out
and encouraging the plant to transfer as much of its nutrient supply to the
grains as possible. Some
scientists think draining should come later than this. Farmers are encouraged
to experiment to see
what works best for their soil and other conditions.
Harvest
SRI rice is harvested just like any other rice, except there should be much
more rice to harvest. This
makes the farmer's task more difficult, but this is the kind of difficulty
everyone should wish for: a
bountiful harvest. Some farmers find that the way rice grows with SRI
management makes harvesting
easier. For one thing, there is almost never any lodging, even with larger
panicles. Also, the panicles
are easier to collect off the plants.
Experimentation
Throughout the whole process, farmers should be observing their rice crop and
their rice field
carefully, looking for any signs of stress or poor growth. Farmers should feel
free to make some
adjustments in practices like timing, spacing, soil preparation, weeding, or to
try any other thing they
think might give their rice a better chance to grow vigorously. Innovations
should be tried first in
small areas rather than for the whole field.
One of the main things that needs to be evaluated by each farmer according to
his or her particular
field conditions, is the spacing of the rice plants. What density of rice
plants per square meter will
produce the best total yield from that area will depend on the farmer's
soil, on temperature and
climatic conditions, as well as the variety of rice used.
We suggest starting with plants set out in a square pattern 25 by 25
centimeters. Sometimes wider
spacing is more productive (even with fewer plants) depending on soil
structure, nutrient and
drainage conditions. Sometimes narrower spacing produces more total rice,
though probably plants
should not be closer than 20 by 20 cm, or 25 x 14 cm. Enough space must be left
for the weeder to be
passed up and down the rows between plants in both directions. With good soil
and water conditions,
very wide spacing is likely to be most productive -- 40 by 40 cm, or even 50 by
50 cm.
Farmers are also encouraged to experiment with different varieties of rice.
Sometimes certain
improved varieties respond very well to these management practices, but
sometimes, under other
conditions, certain local varieties will produce more. We have seen some
varieties such as x265 and
2067 perform very well at higher elevations (over 1,000 meters), producing 11
to 12 tons per hectare.
But when these varieties are planted at lower elevations (400 to 600 meters)
just 20 to 25 kilometers
away, their yield may be only half or a third as much. (Variety 2067 produced
rice at a rate of 21
12
tons/hectare for the farmer Ralalason in Soatanana, Madagascar, who used all of
the SRI methods to
their best advantage, including excellent compost, applying 5 tons to his 1/8
hectare. He applied it to
the vegetable crop that he grew between rice crops, so it had a long time to
decompose.)
• Farmers can often get a much greater return from their land and labor if
they can find one or
more varieties that are very well suited to their growing conditions. This
requires
experimentation and evaluation by farmers and will be more efficient if a
number of farmers
cooperate in evaluating varieties. If a large number of them operating rice
fields under similar
conditions test many different varieties, they can usefully share information
about their
experience with each.
LABOR REQUIREMENTS
One of the main reasons cited by farmers and others for not adopting SRI
methods is that SRI requires
more labor. This is true in the sense that any intensification will require
more work and certainly
more management effort. However, the increased labor requirements for SRI are
not simply a matter
of needing to invest more labor, and in some respects, farmers will find that
SRI requires less labor.
In fact, some Sri Lankan farmers now report that SRI requires fewer days of
labor per hectare than
their conventional methods, which include time for spraying their fields with
insecticides, no longer
needed.
First, when any new method of production is used, there is some time requires
for learning how to use
the method correctly and quickly. Some of the increased labor needed for SRI is
simply a matter of
learning time. This is an investment that should be repaid within the first
season.
• One study of SRI labor requirements found that it required about two-thirds
more days of
labor per hectare when using the methods in the first or second year. But after
farmers had
become better acquainted with the methods, and had become more comfortable with
them
(particularly the transplanting), the labor requirement dropped by about
one-third, so that SRI
required only about 25% more labor per hectare. A more recent study with 108
farmers in
Madagascar who used both SRI and conventional methods on their farm found that
the
difference in labor requirements for SRI was 25% greater. Since yields with SRI
were at least
doubled, the amount of rice produced for each day of work invested was
increased greatly.
• The field preparation is essentially the same for SRI and usual methods of
production. As the
nursery is much smaller, there can be a saving of time on this part of the
process.
• The amount of time initially spent in setting up a field for planting with
SR1 is greater, as
lines need to be laid out for planting seedlings in rows carefully and
well-spaced. Although
the amount of time spent for putting each seedling into the field is several
times greater, there
will be many fewer seedlings to be planted. The number of seedlings
transplanted with SRI is
only one-tenth as many as with conventional planting, and possibly even fewer
if wider
spacing is used.
• Once farmers are skilled in organizing SRI transplanting -- which requires
a handful of
seedlings for a field where before a headload full of seedlings was needed
before -- the
transplanting may take no more time or only a little more.
13
The biggest difference in terms of labor required is for weeding. But doing the
minimum of two
weedings with a weeder take little more time than two hand weedings -and this
work is much less
difficult and tiresome than bending over to pull up weeds. Some farmers
consider weeding for SRI to
be easier than with traditional methods.
• How many weedings a farmer will do beyond this minimum is for each to
decide for himself
or herself. Farmers should experiment to see how much increased yield they get
from doing
additional weedings. We know some farmers who have been able to get one ton or
even two
tons more rice from each additional weeding.
• There can be a very great return from the labor invested, worth 10 times
and even 20 times
more than the cost. So each farmer can decide for himself or herself how much
effort to invest
in raising his or her production.
One big difference in labor requirement between SRI and conventional rice
production can be for
harvesting because yields are so much higher. But no farmers complain about
having to bring in more
rice from their fields and thresh it, since this means that the household will
get much more benefit
from the labor they have already invested. Also, because the panicles are
bigger and sturdier, with
less dropping of rice, some farmers find that harvesting even for a larger
volume of grain is easier
with SRI.
One study of SRI experience on the west coast of Madagascar found that for
farmers who were
reasonably acquainted with the methods, using them required about 500 hours per
hectare. Given the
prevailing price/cost of labor, an increase in yield of 500 kilograms per
hectare, at low harvest-time
prices, would repay the extra labor. Average yield increases with SRI were
about 2,000 kilograms per
hectare. If the farmer could wait to sell his rice for three months, when the
price had gone up, yield
would need to increase by only 250 kilograms per hectare to cover the increased
labor cost, producing
2,000 more kilograms per hectare. (The reference is to research by Frederic
Bonlieu during the 1998-
99 season.)
Some farmer households will not have enough labor to be able to cultivate the
full extent of their rice
fields with SRI methods. In this situation, they should experiment with SRI on
a small area to satisfy
themselves that this technique will increase their production by a substantial
amount. We suggest that
they then cultivate only part of their available fields with SRI, reserving the
rest of their land for
growing other crops at some other time when they are not limited by the amount
of labor time
available.
• If farmers can get much greater returns from their land and their labor by
using SRI methods,
it is a waste of their land and their labor to continue cultivating the whole
extent of their fields
with less productive methods. It will be more profitable to cultivate just part
of their land with
SRI methods, and then to grow other crops on the remaining land when time
permits.
• If there is a particular operation for which a farm household does not have
enough labor to use
SRI methods, it will be worthwhile to hire additional labor to assist with this
operation. If the
household does not have enough money in hand to hire labor, it can offer to
share the greater
harvest with those who provide labor or to pay for the labor with rice after
the harvest rather
than with money.
14
Farmers should not let labor limitations keep them from experimenting with and
using SRI methods.
There should be some way that they can benefit from this new technology by
making the kinds of
arrangements described above. SRI is one of the few technologies that can
increase simultaneously
the productive of land, of labor, and of water. The goal is not so much to
increase yields by several
times as to make all of the factors of production more productive, so that
farmers can get more return
from whatever resources they have, starting with labor.
CONCLUSIONS
SRI was developed by Fr. de Laulanié with farmers as friends and as students.
Their purpose was to
improve the quality and security of life for all people in Madagascar who
depend on the soil for their
livelihoods. Others will also benefit if rice can become more abundant and
available at a lower price.
The essential initial step toward success with SRI is to think about the rice
plant in a new and
different way. The previous ways of understanding and cultivating rice have
served millions, even
billions of people well for many centuries. But with some new management
practices, it will be
possible for farmers to get many more grains of rice returned for every grain
they plant by doing this
carefully and by providing better conditions for the growing plants.
There is now experimentation going on to adapt the concepts of SRI to growing
upland (unirrigated)
rice. One initial experiment at Zahamena, not using fire as an agricultural
practice, produced 16 times
more grains of rice per rice seed planted -- double the yield with only
one-eighth as many seeds -- as
with traditional slash-and-burn production. During the 1997-98 season, some
trials were undertaken
adapting SRI methods to upland conditions. By using compost instead of burning,
and by planting
seeds widely spaced, 30 by 30 cm, with leguminous plant cuttings (tephrosia and
crotelaria) used as a
thick mulch to suppress weeds, unirrigated fields yielded 4 tons/hectare. The
mulch conserved water
in the soil as well as suppressed weeds, almost totally, and provided some
additional nutrients. We
think that other crops may also be able to benefit from drawing on these
concepts for improving plant
growth.
FOR MORE INFORMATION ON SRI
Association Tefy Saina is a non-governmental organization established to
improve agriculture and the


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--- On Wed, 6/25/08, agronursery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: agronursery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [agronursery] Panduan Tanam Padi SRI Organik Akan Disebarkan Gratis
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Wednesday, June 25, 2008, 12:04 PM







Panduan Tanam Padi SRI Organik Akan Disebarkan Gratis




JAKARTA, KAMIS – Keberhasilan pola tanam padi SRI organik yang telah
diimplementasikan di Cianjut, Jawa Barat akan ditularkan ke daerah lain di
wilayah Indonesia. Untuk mempermudah penyebaran pengetahuan metode tanam yang
dapat meningkatkan produktivitas lahan akan dilakukan menggunakan buku panduan
yang dibagikan cuma-cuma.
"Target kami tahun ini membuat modul yang mudah dipahami semua orang
khususnya petani, for all for free," ujar Roni Pramadita, Direktur
Eksekutif Medco Foundation kepada pers di Jakarta, Kamis (24/4). Hal yang
menjadi tantangan terbesar selain isi dari modul tersebut adalah bagaimana agar
informasi yang dismapiakan bisa diakses sebanyak mungkin lapisan masyarakat dan
tidak dikomersilkan.
Pola tanam padi SRI organik telah berhasil diuji coba pada lahan seluas 7,4
hektare di Cianjur, Jawa Barat sejak setahun terakhir. Selama dua kali panen,
produksi gabah kering giling meningkat menjadi 10 ton per hektare. Selain di
Cianjur, Medco Foundation juga  mendukung uji coba pertanian padi dengan
metode SRI organik pada 20 hektar lahan di Merauke. Saat ini bahkan sudah 140
hektar lahan di ujung Papua itu yang dikelola dengan SRI organik.
"Sudah dua kali panen, produktivitas di Merauke 3,5-5 ton per hektare,
lebih kecil sih namun wajar karena tanahnya beda degan di Jawa dan belum
menggunakan pupuk kompos, tapi jangan salah, satu petani di sana mengolah 3
hektar lahan lho," ujar Roni.
SRI organik tidak hanya berhasil meningkatkan produktivitas lahan, namun juga
lebih ramah lingkungan karena tidak menggunakan pupuk kimia melainkan kompos
yang dapat dibuat sendiri dengan MOL (mikroorganisme lokal). Dengan SRI
organik, para petani diharapkan dapat mengelola lahan secara mandiri tanpa
tergantung fluktuasi harga pupuk.
WAH

Sumber Kompas















      

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