Radio Scripts
Package 88, Script 9
July 2009
Rice farmers use an integrated approach for success in weed management
Notes to broadcaster
Weeds are defined as plants growing in places where they are not wanted by people. Annual weeds live less than one year and die after producing seeds. Perennial weeds live after they have produced seeds, sometimes for many years. Some species of perennial weeds have special kinds of roots such as tubers or rhizomes that survive and propagate after tillering. These roots break and remain in the soil when you pull on the plant, making hand-weeding difficult.
Wild rice, which looks a lot like rice, is one of the most problematic perennial weed species in irrigated and lowland rice. Herbicides are not recommended on wild rice as they can damage the rice crop.
Weed management can be a challenge but farmers who discover successful strategies will be rewarded with higher crop yields. This program discusses the benefits of several management strategies, including plowing, flooding, transplanting from a nursery bed, and crop rotation.
Characters:
Radio host
Rice farmer (Mr. Fofana)
Farmer training officer (Mr. Diallo)
Signature tune
to introduce program
Host: Dear
listeners, good morning and welcome to your favourite program about
agriculture. The theme of today’s show is weed management, and to discuss this
I’m joined by two guests in the studio, Mr. Fofana, who is a rice producer, and
Mr. Diallo, a training officer working with a local farmers’ organization. They are going to talk about their own experiences with
weed management. Welcome to you both.
Farmer and training officer:
(Together) Thank you!
Host: Mr. Diallo,
let’s start with you. Tell us how the farmers that you are working with deal
with weeds in their rice fields.
Training officer:
Well, of course it depends on the weed. There
is a specific weed that looks like rice, that we call wild rice. This weed is
particularly difficult to control because when it is uprooted the rhizomes
break fairly easily. Broken parts of these roots can survive and grow quickly. When farmers have wild rice in their plot, they need to
plow it and then collect the roots that are exposed to the sun. Some women put
the roots in baskets and throw them away…others pile them up. After two weeks
under the sun, they burn the heaps. I think Mr. Fofana has experience with that
weed.
Farmer: Yes,
I have exactly that troublesome weed in my field.
Host: Have
you been able to get rid of it?
Farmer: Yes. First I
plowed my field to uncover the roots. But that isn’t enough. I then hit the
clods with a small hoe, removed the roots and piled them in a heap. After two
weeks of sun-drying, I burnt the heaps and used them as organic manure. But for
a few years I had to pay particular attention, as it is very difficult to
remove all roots at once.
Training officer: And there’s another reason that plowing is
useful. When you plow, many kinds of weed seeds get buried deep in the soil, so
far down that they can’t germinate.
Host: So from what
you’re saying, it seems that plowing is an important step in controlling
weeds…wild rice and other weeds too.
Training officer: Yes, but plowing is only the first step. After the plowing
is done, leveling and flooding are the next steps. Flooding the field for two
weeks kills most of the weeds. But flooding only works if you level the field
properly. If parts of the field are not flooded because you haven’t leveled it,
the weeds will grow and spread.
Host: And what do you say to farmers about the right time to
flood their fields?
Training officer: I suggest that you flood your field after the first field
preparation. Keep it flooded for a
few days, and then drain the field. Then, when you see the first sign of weed
growth, you can weed and flood the field for a second time. This keeps the
weeds down before planting starts.
Host: And
then, once the crop is growing, the plot needs to be weeded again. Am I right?
Farmer: Yes, and the
timing of weeding is very important. Weeds are more harmful in the first six
weeks of the rice crop. If you use direct seeding, do the first weeding after
three weeks, when the rice plant has four leaves. Two or three weeks later, at
tillering, you must weed a second time.
Host: I’ll repeat that
for the benefit of our listeners. Do the first weeding when the rice plant has
four leaves. Two or three weeks later, at tillering, it’s best to weed again.
Training officer:
That’s correct if you use direct seeding. But if the rice has been transplanted
from a nursery, you need to weed only one time, at the beginning of tillering.
When you apply fertilizer, there shouldn’t be any weeds in the field. You don’t
want to fertilize the weeds!
Host: Mr. Fofana, I
know that you’ve been growing rice for many years. If you compare direct
seeding and transplanting, which would you say is more effective in controlling
weeds?
Farmer: I have tried
both methods and learned that transplanting is better. What I mean is
that if I transplant two-week old seedlings from a nursery into the field, that
gives the rice a good advantage over weeds. But
sometimes farmers can’t use the transplanting method. So they use direct
seeding. If you must do direct seeding, make sure that you germinate your seeds
before sowing them. That will help.
Training officer: Also, when you transplant seedlings, the spacing is
important. If there is too much space between rice plants, weeds can
grow more easily. Leave about twenty centimetres
between the rice plants so you can move around the plot without damaging the
plants. If the spaces are too narrow, you trample on the rice plants when you
weed.
Farmer: I find it’s
also easier for me to do hand weeding if I plant rice in rows. Some weeds look
a lot like rice, so if I see a plant outside the row, I can be sure that it’s a
weed. In our neighbouring district, I have seen farmers using a rotary weeder.
It is a handy mechanical tool with which they easily weed in between rows. Next
time I visit that area, I will surely buy one as it makes weeding much easier
and I won’t have to hire more labour.
Host: Is
there anything else you’d like to offer before we sign off?
Farmer: Apart
from these things, I also do a rotation of crops. If the land can bear three
crops per year, that’s a way to reduce weeds. Weeds can’t survive in a field if
you keep changing the crop. For example, I use the rotation of corn, rice, and
potatoes. Taking up this cycle for two or three years or more, I manage to
control most weeds…even wild rice.
Host: Thank you, Mr. Fofana and Mr.
Diallo. You’ve provided valuable information for those of us who are trying to
keep weeds down. We’ve talked about the benefits of several approaches… plowing,
flooding, transplanting and crop rotation. On the weeded farm, the nutrients in
the soil and the fertilizer that you apply benefit only the rice. The rice
plant, with fewer competitors, develops well and yields better.
Thank you for listening. If you
wish to have a copy of the video CD on weed management or other rice
technologies, please contact me at
this station [the radiobroadcaster should
give a mobile number or the number of the radio station. Please see notes below
for information about obtaining rice videos from the Africa Rice Center].
Fade in signature tune. After
30 seconds, fade out background
music and hold under host.
Note
If you are
interested in receiving videos about different rice technologies, please
contact Jonas Wanvoeke at the Africa Rice Center (j.wanvoeke@cgiar.org; +229 21
35 01 88; 01 BP 2031, Cotonou, Benin). For a list of rice videos available,
please see: www.warda.org/warda/guide-video.asp
Acknowledgements
- Contributed by: Felix S. Houinsou, Rural Radio Consultant/WARDA, and Radio Immaculée Conception, Benin, a Farm Radio International broadcasting partner.
- Reviewed by: Paul Van Mele, Program Leader, Learning and Innovation Systems/Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
- Information provided by: Jonne Rodenburg, Weed Scientist/Africa Rice Center (WARDA)
Thanks to
- The International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) for supporting participatory research with women rice farmers in lowlands. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID and IFAD for supporting this script and for translating the rice videos into local languages.
|
Program undertaken with the financial support of the Government of Canada provided through the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA) |

