Vigan Agriculture
Agricultural lands occupy around 1,300 hectares of
Vigan. Of this area, 1,017 hectares get their water
source from pumps, with the remaining relying on the
rain. The farmers practice crop rotation, alternating
other agricultural products with the usual rice and corn
that are mainly grown during the rainy season. Rice,
onion, corn, sugarcane and Cavendish bananas are the
major crops of Vigan.
The Biguenos are known for their love of vegetables,
including a lot of it in their cuisine. So it is no
surprise that they also dedicate a lot of their
agricultural lands to planting vegetable crops like
ampalaya, bell pepper, cabbage, cauliflower, eggplant,
mongo, squash, tomato and bottle gourd. They also
produce plenty of root crops, mainly cassava, jicama,
peanuts, sweet potato and yam. Aside from bananas, Vigan
is also a producer of calamondin or calamansi, guava,
mango, melon and watermelon.
The lands are mostly owned by the farmers themselves,
with only 30 percent worked on by tenants and 10 percent
by lessees. Tenants and owners share the harvest
proceeds according to what is legislated by the land
reform program of the government which is at 75/25.
All the farmers use fertilizers, either the organic or
the inorganic kind. They also know how to choose the
best yielding seeds and make use of farm equipment like
tractors and water pumps. To supply the farmers needs,
there are dealers and retailers of agricultural supplies
within the poblacion. The more than a dozen rice mills
are found much closer to the farm lands.
The agricultural animals found in Vigan are cattle,
carabao or Asian water buffalo, pig, goat and poultry.
Most of them are raised in backyards.
Though it has fish ponds, is by the China Sea and
surrounded and crisscrossed by many rivers, Vigan’s
fishing industry is not sufficient to provide the
residents’ needs. They have to source the rest from
neighboring municipalities and major fishing centers in
the country like Dagupan and Malabon.
Vigan’s agricultural office has officers and technicians
that inform and assist the farmers through programs on
plant material distribution, pest management, fertilizer
use, diversification of crops, as well as development of
poultry, livestock and fisheries, i.e. the dispersal of
aquaculture materials. They engage in research,
community empowerment and other trainings for the
farming community that not only improve planting
knowledge and skills but also impart management know-how
as well.
The agricultural officers and technicians also conduct
studies on soil and water, and implement conservation
measures to ensure the sustainability of the
agricultural industries in Vigan. |