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Wheat against weeds and windstorm on small farms

Weeds and windstorm - double scourge to wheat crop of the smallholders in Durmon village in the cold winter desert of Uzbekistan










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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Benefits of improved wheat variety for rural smallholders in Uzbekistan 2021
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    International Center for Agricultural Research in the Dry Areas for Central Asia and the South Caucasus (ICARDA-CAC), in cooperation with FAO, conducted a farmer field school program in a village in Kyzylkum, which opened up access to new farming prospects for local smallholders. The publication explores the first-hand benefits of improved wheat variety through the story of a local farmer.
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    Booklet
    Farmer field school information diary for facilitators
    Wheat production on small farms in the cold winter deserts of Uzbekistan
    2023
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    The farmer field school (FFS) approach is useful in delivering information on improved methods of wheat production to remote regions. This document has been prepared to serve as a guideline diary for the facilitators who would be involved in implementing FFS with the small farmers in the cold winter deserts (CWD) of Uzbekistan. However, this guide document would also be useful for small wheat growers beyond the CWD region.
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    Book (stand-alone)
    Establishing best practices and approaches for climate-adapted and biodiversity-friendly integrated natural resource management Farmer Field Schools in cold winter deserts
    Final report
    2024
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    Recent population growth in Uzbekistan necessitates increase in productivity of agricultural crops extensively or intensively. This report shows how the concept of a farmer field school can help to improve the food security of small farmers and to involve uncultivated desert lands in production of food crops.By reading this report, you will find out how two farmer field schools were implemented in research sites located in Durmon and Chuya villages of Uzbekistan. The report explains that the improved wheat variety resulted in 116 to 241 percent higher grain yield than the local variety. The second major outcome specified in this report is that winter chickpea was successfully cultivated in the cold winter desert. Read this report to learn the following important impacts:-Adoption of improved wheat varieties would play an important role in improving food security of the farmers living in the cold winter desert of Uzbekistan.-Food security in the cold winter deserts can be improved by cultivating chickpea on previously uncultivated land and help ease pressure on the limited cultivable land in Uzbekistan.

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