Nuts over Coconut
farmeric September 4th, 2008
Nuts over Coconut by Nestor Cuartero

Coconut Tree of Life
WONDERS NEVER CEASE for the tree of life.
At the 7th National Coconut Festival held from August 7 to 10 at the Megatrade Hall of SM Megamall in Mandaluyong City, guests were introduced to new coco health products, both edible and un, much to their amazement and celebration.
New health products that caught the eye of the festival-goers included coco sap beverages, skim milk beverages, gluten-free coconut flour, and fiber-rich low sugar food products.
Last year, in the same coco festival, we were won over by coco sugar, nutritious sugar made from coconut sap, which is supposed to be good for diabetes. Other previous revelations from the annual festival include Virgin Coconut Oil in its many variations, including VCO for massage therapy and well-being. In festivals past, also highlighted were other coco-based invetions like coco fiber geo textiles and coco biodiesel.
Spread out in at least 75 booths at Megatrade Hall B of SM were products and services that summed up the present state of the country’s coconut industry, an industry that employs 23 million Filipinos, 3.4 million of whom are farmers. Nurture 324 million coconut trees planted on 3.1 million hectares.
A few picks from the fair: Coconut dietary fiber and food supplement offered by the Davao-based PTOCOCO Agri Ventures; VCO blended essences, perfume, skin moisturizer, and sunblock that beautifies and relaxes from Coco Zen; all-natural vinegar made from coconut nectar from Lola Conching’s Sorsogon Foods Enterprises; coconut lip balm and VCO shampoo from Quezon’s Best; coco fiber pots and cocopeat bricks from Coco Green; coco ice cream from Coconut House; living room panels, bags, trinklets, and fashion accessories from a shop called Islander.
At the Sorsogon booth, we chanced upon fresh, ice-cold tuba, a drink that I had been pining for and missing for years. Tuba is the sweet nectar of sap or toddy. The toddy transforms into many things under different preparations. It becomes lambanog when distilled, vinegar when fermented, coco honey and coco sugar when cooked. All of these were available in that little booth from Sorsogon, many of whose products, according to Thelma Tolentino of the Philippine Coconut Authority (PCA), have won awards.
The country’s coconut industry has remained a strong pillar of the national economy. According to PCA administrator Oscar G. Garin, the coconut has maintained its position as the top agricultural crop exported in many forms, either as food or non-food classified as traditional or non-traditional, to 130 countries. The country’s coconut industry has an export income of $800 million.
In the years 1979, 1995, and 2007, Garin proudly stated that RP’s coconut exports reached the $1 billion level. The month of August, according to Garin, is traditionally the peak of coconut fruiting season. Which explains why the coconut festival is mounted within the month as a tribute to the versatility of the so-called Tree of Life.
Mounted as centerpiece of the 2008 National Coconut Week, now on its 22nd year, the Coconut Festival had for its theme Kasaganaan at Kaunlaran sa Pinagyamang Niyugan(Sufficiency and Prosperity through Coconut Productivity). The festival was celebrated in the wake of government’s National Coconut Productivity Program, which recently welcomed to the industry nine million seednuts. The seednuts are now taking roots nationwide through PCA’s participatory planting project.
At the same time, Garin announced that productivity of 10 million more coconut trees has been enhanced through a process called Salt Fertilization. The PCA is spearheaing a campaign among farmers to fertilize their coconut farms with two kilos of salt per tree per year for three years to increase yield by at least 25 percent. Salt fertilization is believed to increase thickness of coconut meat and also increase the number of nuts harvested. The procedure is also credited for making coconut trees resitant to drought, pests and diseases.
***************************************************************************************************************
Note:Posted with permission from Nestor Cuartero (nescuar@yahoo.com)
Published at Panorama
***************************************************************************************************************

Picture of an hotair balloon
- Nutritional Value Of Malunggay Part I
- Malunggay - a miracle tree
- You’ve got Milk…You’ve got Stones!
- Herbal plants = safe and cheap alternative medicines
- Let there be Light!
- Food , Health , Herbal , Plants , Whats' In a Name?
- Comments(0)