Success Story: This farmer from Ballia left engineering and started farming and became rich
Success Story: We’re going to tell you about a young farmer who, after graduating, quit a fantastic career as a computer software developer. This young person has been an inspiration to everyone in addition to being a farmer. Today, he is providing farming a new perspective with the help of professionals. We’re talking about Dushyant Kumar Singh, a man from Basantpur in Ballia who quit his job to become a farmer and now employs other people.
This farmer has a B.Tech degree.
Dushyant Kumar Singh, a young farmer, said that he lives in the district’s Basantpur. Dushyant used to work on machine learning and artificial intelligence at Calix Company in Bengaluru after getting his B.Tech. Dushyant abruptly quit his work in AI and moved to farming after meeting Subhash Pal, a well-known figure in the field.
Is growing wheat a
Dushyant is now growing the Khapli kind of wheat. There are traditional varieties of this plant. It is a nutrition storage. Dushyant has grown it because of its various specializations. So far, the crop is going nicely, he said. In his own farm, Dushyant now employs over ten people.
Outstanding farming with native cows
Dushyant uses native cows for their entirely natural farming. He has raised seventeen native cow breeds for farming. Compost manure, Jeevamrit, Bijamrit, Kripamrit, and Panchgavya are among the fertilizers he utilizes. He claims that organic farming is considerably superior than chemical farming. Better means that the high-quality food produced by this kind of farming is not accessible via chemical farming.
You may get wealthy using Khapli.
According to Dushyant, he is growing the Khapli kind of wheat on a single bigha. About eight quintals of produce may be produced simply on one bigha. Farmers may easily acquire a production of ₹4 lakhs in 5 bighas with organic farming, even if we consider it in terms of ₹100 per kilogram, which translates to a yield of ₹80,000 per bigha.