Sunday, January 18th, 2026

Banana farming fetches Rs 150 million income annually in Parbat



PARBAT: Farmers in Gyadi area of Kushma municipality in Parbat district are making a handsome income from commercial banana farming.

As many as 65 farmers at Pipaltari and Katuwachaupari in the municipality have been doing commercial banana farming for seven years in 1,000 ropanis of land, replacing rice and millet farming.

Each farmer has cultivated banana plants across at least 5 to 10 ropani on average and their income spans from Rs 50,000 to Rs 300 thousand per person annually from the sales of their produces.

Farmers took up banana plantation after they found it more lucrative than rice and millet farming, said Baburam Sharma, coordinator of the Gyadi Banana Block.

Banana seeds and saplings were first brought to Gyadi Area in 2052 BS from Rapti river basin of Chitwan district for commercial farming.

Since then the banana farming has been the major source of income here.

The seeds were sown, and Banana Block under the Prime Minister Agriculture Modernization Project was extended in 2076 BS for the commercial farming, according to Coordinator Sharma.

The fusra variety of banana, known for having high diseases resistance, is planted by the farmers.

Farmers have been receiving seedlings, tools, fertilizers and other technical assistance in subsidy from the Project, Sharma informed.

The produces here are sold at Kushma, Cyclechowk, Phalebas, Maldhunga and Patichaur among other local markets and in the adjacent district Baglung.

The expansion of road network to the village has aided in marketization, thereby promoting the trade of local produces including banana, said banana farmer Deepak Subedi.

The traders directly reach out to them and take their produces straight from the farmland. In the wake of exodus of youths, the lands left uncultivated are used for banana plantation, which has not only ensured regular income but also revived fertile soil, according to farmer Shovnath Lamichhane.

A bunch of banana has as many as 400 fingers.

In Lamichhane’s observation, most of the farmers in his village were attracted to banana plantation because it could be managed with few human resources and low investment.

Each farmer has planted banana trees in the area up to 10 ropanis.

(RSS)

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