Yam is regarded as the king of all farm produce, and its arrival in the market is usually welcomed with much enthusiasm.
Sequel to this, staff reporter Emengini Osadebe, captured the mood of the farmers and traders at the Marine and Oseokwodu markets in Onitsha, during the arrival of this farm produce into the markets.
The Marine and Oseokwodu markets, which for some times, were scantily populated, are now witnessing beehive of activities, as buyers were at hand bargaining for the produce, while some youths were seen unloading new tubers of yam from canoes and boats by the river sides, when ABS visited.
This also provides avenue for some youths, who are on holidays, to make brisk businesses, as they assist buyers carry tubers of yam to their waiting vehicles, either with head pans or wheel barrows.
Some people who spoke to the ABS believe that with the arrival of new yam into the markets, hunger will subside, due to its importance to various homes.
Farmers who brought in the produce at the markets, including Messrs Ekwegbalu Ndife, Udorji Agbata, and Udoka Onyegbuje, said yams are being harvested gradually due to low flooding and sun that also affected their growth, and expressed optimism that by middle of August, new yams will flood various markets.
They noted that tubers of yam are expensive due to high cost of yam seedlings during planting season, and called on Government to increase assistance to farmers, by providing soft loans to enable them cultivate more for food sufficiency in the State.
Traders at the markets, including Mrs Chinyelu Akuchukwu and Nkechi Ogbo, expressed gratitude to God for the arrival of yam into the markets, but noted that a heap of hundred tubers of yam, which was formerly sold between eighty thousand naira to one hundred thousand naira, now goes for one hundred and twenty thousand naira or more, as the case may be.
Contributing a buyer, Mr Chieme Odili, who bought a tuber of yam at the cost of one thousand five hundred naira, as against eight hundred naira last year, said yam is usually expensive on arrival, and expressed optimism that that the price would go down the moment the produce begins to flood various markets, as most towns are yet to celebrate new yam festival.
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