Posted by agri_center | Posted in Business Opportunities, Fruit and Nuts, News, Regional, Research and Development/Product Development | Posted on 17-11-2009
Tags: Filipino-Hawaiian investors put up first macadamia-tree plantation in Ilocos Norte, Macadamia Growing in the Philippines
Filipino-Hawaiian investors put up first macadamia-tree plantation in Ilocos Norte
BADOC, Ilocos Norte—About 400 saplings of Hawaiian macadamia trees found a new habitat on a sprawling idle land in sitio Paratong, Saud, Badoc, Ilocos Norte, with the launching of the first macadamia demonstration farm in the country.
Attended by Filipino-Hawaiian investors, together with Mayor Mufi Hannemann of the city and county of Honolulu, Hawaii, and party on November 9, the first macadamia tree plantation in the country will serve as a demonstration farm for the production of macadamia nuts, a high-valued commercial crop in the United States and some parts of Europe.
Valued at P2,000 per seedling, the Filipino-Hawaiian investors, led by Mito Ablan, brought some seeds three years ago and started propagating macadamia in a nursery farm in Tarlac. About 200,000 macadamia seedlings are ready for planting.
Study shows that macadamia can be grown in the Ilocos region, which has a tropical climate like Hawaii.
Like mango trees that abundantly thrive in the Ilocos region, Ablan said macadamia could be harvested from six to eight years depending on the variety.
Ablan, who is also the president of the Ilocos Norte Association of Hawaii, has encouraged fellow Filipinos in Hawaii who have idle land in Ilocos to develop their vacant lots and invest in macadamia farming.
In Hawaii, he said about 19,000 acres is planted to macadamia, and it is bringing almost $700 million in income.
Macadamia nuts grown in Brazil, Australia and Hawaii consist of only 2 percent of the world consumption, Ablan added.
According to Badoc Mayor Thomas Torralba, they have identified more than 3 hectares of private lots which they initially developed as a demonstration farm. Ablan said the first Philippine macadamia demo farm in his town has been established in cooperation with Mac Nut (Phils.) Inc. and the government of Ilocos Norte under the administration of Gov. Michael Keon.
To sustain the project, Torralba said the local government of Badoc would be coordinating with technical experts from the Mariano Marcos State University and the Department of Agriculture for the proper care and maintenance of the project.
Unlike other fruit-bearing trees in Ilocos, Ablan said macadamia nuts could be harvested from June to December as it assures an all-year-round supply of quality nuts. The seeds are not perishable because it is hard.
In an earlier interview, Governor Keon said the provincial government is looking forward to the success of the macadamia plantation in Ilocos province, as he encouraged other municipalities to do the same.
He said farmers would ultimately benefit from the project by giving them other alternative source of income with its global demand.
In his speech, Mayor Hannemann told local officials and Ilocanos here that his government hopes to establish stronger ties and better cooperation with Ilocos provinces geared toward the promotion of cultural exchanges and to solidify economic ties.
Most of the Filipinos in Hawaii are Ilocanos who trace their roots in Ilocos Norte and other neighboring provinces in northern Philippines.
Written by Leilani Adriano
Source: Business Mirror

Sir/Maam:
Would this kind of nut grow on a mountainous/hilly kind of land?
I would appreciate your answer.
Thanks,
Elmer
Sir/Maam:
are the seedlings also commercially available for buying?and how much is the cost for each seedling?
would like to invest in this kind of business.
thanks!
Please contact Macnut Phils Inc. for seedlings
Jorge H. Disuanco
0915-217-9666