There is a festive mood in Godagari upazila of the district recently.
Farmers, labourers and traders in the Barind tract of Rajshahi are passing busy days with their crops across the fields.
Moving along the Rajshahi-Chapainawabganj highway and all other roads in the area, people are seen weighing and packing tomatoes in sacks and bamboo baskets, and separating the damaged ones. Some sew up the sacks and some replace the lids of the baskets.
Buying, selling and transporting the crops to different destinations across Bangladesh are common to the people living around Godagari during November to February.
On the roadside, workers load trucks with the produce and some spray ethylene, a fruit hormone, to turn them red. Leaders of the sector estimate annual sales of tomato in the area at around Tk500 crore.
Mahtab Ali, a tomato buyer from Dhaka, said he has been coming here for the last eight years, and buys around 600-700 maunds of tomatoes a day to send to Sylhet or Dhaka. “Tomatoes here are the best in size, colour and taste.” Demand for tomatoes and his investment in the crop are increasing, he added.
“Tomato traders seldom incur losses,” Ali said. He made Tk1.5 lakh in profits last year from an investment of Tk8 lakh. This year, he plans to invest Tk10 lakh. Like Ali, hundreds of traders from Dhaka, Chittagong, Comilla, and Sylhet throng to Godagari to buy tomatoes. It is considered a cash crop in this region.
However, Rejaul Karim, a farmer from Bidirpur, said: “Tomato output is rather low this season for bad seeds. If the seeds were good, I would have made Tk 2-2.5 lakh from my two-acre field.”
On the other hand, Nabibar Rahman, 45, another tomato grower, said tomato cultivation saved his family. “My family was passing days in extreme hardship only years ago. I failed to make ends meet from paddy cultivation. Then I switched to tomatoes and there was no looking back.”
Rahman has been cultivating tomato for the last eight years. He bought a piece of land and built a one-storied house there. He took 14 bighas of land on lease and he gets Tk 30,000- 35,000 in profits by spending only Tk 10,000 on a bigha of land, he added. “Tomato cultivation gives you high profits.”
“There are about 25 buildings in the village. All but four were built with money earned from tomato farming,” said Rafiqul Islam, a farmer in Rajabari, five kilometres from Gopalpur.
Islam was on the lookout for work upon graduation. He later ended up farming tomatoes. “Most villagers took to tomato farming. I gave up job hunting and concentrated on it too,” said Islam, who earns Tk 3 to 4 lakh a year from 12 bighas.
Tomatoes are widely cultivated in almost all 400 villages of the upazila in the past decade, said DrSaiful Islam, upazila agriculture officer. The total land under tomato cultivation doubled in the last around ten years, while yield tripled, he added.


