“Mirchi, lehsun, adrak…leaves of bottle gourd, karela…jaggery.”
This is not a recipe for food with chillies, garlic, ginger, bittergourd…but instead organic farmer Gulabrani’s potent fertiliser and pesticide that she brews up here at Chunguna village, on the edge of the Panna Tiger Reserve.
The 53-year-old recalls laughing loudly when she first heard the list. “I thought, where will I get all this? But then I did have gourds growing in the jungle…” she adds. Other ingredients like jaggery she had to buy in the market.
Doubting neighbours didn’t help, curious about what she was brewing. But what other people think has never bothered Gulabrani – it’s not surprising that she was the first in her village of roughly 500 people to make the move towards organic.
“The food we buy in the market has medicines and is injected with all sorts of chemicals, so we thought why eat that,” she says recalling the conversations at home four years ago.
“My family thought going organic was a good idea. We all thought that if we eat jaivik [organically grown] food, our health would also benefit. With jaivik fertilisers, the swasth [health] of the pests suffers, ours thrives!” she adds, enjoying her joke.
















