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: Punes Bora Man is Saving Delicious Wild Berries By Planting Hundreds of Trees/Year #IndiaNEWS #Conservation I’ve never met anyone who speaks so passionately about something seemingly inconsequential

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Posted in: #Conservation #IndiaNEWS

Punes Bora Man is Saving Delicious Wild Berries By Planting Hundreds of Trees/Year #IndiaNEWS #Conservation
I’ve never met anyone who speaks so passionately about something seemingly inconsequential — the wild berries that Maharashtra’s Sahyadri has to offer. Pravin Thete from Pune vehemently markets the importance of these berries. He believes that the saying should be changed to, “Having boras (jujubes) every day keeps the doctors at bay. �
“Apples are a rather tasteless fruit in comparison to boras, and they don’t have as many vitamins,� Pravin, who has done his MBA in Marketing from Pune University, asserts.
His love for these berries had him document 54 different boras and wild berries by taste, colour and vitamin content.
He tells me these fruits have “four of the six different tastes that our palates can taste. They are sweet, sour, kadwa (bitter), and astringent at times. And yet so many people don’t care for them. �
The 37-year-old’s obsession with these fruits, which are usually eaten straight off the trees and mixed with a bit of spice or salt, stems from the abysmal numbers of ‘ber’ trees left in the village of Baner.
So, for the past six years, he has been fighting to conserve this plant and has planted thousands of ber trees in different parts of Maharashtra and Goa.

“I come from an agricultural background. We used to grow onions, wheat and grapes. I grew up in Nashik and feasted on the local wild berries,� he says.
In 2012, during his MBA days, he started going on various tree plantation drives in his free time and subsequently joined the CEE (Centre for Environment Education) as a field officer. “We would take the kids to the Sahyadri hills and collect different kinds of wild berries like jamun (java plum), imli (tamarind), boras (jujubes), etc. We even collected saplings of these plants to grow elsewhere. �
“What I found on these excursions was that these varieties have adapted very well to nature. They have been here for thousands of years,� he adds.
On his regular tree plantation drives during 2014-15, he spoke to local farmers of the Baner village who told him that the ber trees were depleting in numbers. “There was a time when every farmer in the village had 1,000-2,000 ber trees, which would add up to lakhs of trees. But today, there stands less than 50-100,� he says, adding that the reduction in numbers is because of urbanisation of the villages and increasing farmlands.
“There weren’t many takers of boras in the city,� he says. And so these trees fell by the wayside, quite literally.
The number of remaining ber trees in the village is still less than 1 per cent of the initial figure.
 

“The farmers would tell me of how they would send truckloads of boras to Mumbai and other cities, but now they’ve lost out on that income,� Pravin says.


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