Hassan Thomas is a gardener with an ornamental plants nursery business in Minna. He also maintains my neighbour’s flowers.
That’s how we met.
“You can do this on a guava?” Hassan asked moving toward the guava tree. He noticed what many people wouldn’t. He saw that I was cloning the tree from its branches so that I could get genetically identical copies without planting seeds. This way you can have hundreds of seedlings from one tree.
“Yes you can,” I said, “I’ve successfully done it in Abuja, so I’m now doing it in Minna. You know about this?” I asked him.
“Yes, but we can only do it on one tree and that’s because that tree has roots even on the branches.” Hassan explained.
“Can you use the same method on mango and orange trees?” Hassan was intrigued. So I showed him the one I did on a citrus tree.
“This is money,” he said excited. “I’ve already planted many trees for some big people. I can go and get thousands of seedlings from those trees! The trees are already big.”
Improved seedlings are very expensive. Some can sell as high as N15,000. That was why Hassan immediately saw the potential. So he asked me to teach him. I was excited to pass on the knowledge myself.
“Sure. Come early tomorrow morning, “I told him.
But he couldn’t come. He came on the third day. So I taught Hassan two methods of air layering.
With the permission of his clients, if he harvests 100 seedlings from one tree, even from 10 trees he will earn N500,000 if he sells each seedling for N500. And he could sell each for more – much more. Although I sell seedlings myself, I still buy some – for up to N15,000 or N20,000.
So why am I teaching Hassan something he can use to compete against me – since we’re doing similar business in this same town?
Because it’s part of my 300-year plan. (I will write more about this plan another time.) For now, the simple explanation is that for every tree he sells or plants, I get a reward. For every animal or human being that eats from the fruits, I get a reward. For every person who uses the knowledge I teach to benefit himself or his community, I get a reward from Allah.
Indeed, Hassan’s excitement inspires me to teach more people. So I’m thinking of organising a workshop in Minna for interested youth to come and learn the practicals of it.
But you don’t have to come to the workshop. You can simply google or search YouTube for these keywords: “air layering trees.”
So what kind of fruits can you do this with? All kinds. It’s very difficult to find a tree on which you cannot do air layering. I’ve done it on guava, sweet orange, mango tree, grape. It may be difficult to do on some. For example, some people think you can’t air layer a papaya tree. But it’s one of the simplest trees to use for that purpose.
The benefits of air layering is that instead of waiting for seeds to germinate, you just wait for a few weeks to have fairly grown plants. For example, guava seeds can take up to a month or more to sprout. Air layering guava also takes about a month. But the chances of survival of the latter are more in my opinion.
So far, even before I learned this technique, we had donated two thousand fruit trees to youth cooperatives. Now I’m thinking of teaching them air layering so that we can multiply the by ten. That will give us 20,000 trees. These new trees could be planted by the youths or they can also donate the way we donated to them.
Our original plan is to donate and plant 250,000 trees in 10 states of the north. With air layering, we can reach the target of planting 250,000 fruit trees faster. We can also move through the 10 states more smoothly – and even go beyond the target.