Home Opinion Featured Articles National Chocolate Day: a visit to cocoa farm in the Bono region

National Chocolate Day: a visit to cocoa farm in the Bono region

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National Chocolate Day
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As the world marks Valentine’s Day today, 14th February, 2022, Ghana rather celebrates its rich cocoa with loved ones.

In 2005, under the regime of president John Agyekum Kuffuor, his able tourism minister, the late Jake Obetsebi Lamptey instituted the National Chocolate Day in lieu of the global St. Valentine’s Day phenomenon.

Since that year til date, Ghanaians largely replace sharing of cocoa products, especially chocolate bars to their loved ones as opposed to flowers or cards exchanged elsewhere.

To highlight the significance of the day, a spotlight is shed on a Ghanaian youth in the Bono Region whose cocoa beans contribute to the chocolate bars you may be sharing on this lovers’ day.

Mr. Anokye Isaac has taken over the age old farming business of his grandfather, Kwaku Sah, as he gladly tells this reporter.
At his farm on the outskirt of Goka in the Jaman North District of the Bono Region, Mr. Anokye points to a cocoa tree (Tetteh Quarshie) that’s over eighty years, yet still bears fruit all year round.
And he boasts of it that, “right here, there’s Mampong Akuapem cocoa farm if one want to see”.

As a former footballer who ended his education after Junior High School (JHS), Mr. Anokye has taken to farming.
And a visit to his farm is more of excursion to see sauna and fauna – trees and all kind of livestock.

As part of good farming practices, Mr. Anokye has planted commercial trees in Odum, mahogany, sapele, wawa and all other nearly extinct forest trees on his farm.

He gladly points to those trees that: “students will in the near future visit my farm to see trees they only know of in their books”.

To chalk more successes, Mr. Anokye appeals to the government and all stakeholders to assist his farming activities by providing technical knowledge and ready market for his produce.

His cocoa farm share borders with his huge cashewnut farm on a unique landscape with caves that he tells me: “was a safe haven for the Goka Adonteng warriors in the ancient times of the kingdom wars”.
But now the rocky caves are dens for all beasts whose marks in footprints are visible upon approaching the place.

His major headache now is the lack of irrigation system that’ll encourage all-year-round farming.
To nurse seedlings or serve water to his livestock – the goats, fowls and pigs, Mr. Anokye employs farmhands to walk miles to a well that lies at the mercy of the vagaries of the weather – overflowing in rainy season, and dried up in the drought prone harmattan season.

As did the tourism minister in 2005, Mr. Anokye’s farm presents a side of attraction that deserves highlighting for adventure seekers.

And coming to his aide now will add weight to the government’s call for the youth to venture into agriculture/farming.

Happy National Chocolate Day to all Ghanaians, and happy Valentine’s Day to all lovers of the world.

To reach Mr. Anokye for an interview: 0540672049

*Written by: Charles Yeboah (Sir Lord)*
+233(0)249542111
sirlord42111@gmail.com

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