Priyanka Bhadani
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March 17, 2026
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12
min read
Basanti Devi’s boots are made for walking
The Padma Shri awardee, once a widowed child bride, empowered forest communities and women to protect a river
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The Padma Shri awardee, once a widowed child bride, empowered forest communities and women to protect a river
Editor’s Note: To work in ecology science and biodiversity conservation in India is to undertake the work of a lifetime. For many, but especially women, this work is as much a career as it is a calling, with challenges that pertain to the job itself—such as reasoning with authorities—as well as their personal journeys and identities. In this series, the Good Food Movement highlights female scientists, activists and community builders whose visions and labour have ensured forests, wetlands, and species across flora and fauna live another day.
At one point during our hours-long conversation about saving the Kosi river and conserving forests in Uttarakhand, Basanti Devi pauses to reflect on her seven decade-long life. “What would I have done, if not for this? What purpose would my life have served, if not helping to solve some of these crises plaguing our society?” she asks, as a faint smile crosses her face. My response to her reflection doesn’t matter.
Devi is a petite woman. Age, it seems, has shrunk her further. But there’s a largeness to her warmth: The first time we spoke over the phone, in July 2025, she was worried about where I would sleep, if and when I visited her in Pithoragarh (where she lives now)—because she only has one room, “with a tiny bed.” A few weeks later, when we spoke again, her inimitable sing-song Kumaoni inflection reflected concern as she warned me about the incessant, untimely rains, the resultant landslides, and the traffic snarls that had brought the hills to a crawl. “Come after a few weeks, when it is better to travel,” she advised.
On the day we finally meet, the weather swings back and forth like a pendulum between sunshine, cloudiness and drizzles. It feels like a fitting backdrop to a meeting with a woman whose own life has been marked by periods of extreme darkness and light.
Devi, a widowed child bride who later became a Gandhian social worker, is the recipient of the Nari Shakti Puraskar (2016) and the Padma Shri (2022), honoured for her effort to empower women, educate children, and protect forests and water sources. The most significant of her life’s projects is the revival of the Kosi, an important tributary of the Ramganga in Uttarakhand’s Kumaon region.
Much of Devi’s work unfolded while she was affiliated with the Lakshmi Ashram in Kausani. Founded in 1946 by Sarla Behn (Catherine Heilemann), the ashram educates and organises women in the hills, encouraging self-reliance and care for water, forests and land. The awards were conferred upon her after she had already left the ashram where she had worked for most of her life. Even at that juncture, these national honours evoked pride at her, for this was recognition for decades of focused, dedicated work.
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Devi was born to Kunwar Singh Samant and Tulsi Devi in Digra, a small village tucked in the hills of Pithoragarh, in 1958. At the time, life was simple but bound by custom: at age 12, when she could barely make sense of what the institution meant, she was married off. She had studied till Class 4 but dropped out, because continuing schooling would have meant walking several kilometres from the village she was married into. For girls in her generation in Pithoragarh, travelling such far distances to earn an education was out of the question.
Questions of grief aside, widowhood was cruel to Devi.
The boy she was married to was a Class 11 student. A little over two years later, he passed away; they’d never spent time together during this brief marriage. “For the first two years, he was away for his studies. In the third year, he was away for a teacher training programme in another village in the district. Then, news of his ill health arrived. He had a fever and died,” she says, describing the illness with no expression or emotion, as if the words had been uttered often.
Questions of grief aside, widowhood was cruel to Devi. Her mother-in-law accused her of being a witch; someone else called her a man-eater; and most others cursed her. She was blamed for her husband’s death and kept at a distance, often going days without food or fresh clothes. The world around her, already narrow, seemed to close in further. When life became unbearable, she decided to return to her parents’ home. “At least I’d be fed some food,” she recalls telling herself.
A few months later, “one Bubu (a grandfatherly figure) suggested I visit the ashram.” His physically disabled granddaughter lived there, and he thought it may help Devi, too. “He told me, ‘Do you want to live the rest of your life like this? Go there, study and learn.’” That’s exactly what she did, and never looked back.

Kasturba Mahila Utthan Mandal, or Lakshmi Ashram as it is better known, was founded in Kausani a year before India attained independence by Catherine Heilemann, better known as ‘Sarla Behn’. Sarla was a Gandhian dedicated to advancing the Mahatma’s constructive programme in the remote villages of Uttarakhand.
Described by historian Dr Shekhar Pathak as “a nursery for social activists” in the foreword to Sarla’s autobiography A Life in Two Worlds (translated from the Hindi by David Hopkins), the Ashram was the first basic education school in the Himalayas. When Devi arrived at its gates in the late 1970s with her father, she was immediately captivated by the atmosphere. At the time, around 40 girls lived there, and they were taught by 10 teachers. By then, Gandhian Radha Bhatt had taken over its leadership.
Once forced to drop out of school as a child bride, Devi had become a catalyst for change, helping educate and empower hundreds of women.
“Girls were studying, farming, working so hard,” Devi recalls, sitting in her small room and poring over old news clippings and photographs. Among them is a sheet of paper scribbled over with short sentences written by girls she once trained and educated: “Basanti didi bahadur hain, himmati hain.” (Basanti didi is brave and courageous.) “Didi karmath hain”. (Didi is relentless in her work.)
It was part of an exercise facilitated during her years at the Ashram, and she has preserved it carefully ever since. After she had settled into the institution, Radha Bhatt instructed her to take up kadhai-bunai (handicraft work including knitting, weaving and embroidery) and oversee other activities. Mentoring young girls was one of her responsibilities. “This sheet of paper is my life’s reward,” she says with pride.
Life at the ashram revolved around self-reliance: growing vegetables, keeping cows for milk, making woollen bedding and clothes, and taking turns to graze cattle, cut grass, and collect firewood from the forest. Grain was carried up from the market and ground at the watermill in the valley. As Sarla Behn wrote in her autobiography, the idea was to combine daily labour with learning so that girls grew in both skill and knowledge.
Devi became a pivotal force when Radha Behn put her in charge of addressing families in 200 villages, to convince them to send their girls to school. She went door to door to do just that, and later began opening Balwadis (children’s centres) across villages. Once forced to drop out of school as a child bride, Devi had become a catalyst for change, helping educate and empower hundreds of women. These women later became homemakers, teachers, joined the police force, and took up other public roles. “Some of them still call regularly to check up on me,” she says with a smile.
Also read: How Rahibai Popere built a seed bank with a mother’s grit and love
In his seminal book, The Chipko Movement, Dr Pathak traces the first environmental people’s movement of India, highlighting the smaller organising efforts that shaped—and continue to influence—bigger, influential ones. Among these is the tale of Khirakot, a small village in the Kosi catchment just before Kausani, where Devi felt the first stirrings of activism that would define the rest of her life.
In the early 1980s, Khirakot was being eaten away from within. A talc mine run by a contractor named Rampal Singh Katiyar had begun spilling waste into the villagers’ fields. The dust and debris smothered crops, and the sturdy banj trees (Quercus leucotrichophora)—the oaks that held the soil and water together for centuries—began to wither. Even the village road caved in, claiming the lives of animals, and disturbing the flow of the river Kosi.
The Kosi winds through the districts of Almora and Nainital in Uttarakhand before descending into the plains of Uttar Pradesh to meet the Ramganga. Its basin stretches from low valleys at around 330 metres to ridges rising above 2,700 metres. For generations, it has sustained life in the region, providing water to drink, fields to irrigate, fish to catch, and a place for final rites.

Amid this crisis, the men stayed silent but the women refused to look away. Malti Devi, who was leading Khirakot’s women, reached out to Lakshmi Ashram for help. Radha Bhatt had put Basanti Devi in charge. What followed were petitions, the confrontation of officials, and even taking down men in fake police uniforms. The mine was shut down. The banj forests slowly began to heal, at least at the time.
The Ashram continued its work, helping banj forests in the Kosi valley and strengthening women’s role in forest management.
Basanti Devi would later head to Danya, the Ashram’s field office about four hours away from Kausani, for almost two decades–to continue her work with local communities on education, eradication of alcoholism, and conservation of water, forests and farmland (jal, jungle, zameen).
During the 20 years Devi spent in Danya, the Kosi kept thinning. Illegal mining was part of the problem, but there was more. Climate change, reckless construction, expanding farmland, tree felling and unplanned roads had slowly chipped away at its strength, leaving the river more fragile than ever before.
In the early 2000s, Radha Bhatt asked Devi to make a return. “Basanti,” she said, “you must return now. The forests need saving, the Kosi needs saving. Women must be organised again. Just as you mobilised people in Danya, you must do the same here. The Kosi is drying up.”
Around that time, Devi read a newspaper report about the depletion of water resources across the hills. She soon began to see the strain firsthand during her visits, one of which was to Layshal, a few kilometres from Kausani in the surrounding hills.
Devi’s effort faced strong resistance from conservative villagers who refused to allow women to participate in social or public work.
The forests closer to the villages had already been stripped, forcing women to walk deeper into the forested slopes each day in search of firewood. The same women who had once fought to save forests during the Chipko Movement were now, unknowingly, contributing to the depletion of forest resources. “They were cutting the banj trees for firewood,” Devi recalled, “without realising that banj is the lifeline of the forest.”
Ecologists note that the banj oak’s deep roots draw water from far below the surface, helping retain soil moisture and sustaining the springs that feed rivers like the Kosi. Across the western Himalayas, hydrologists have long warned that natural springs are drying up as groundwater recharge declines. In Kumaon, the rapid spread of chir pine at the cost of the water-retaining oak has further weakened the soil’s ability to hold water, leaving rivers like the Kosi more prone to danger.
Devi recounts a long wait of seven days to meet Layshal’s women; she would show up at the crack of dawn, only to find that they had already departed to cut wood. On the eighth morning, she embarked on the forest route herself, climbing through damp leaves and mist, when she finally crossed paths with them.
This encounter marked the beginning of a long debate with the women. In their exchanges, Devi spoke about her travels over two decades to countries like Bangladesh, Bhutan and Nepal. In parts of those countries, too, she told them, forests had been degraded, water sources had dried up, and greenery had disappeared. But once communities began protecting and regenerating forests, water returned to streams, rivers and springs, and the forests slowly turned green again.
She told the women that if they were willing, she would help them form a ‘Mahila Mangal Dal’ so they could protect the forest instead of wiping it out, using only dry wood for fuel instead. “Protecting the forest,” she told them, “could even bring water back to the Kosi, keep the forest healthy, and help feed animals.” The Mahila Mangal Dals went on to protect the interest of women in all spheres of their lives, including supporting the wife and children of a man charged with life imprisonment, whose crimes the villagers were hesitant to report—exhibiting how community ties could hold together a village in tough times.

Devi’s effort faced strong resistance from conservative villagers who refused to allow women to participate in social or public work. Many husbands and in-laws were irate. “Who is this woman?” they scoffed. “She has no home or family of her own and lives in an ashram, and now she’s turning our women against us.” The accusation followed Devi from village to village.
Building a movement against tree cutting was a slow process. Gradually, the women began to understand and joined Devi, persuading—and sometimes arguing with—their families to support the effort to protect their forests. Now in the winter of her life, Devi struggled to recall the finer details of the movement she had once helped shape. But with a little prompting, the memories returned.
Government officials, she says, would cut green trees from forests and sell the timber outside the village, even selling river water to large hotel establishments. “We stopped them—sometimes with force,” she says. “We imposed fines. If the forest wealth belonged to our region, its benefits should also remain here.” The women confiscated the timber, used it in the village, and the income generated was spent on welfare activities undertaken by the Mahila Mangal Dal.
Also read: Sasbani’s 'fruits' of labour: Reviving hope in rural Uttarakhand
For over a decade and a half, Devi helped organise large awareness marches that brought together women, men, elders and people from the ashram, drawing more villages into the effort to protect forests and water. Wherever they went, she urged people to hold soil from the Kosi forests in their palms and take a pledge: “Until now you protected us, but from today we will protect you.”
The oath included a promise not to cut young, living trees—“not baanj, not buransh (Rhododendron), not kharsu (Quercus semecarpifolia).” If wood was needed for a wedding or to build a house, she told them, they would go together to the Forest Department and seek permission to cut only cheed (pine), never green oak or buransh, because these held the soil and water together.
“If women like Sarla Didi, Radha Didi, and Basanti Didi hadn’t done what they did, walking from village to village, talking to people, mobilising women, we wouldn’t have a reason or even the confidence to keep doing this work today,”
The day the oath was taken, Layshal’s women returned home carrying their sickles and ropes, promising never again to cut live wood. In time, the movement spread to more than 200 villages across the region.
In 2010, the Friends of Lakshmi Ashram–a Denmark-based organisation that provides guidance and financial support to the ashram–sent out an update that affirmed Devi’s ability to understand and organise people as well as win them over. Lone Poulsen, who took over the administration of the organisation in 1991, wrote that over six years, “Basanti Behn had been working tirelessly across the Kosi valley, from its source to Someshwar”.
Also read: How Jayshree Vencatesan got Chennai to finally care for its wetlands
At Lakshmi Ashram, 48-year-old Shobha Bisht, one of the women now carrying forward the legacy of the institution, reflects on the scale of what came before her. “If women like Sarla Didi, Radha Didi, and Basanti Didi hadn’t done what they did, walking from village to village, talking to people, mobilising women, we wouldn’t have a reason or even the confidence to keep doing this work today,” she says over the phone from Kausani.
For Bisht and other Ashram residents and leaders, these women are both mentors to look up to, as well as a North star to lead them in the right direction as they keep up the fight for forests and water, and women’s self-reliance. “Everything that we do today is defined by the work that has been done before. We persist because they did; we follow in their footsteps,” Bisht adds.

After six decades in activism, Devi returned to her home in Pithoragarh’s Aincholi in 2015 to care for her ailing mother. And though she would continue to go back to the Ashram occasionally, this marked the end of her active service. She takes out pictures from photo album sleeves with utmost care, going down memory lane and speaking of some of the people from the photographs with childlike excitement. “Maybe this is what I was meant to do. That’s why my life turned out the way it did,” she reflects.
Entirely self-aware of her advancing age, Devi laughs easily at her own fading memory. “I forget things these days,” she says, waving a hand as if to brush the thought away. But what she has built over the decades casts a long shadow and won’t be forgotten. Her organising effort, spread across hundreds of villages, rivers and forests, runs deep in the hills of Kumaon.
Edited by Neerja Deodhar and Anushka Mukherjee
Art by Jishnu Bandyopadhyay
All photographs by Priyanka Bhadani
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Buffalo herds are matriarchal, and the bond between a mother and calf is crucial for milk production
Buffaloes are a defining presence across India’s agrarian landscape. But their pervasiveness in the region for over three thousand years has done little to curb misconceptions about them. By their sheer size, massive horns and a steady gaze, buffaloes paint an imposing picture. Indian mythology, too, portrays the buffalo as a fierce character, among its most well-known depictions being that of the vehicle of Yamraj, the Hindu god of death.
This perception of the buffalo as an aggressive creature, however, does not hold true. Domesticated buffaloes are gentle by temperament. In fact, they can be shy to the point of being easily startled, triggering a defensive response. The bovine’s nature calls for patient management from its caretakers.
Also read: River versus swamp buffaloes: The role of domestication in adaptation
In fact, they can be shy to the point of being easily startled, triggering a defensive response.
Whether they are in a season of migration or in a state of blissful immersion in water, buffaloes move around in groups. This formation is not scattered but strategic. The herds, led by a dominant female, are matriarchal in structure. A buffalo gives birth after a gestation period of about 300-340 days. When they sense an approaching predator, they are known to form tight, cooperative circles to protect young calves. Their defensive instinct is also palpable in aquatic habitats. Although they usually swim at a leisurely pace, they can accelerate in short bursts to evade perceived danger.
Female calves stay with their natal herd for the rest of their lives. Young males, on the other hand, leave the matriarchal herds at the age of three and join a bachelor herd that usually numbers around 10. It is only during mating season that a bull enters a female herd, using its strong sense of smell to find the receptive ones in the group. A bull does not exert dominance over a female herd, making its exit after mating.

Buffaloes are most known for their physiological dependence on wallowing in water, owing to the presence of fewer sweat glands in their bodies, and therefore, a high predisposition to heat stress. Lack of access to a terrain that facilitates the buffalo’s need to wallow and stay cool has serious repercussions on its health. In a situation of heat stress, buffaloes lose their motivation to graze for food and consume it, since these are activities that produce heat. Researchers have found that buffaloes reduce their food intake by 9-13% under hot conditions. This also has a profound impact on the yield and quality of milk. A study conducted on the Murrah breed found that heat stress reduced the milk fat content by 0.26% during the summer season.
Female calves stay with their natal herd for the rest of their lives.
Since they are a species naturally prone to a daily routine of grazing and wallowing, buffaloes do not respond well to confinement. A loose housing system—an expansive space where buffaloes are free to explore their environment—stimulates their natural behaviour, and keeps them content.
Also read: Decoding buffalo behaviour: Why the domesticated beast wallows in water
For buffaloes living on farms, close communication with humans is a part of their daily routine—a result of domestication and evolution. The buffalo’s temperament during milking has a direct correlation with the yield. If they register a negative human interaction during the process, they may respond with restless gestures. A factor of severe distress in a buffalo is early separation from its calf.
The first few hours after a buffalo has birthed a calf are critical in ensuring that the two develop a bond, becoming the key to the newborn’s survival. The absence of the calf negatively influences the production of oxytocin in buffaloes, a natural hormone that stimulates milk production. Given the high sensitivity of this species, even a subtle change in the environment during the milking process suppresses the release of oxytocin in the buffalo which then struggles to discharge milk.
The first few hours after a buffalo has birthed a calf are critical in ensuring that the two develop a bond, becoming the key to the newborn’s survival.
Many farms have responded to this problem by resorting to injecting the buffaloes with oxytocin, to speed up milk secretion. But unsupervised repeated dosage of oxytocin can result in long-term deterioration of animal health, which includes fertility disorders. Its rampant misuse in the Indian dairy industry led to an order from the Union Health Ministry restricting its manufacturing rights exclusively to the public sector.
The behavioural pattern of the buffaloes, a species so central to India’s dairy economy, deserves further study so that they may be understood better and looked after with sensitivity.
Also read: Water buffaloes: A historical look into their role in agriculture
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Women’s work across agriculture, whether diminished or acknowledged, shapes the very food we eat
Editor’s note: To know Rama Ranee is to learn about the power of regenerative practices. The yoga therapist, author and biodynamic farmer spent three decades restoring land in Karnataka, envisioning it as a forest farm in harmony with nature. In ‘The Anemane Dispatch’, a monthly column, she shares tales from the fields, reflections on the realities of farming in an unusual terrain, and stories about local ecology gathered through observation, bird watching—and being.
Agriculture is commonly considered to be the domain of men. The role of women farmers, on the other hand, is perceived to be peripheral or supportive. Contrary to this belief, on-ground realities tell us that it is women who hold the key to sustainable agriculture and the conservation of agrobiodiversity and sustenance in these times of climate change, which pose a serious threat to food security.
Anthropological findings show that prehistoric women catalysed the transition of agriculture from hunter-gatherer-led subsistence to settled farming communities when they became seed gatherers. They learnt how to domesticate the plant species whose seeds they procured. They were the first researchers—‘ethnobotanists’ who developed the knowledge to identify native flora for food, medicine and fodder.

In 10,000 B.C., prehistoric women were probably involved in tilling, planting, and harvesting crops with hoes, flint sickles, and digging sticks, as well as grinding harvested grain, a study of their skeletal remains reveals. The practices prevalent among women in some of India’s own remote rural communities today are reminiscent of this study pertaining to the early Neolithic era in Central Europe. By the Iron ages, the hoe had given way to the plough, marking a technological shift facilitating large-scale cultivation.
In contrast to the catapulting of agriculture into an industry characterised by mechanisation, monocropping, hybrid seeds and the use of chemicals, cultivation was not merely an economic activity for early agriculturalists. The fecund earth receiving the potent seed and bringing it to life was viewed with awe as a spiritual phenomenon. Planting was an act of worship. Veneration of the Earth Mother—Ila, Gaia, the source of all life—was deeply embedded in early religious expressions and art, as the figurines of the Indus Valley civilisation indicate.

Echoes of these beliefs are evident in rituals associated with agriculture in our traditional societies. In matrilineal or matriarchal societies, women are not just caretakers of land, they embody the spirit of the Earth Mother as nurturers. For example, Mother Goddess Mei-Ramew and her lore endure among the Khasis of Meghalaya.
The success of a farm rests on the wide range of tasks performed by women. A study by Oxfam suggests 80% of all economically active women in India are farmers, of whom 33% constitute the agricultural labour force and 48% are self-employed. They complement and support the efforts of men at different stages of the growth cycle of crops; herd and care for livestock; and significantly, keep alive landraces of grains, thus preserving agrobiodiversity. These landraces are the dynamic repositories of gene pools, most critical for food security and nutritional adequacy.
In observing women in the communities surrounding Anemane—at work in fields and in their homes—I saw their contributions beyond what data and studies can reveal.
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Madamma drives her cattle over the hills to graze them in the Kalkere Forest of Karnataka’s Bannerghatta, adjoining her family’s one-and-a-half-acre farm, as she has done for the last 42 years since she was 28. Her day begins at the crack of dawn, milking cows, cleaning the cowshed along with her husband, cooking the morning meal, and ends at sundown, after housing the cattle, milking the cows again, and preparing the evening meal.
Tilling was the man’s job; everything else—applying compost, de-weeding, transplanting paddy, harvesting, threshing, and winnowing—were chiefly her tasks.
Herding is her passion and what she knows best. Growing up in Gummalapura, a village 40 km away from the Tamil Nadu border, 6-year-old Madamma was sent to the forest to herd the family’s buffaloes and cows until she turned 15, when she was married off. In her spare time, she slit bamboo for incense—a cottage industry that flourished in the area, contributing to the family income.
In Bannerghatta, her husband’s rain-fed field supported ragi intercropped with legumes, and marigold during the rainy months. A strip of wetland was taken on lease for paddy cultivation. Tilling was the man’s job; everything else—applying compost, de-weeding, transplanting paddy, harvesting, threshing, and winnowing—were chiefly her tasks.
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The produce barely sustained the family, and cash was scarce. Summer offered opportunities to earn. Madamma took on work like dredging soil at sites where wells were being dug for a sum of Rs. 8 per day, and signing up to be day labour at a nearby vegetable farm for Rs. 7 a day; the latter gig was possible only after her children had grown old enough to be on their own. After 13 years, with their meagre savings, the couple bought a few cows, a buffalo, and a bullock cart. Thus resumed her task of herding. The milk was sold and the herd grew. After a few more years, a cottage with a sheet roof was added to the original thatched hut. At present she has 15 cows.
A study by Oxfam suggests 80% of all economically active women in India are farmers, of whom 33% constitute the agricultural labour force and 48% are self-employed
At 74, Madamma still wakes up at 4.30 am, cleans the cattle shed, milks cows, and dispatches it to regular customers without fail, every single day: 25 litres in the morning, and 20 litres in the evening. Before the sons were married, the household chores and cooking were entirely her responsibility. Now, she has the support of one of her daughters-in-law and son, and occasionally her grandchildren too, to bathe the cows once a week.
After years of drudgery, abuse at the hands of her husband, and upheavals within the family, Madamma’s bones are giving way. Her legs ache constantly, yet she stays strong and committed to her home and land.
Also read: Friends of the soil: A farmer’s key allies hide backstage and underground
Rangamma Sr. decided to shift, lock, stock, and barrel, from her village in Tamil Nadu’s Dharmapuri district along with her daughter and brother, to whom the daughter was married, and set up home in Karnataka’s Kasaraguppe. Her expertise was wild edible greens. Even at 80 years of age, she foraged, walking a 2 km stretch from her village to the next, and at times to various tanks in the vicinity in search of tubers like Gotti Gedde or Lesser yam (Dioscorea esculenta). She would return with her basket overflowing with more than 30 varieties of greens, enough to make her trademark Berike soppina saaru, a spicy extract of wild greens and legumes, for her own household as well as seven neighbouring ones. Rajappa, our senior staff at Anemane and an expert forager himself, was inducted into the art by Rangamma, his grandmother, at a very young age.

Her daughter, also known as Rangamma, was 36 when they moved. Her physical abilities and skills are legendary in the local community: the land was unkempt and overgrown with bamboo thickets which she cleared and terraced, bunding it with rubble, on par with men—her neighbours. The husband tilled the ragi field and left the rest to his wife, devoting himself to religious pursuits. His only requirement: a spotlessly clean dhoti and garments!
Rangamma Jr. had brought with her Sanna kaddi ragi and Dodda kaddi ragi, two local landraces from their village which were drought-resistant crops that matured in six months and thrived in dry land. That is what she cultivated along with same (little millet) and navane (fox millet), four kinds of legumes, hucchellu (Niger) and a handful of vegetables. The millets and legumes were intercropped for optimum yield.
Her legs ache constantly, yet she stays strong and committed to her home and land.
The women’s day would begin with the first cock’s crow at 3 am; grinding ragi on the chakki and cooking lunch by 6 am; and then onwards to the field. Ten cows had to be milked and calves tended to, besides the bullocks that were used for tilling. Cutting and fetching 10 headloads of grass from the valley below was a daily chore. The older son and three younger children, Rajappa and his sisters, shared these duties. While the older siblings grazed the cattle in the forest, Rajappa, caring for 50 chickens at home, was tasked with cooking for the evening—a skill that Rangamma insisted that boys should learn. Later she taught her grandson Ananda, too, but exempted his sister from household duties!
Her method of saving seeds was to rub chili powder and castor oil on them, place them in paddy straw baskets, and bury them in the rick, placing them strategically at a level that would be accessible when it was time to sow. Sticks were stuck as markers for the seed baskets. They were well preserved with no pest infestation.
Rangamma Jr. continued to work well into her 80s, initially as a daily wage earner after the sons sold the land, and in her own home garden when they shifted to Bannerghatta, dying peacefully at 95.
Parvathamma was an able assistant to her aunt and mother-in-law to be. As a girl of 10 she would draw water from the well, help with the cattle and fetch headloads of ragi bundles and grass, finally inducted into the more challenging and multifarious tasks of raising crops after her marriage to Rajappa at 15.
Also read: Raised by nature: Bonds with farms, forests help children grow holistically
Pregnancy was hardly a time of rest and respite in those days. When she was nine months pregnant, Parvathamma remain engaged the whole day, applying headloads of compost to the fields. Then she came back home to deliver her child with the neighbour’s assistance.
The self-possession and insights with which these women managed the health and well-being of family and community with available resources is a lesson unto itself.
The self-possession and insights with which these women managed the health and well-being of family and community with available resources is a lesson unto itself. It speaks of a life of harmony and integration. There are many learnings embedded in their lives: the grit and determination of Madamma under very difficult and trying circumstances, to protect her land and dignity; the knowledge of local ecology and agrobiodiversity of Rangamma Sr.; the immense power and energy Rangamma Jr. brought to create what we may now recognise as an integrated, zero-waste, circular farming system while conserving heritage seeds, mentoring at least two generations and breaking gender stereotypes through personal example.

Their legacy is inspiring for me, as an urban woman who embraced regenerative farming. The role of women farmers is diverse and multi-dimensional—at the bedrock of sustainable agriculture and the health of the planet.
Also read: In forest bathing, an invitation to heal by being one with nature
Artwork by Khyati K
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While river buffaloes are essential to milk production, their swamp counterparts are pivotal in rice fields
Across Asia’s farms and wetlands, the water buffalo is an unmissable presence, standing knee-deep in ponds, hauling ploughs through rice fields, or returning home at dusk to its shed. The animals we loosely call the ‘water buffalo’ in India are actually categorised into two distinct types—the river buffalo and the swamp buffalo. They differ in their genetics, appearance, histories and the roles they play in agriculture.
Both belong to the same species (Bubalus bubalis) but thousands of years of domestication in different parts of Asia have prompted them to evolve into animals suited to very different livelihoods. One became a master milk producer, forming the backbone of large dairy economies. The other evolved into a powerful draught animal, indispensable in the floodplains and rice fields of South and Southeast Asia.
Scientists believe the two types represent the different domestication pathways of wild buffalo populations thousands of years ago. River buffalo domestication likely began in northwestern India around 5,000–6,000 years ago, while swamp buffalo domestication occurred later in the China–Indochina region.
The river buffalo evolved primarily in the Indian subcontinent and constitutes nearly 70% of the world’s water buffalo population. Over centuries of interactions with humans, it became closely associated with dairy farming. Today, most of the world’s buffalo milk—from India’s village dairies to mozzarella production in southern Europe—comes from river buffalo breeds.
The swamp buffalo, on the other hand, emerged further east, along the Indochina region and parts of Southeast Asia. Instead of dairy production, these animals became indispensable draught animals in wetland agriculture, especially in paddy cultivation. In countries like Vietnam, Thailand, and the Philippines, swamp buffaloes are still used to plough flooded rice fields where tractors often struggle to move through the mud.
Also read: Water buffaloes: A historical look into their role in agriculture
These two distinct animals are fascinating examples of how a single species can adapt and evolve according to different landscapes and human needs. In regions where dairy economies flourished, buffaloes were bred for milk. Where wet rice agriculture dominated, strength and endurance mattered more. River buffaloes became milk specialists, and swamp buffaloes, the hardy agricultural workers.
These two distinct animals are fascinating examples of how a single species can adapt and evolve according to different landscapes and human needs.
Although they belong to the same species, river and swamp buffaloes are genetically distinct. River buffaloes typically have 50 chromosomes, while swamp buffaloes have 48. This difference is the result of a chromosomal fusion that occurred in the swamp buffalo lineage.
To put it simply, imagine two separate chromosomes in the river buffalo ancestor gradually joining end-to-end to form a single, larger chromosome in swamp buffaloes. Instead of carrying the same genetic material on two smaller chromosomes, swamp buffaloes carry it on one fused chromosome. Because of this, their total chromosome count drops from 50 to 48, even though most of the underlying genetic information remains largely the same.
Farmers in parts of Asia have occasionally crossbred them to combine desirable traits.
Such fusions occur when two chromosomes join end-to-end during evolution. Over generations, this fused chromosome becomes stable and inherited as a single unit. The genetic material is still largely the same; it is just packaged differently.
Interestingly, the two types can still interbreed. Their offspring usually have 49 chromosomes and are generally fertile, though sometimes with reduced reproductive efficiency. Farmers in parts of Asia have occasionally crossbred them to combine desirable traits.
Also read: Decoding buffalo behaviour: Why the domesticated beast wallows in water
The most striking difference lies in productivity.
River buffaloes are the foundation of the global buffalo dairy industry. India alone hosts over half the world’s buffalo population, and most of them belong to river buffalo breeds such as Murrah, Nili-Ravi, and Jaffarabadi. They produce between 1500 and 2500 litres of milk per lactation and can remain productive, calving and yielding milk, for up to 20 years. Their milk is rich in fat and protein (7-10% fat, nearly double that of typical cow milk), making it ideal for products like ghee, paneer, khoya, and cheese.

Swamp buffaloes, by contrast, produce very little milk—often just enough for their calves. Their value lies instead in physical strength. In flooded rice fields, their wide hooves and sturdy build allow them to move through thick mud without sinking, pulling ploughs through soil that would stall machines.
Also read: Mumbai's Nagori dairies are a living archive of milk, migration and memory
| Characteristics | River Buffalo | Swamp Buffalo |
|---|---|---|
| Colour | Jet black or dark grey | Slate grey with pale markings on face and legs |
| Body type | Larger, heavier build and more elongated | Compact and muscular |
| Horn shape | Grow in tight curls or crescents, often sweeping backwards along the head | Extend sideways in long, wide arcs, before curving upward. |
| Productivity on farms | Champion milk producers, yielding between 1500 and 2500 litres per lactation | Excellent at pulling loads and muddy terrains (especially in paddy fields) |
| Regions where they’re typically found | India, Pakistan, Nepal, Egypt and parts of Southern Europe | Southeast and East Asia; including China, Philippines, Vietnam and Thailand |
While a buffalo lounging in a village pond may look like just another bhains, it might belong to one of two very different worlds. So next time you encounter a buffalo, pay attention. Both animals play an important role in the journey of your food from the farm to the plate.
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Halemani’s award-winning self-help group in Karnataka runs a seed bank and instills new confidence in millet cultivation
Editor's note: Every farmer who tills the land is an inextricable part of the Indian agriculture story. Some challenge convention, others uplift their less privileged peers, others still courageously pave the way for a more organic, sustainable future. All of them feed the country. In this series, the Good Food Movement highlights the lives and careers of pioneers in Indian agriculture—cultivators, seed preservers, collective organisers and entrepreneurs.
On a Sunday morning in September 2025, in Teertha—a small village about 30 km from Karnataka’s Hubli region—Bibijan Halemani makes her way home. A man sitting near a corner store asks her, “Will you buy mekke beeja (maize seeds) this time?”
Before she can respond, another man has a ready answer: “They have won a prize. She can.” Halemani smiles and continues walking.
“People are talking about the prize now, but until recently, they had little faith in our self-help group (SHG),” she says. The prize she speaks of is the Equator Initiative Award, won by the Bibi Fatima Self-Help Group for community-led biodiversity conservation, meaningful work in food security, and creating jobs for marginalised women.
“Recognitions like these make it difficult to dismiss our [women’s] work,” she says. However, it isn’t the first one. In the last seven years, the SHG has received several recognitions; of these, the one that first changed the way people looked at them was Deccan Herald’s Changemakers Award in 2023.
As the 40-year-old reaches the SHG’s community seed bank, started in 2018, which is next to her house, two sparrows are chirping around in the verandah. “You’ll always find sparrows here. They love seeds.” As she opens the door, the birds rush in, happily flying in circles near the roof.

With earthy-red hand-paintings across the white walls and millet husks all around, the seed bank stands out from the line of houses surrounding it. Near the entrance, three rows of baskets full of millets—from the popular kodo and foxtail, to the lesser known browntop–greet us. Next to them, some millet foods such as sevai (vermicelli noodles) and beaten millet rice flakes are displayed on a wooden table where Halemani keeps tea and snacks for visitors. As we enter, the wall opposite the door is lined with various colourful seeds and millets in small glass bottles, along with the awards that the SHG has won.
Within ten minutes of meeting Halemani, three phone calls have already interrupted the conversation. Her busyness is also reflected in her way of talking: fast and to the point. But life wasn’t always like this for her, she recalls.
“About 20 years ago, if someone had told me this is what I will be doing, it would be a little surprising,” she says. For Halemani, ambition came with constant reminders of her gender identity. “The women in my family didn’t really have the option to study a great deal, or work—or even step out of our homes,” she says. Today, her work routinely takes her far away from Teertha, her hometown and address after marriage, to Delhi and Maharashtra.
A ghost ship, carrying dreams of a different life, often makes its presence felt in Halemani’s world. In her late teens, she developed a deep interest in politics and social work. “I just wanted to do something for society,” she says softly. When she completed her degree in Politics, Hindi, and English, her sole focus was on doing a Bachelor’s in Education to fulfil a dream she had stubbornly kept alive. “I always wanted to become a teacher,” she says.
Although acutely aware of the restrictions that had always been imposed on her, she hoped that this could be possible. However, her parents saw no point in further education or work, and got her married off as soon as she turned 20.
For Halemani, ambition came with constant reminders of her gender identity.
In 2004, soon after her wedding, Halemani tried to chase after this dream and applied to become an Anganwadi teacher in her village–despite a lack of any support. “But people in my village were opposed to my application, likely driven by internal politics and a bias against educated women. They made sure the position went to a woman from another village. After that, I gave up on the idea,” she says.
After marriage, her movement and access to public spaces shrunk further. Her days mostly revolved around cooking for many, tending to the cattle, and making manure out of cattle dung. During this time, she observed farming more than ever before—from what people chose to cultivate, to the problems farmers faced. One such observation was the disappearing presence of millets from plates and fields. “After 2007, not many were growing millets. Farmers were switching to maize, cotton, and rice,” she says.
In 2017, when the NGO Sahaja Samrudha came to her village to talk about farming challenges, men and women were both encouraged to come to the meeting; this marked her introduction to sustainable farming. “They noticed that women were more active and vocal during the meeting, and approached us with the idea of a self-help group focused on promoting millet farming,” Halemani explains. Seated next to baskets of millet grains, she adds, “It changed our lives.”
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Halemani and 14 other women from Teertha came together to form the Bibi Fatima Self-Help Group in 2018. This was uncharted territory for them all. “People don’t have much land here. Some women would travel to faraway places to earn money. A few from our SHG used to catch a bus at 6 in the morning on chilly, winter days to wash utensils at a resort for just Rs. 300 and return only in the evening. They would fall sick, but still work,” Halemani says.
For years, Teertha’s women tried to find different sources of income. “We have to work constantly,” she says. In 2004, a few women, including Halemani, started an SHG to put aside a portion of their earnings and save it for a rainy day, but it had limited success, and they had to close it three years later.

When the Bibi Fatima SHG was formed, for the very first time, the women had guidance and mentorship. They didn’t really know much about biodiversity conservation or food security, but through training programmes organised by Sahaja Samrudha, they started connecting their lived experience and observations with scientific knowledge.
When the Bibi Fatima SHG was formed, for the very first time, the women had guidance and mentorship.
The initial years also brought scepticism and stigma, as members of the SHG were often scoffed at. “If I carried a shoulder bag, some people would mock me, saying that I am ‘showing off’ my work. Now the same people are congratulating us,” Halemani says.
In particular, she remembers how disrespectfully the women were treated at a local bank when Halemani and her peers wanted to apply for a bank account for their undertaking. The manager, peeved at Halemani for taking a phone call, mocked her—an anecdote that resonates with many women, especially those who aren’t educated, and who feel hesitant to enter banks.
Also read: How Rahibai Popere built a seed bank with a mother’s grit and love
“Siridanya (millets) are not new to us. We have been exposed to them even as children, but I didn’t know of their benefits to health or the environment. Now, I am able to talk to others about millets and make them aware, too,” Halemani says with a smile—the first in this conversation.
Most farmers in and around Teertha had long left behind millet cultivation by the time Sahaja Samrudha put forth its idea. “Farmers were not finding it profitable. The process of cleaning millets after harvests was an issue for many,” she says.

The situation in Teertha was a microcosm of what was underway across Karnataka. By 2017, the abandonment of millets became a growing issue spurring state-wide concern. During the All-India Co-ordinated Project on Small Millets in April 2017, H. Shivanna, the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru, said that over the preceding decade, Karnataka had lost nearly 2.5 lakh hectares of millet-growing fields to acacia and neem. He added that 40% of the area that was under millet cultivation had been replaced by horticultural crops, which meant that the state had just about 9.5 lakh hectares dedicated to growing millets.
Where once millets had disappeared from the fields in and surrounding Teertha, in present times, farmers are cultivating them across about 2,000 acres of land.
To address this gradual decrease, and after consecutive droughts between 2013 and 2017, the Karnataka government focused on reviving production. They also organised awareness programs and promotion campaigns in and around Bengaluru. In 2017, the National Organic and Millets Fair was held to bring together stakeholders in millet production and to connect farmers to markets. The government also pushed for 2018 to be declared as the ‘National Year of Millets.’
However, when it came to rural Karnataka, it was SHGs such as Halemani’s that heralded millet production. The Bibi Fatima SHG took flight in 2018. In the first two years, the women went to different taluks around Teertha to visit farms and meet farmers, explaining the cost benefits that come with growing millets and informing them of training and welfare schemes on offer. A particular advantage of growing millets is the crops’ ability to adapt well to different environmental conditions, especially changing monsoon patterns—a change that farmers are taking notice of. “In recent times, it rains heavily during the non-rainy season, and we barely get rain when we are supposed to,” Halemani says.

Yet, farmers remained sceptical. They wouldn’t come to the meetings or show much interest. The SHG then started giving farmers Navdanya kits–free packs provided by Sahaja Samrudha that consisted of nine kinds of millets that can be grown in a one-acre field. Gradually, more farmers showed a willingness to experiment.
As awareness grew and millet cultivation became more lucrative, more farmers joined the group. “We started with 20 to 25 farmers, but now we have a network of 5,000,” she says. This growth has largely been the result of the sharing of personal testimonies and success stories. Where once millets had disappeared from the fields in and surrounding Teertha, in present times, farmers are cultivating them across about 2,000 acres of land.
To address the gap between harvests and processing—the cumbersome cleaning of the grains—the SHG set up a millet processing unit in Teertha in 2022, with the help of Sahaja Samrudha, the Indian Institute of Millets Research (IIMR), Hyderabad, and CROPS4HD–an international project set up to transform food systems. The unit is run completely by the women. The SELCO foundation also provided them with solar power for their unit, which helped them manage their electricity expenses. The Millet Foundation, Bengaluru, trained the women in operating the unit, where they now earn Rs. 500 for each day of work.
Halemani gets up to reach for the millet baskets, holding a few grains of the browntop millet—small and polished, shining soft-golden in the light. “See, it has to be cleaned and properly processed for it to look like this,” she says. Processing is crucial in removing the inedible parts and increasing the bioavailability of nutrients. “Once we collect the seeds from the farmers, germination determines their quality. Those that germinate at least 80% are stored as seeds in the bank, and the rest are processed to make millet rice,” she explains.

Farmers from about 15 villages get their grains processed at the SHG’s unit, where small quantities are undertaken for farmers’ consumption, as well as purchases in bulk for the market. In 2024, about 50 metric tons of millets were processed. The most palpable impact of this ease of processing is an increase in the household consumption of millets, Halemani says. “When we started, no one in our village was eating millets, but now at least 25% eat millet rice daily,” she adds.
To expand their reach, 53 SHGs came together in 2023 to form Devdanya Farmer Producer Company, a farmers' producer organisation (FPO) which is co-led by Halemani. About 500 individual farmers from the Kundagol and Shiggaon taluks are part of this initiative. In its first year, the FPO registered an annual turnover of Rs 58 lakh. After excluding all expenses and paying taxes, it made a profit of over Rs 1.4 lakh. “In 2024, our annual turnover increased to Rs. 1.5 crore,” Halemani shares.
While Devdanya was set up to promote millet products such as health drinks, sevai, and rice, it was also intended to remove the middlemen between farmers and markets. “The rate for millets is set by middlemen, and if these rates are too low, farmers are disincentivised from growing these crops. Through Devdanya, we buy the millets, help farmers process them, and ensure they have enough for household consumption.”
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Building a community seed bank has been a core project of the SHG since its very inception. When they were looking for a place to set it up, Halemani offered the space next to her house, which belongs to her family. “After about a year of creating awareness about sustainable farming and distributing Navdanya, we began to receive seeds in return. If we gave 10 kg of seeds, the farmer had to give us 20 kg back. That’s how the community seed bank started,” she says.
Initially, it received only millets, but as the harvests expanded, so did the seed bank. Today, it is home to 350 varieties of millets, oil seeds and pulses. These include 74 varieties of ragi, 10 of foxtail millet, 25 of little millet, two of proso and browntop, one of barnyard and pearl each, as well as 25 varieties of pulses and 80 of vegetables. Currently, the SHG recognises 30 farmers as seed producers.

The core idea behind the seed bank, Halemani shares, has been to increase farmers’ access to indigenous varieties and provide them free of cost. They can usually find what they require here, depending on the season. With the climate crisis looming, the group has prioritised seeds which can withstand extreme environmental changes––mainly millets.
However, it hasn’t been an easy path for the SHG. Building a relationship with farmers was an exercise in time and patience. Sometimes, the SHG wouldn’t receive the seeds they had lent, and farmers would return millet seeds that wouldn’t germinate. “There were also times when we didn’t have the seeds that farmers needed, so we used our savings to buy them. There have been challenges, but isn’t that how life is?” says Halemani.
Though this may seem marginal, it is a triumph for a community-oriented seed bank in India, where farmers who run such institutions often rely on their own funds or meagre donations.
The community seed bank has been widely recognised for its focus on indigenous seeds, food security and the promotion of sustainable farming. “In 2024 we made transactions of up to Rs.14 lakhs, but in 2025, we made about Rs.10–11 lakhs because we faced some technical issues with the machines that processed millets ,” Halemani explains. They only make an estimated 10% of profit on their earnings, as they have to bear the cost of labour, rent and other expenses. Though this may seem marginal, it is a triumph for a community-oriented seed bank in India, where farmers who run such institutions often rely on their own funds or meagre donations.
At around 1 PM, Halemani generously extends an invitation to join her family for lunch and refuses to hear anything other than yes. As we sit down, she first brings a plate of millet sevai, with milk and sugar on the side. It’s a simple, wholesome meal, popular in Uttara Kannada. The sugar is sprinkled on the sevai, and milk is poured on top. Then come rice, sambar and sandige (sun-dried fritters). “We eat jolada rotti (rotis made of sorghum), but I didn’t think they’d be familiar to you,” she says. As we dig in, another member of the SHG, who is also Halemani’s relative, joins us. “She was the first to be a part of the group,” Halemani explains, nodding towards Shehanajabi Halemani, 42.
Shehanajabi has made a living from tailoring for a long time, but considers working at the SHG as her first and primary job. “Since the SHG was established, there is some work or other which keeps us busy, so the opportunities to earn have increased.” Shehanajabi adds, “We also help farmers and the environment, so the work feels fulfilling.”
For many women in and around Teertha, dreams have felt like a luxury that they don’t have access to.
When asked if she had a dream for her life while growing up, Shehanajabi shrugs and smiles as she looks into the distance. For many women in and around Teertha, dreams have felt like a luxury that they don’t have access to.
As we make our way back to the seed bank after lunch, we are in the company of another SHG member: Prema Prabhakar Bollina, 28, who is with her two-year-old daughter. Bollina got married when she was a teenager and is now a mother to two children. “I wanted to study. I think I could have become a teacher,” she says, with a big smile that stubbornly stays on throughout the conversation. Before she joined the SHG in 2019 and began working at the seed bank, Bollina was a domestic worker. As one of the few women in the area who is educated, she largely works at the bank, undertaking administrative tasks like registering transactions. “Earning recognition has changed the way people look at us. It has also made us independent,” she says.
Earlier that day, Halemani proudly showed photographs of her children: a 20-year-old son, who is studying law, and an 18-year-old daughter, who is pursuing a paramedical degree. “Ever since they were children, I told them education is vital to make something of their life,” she says. Even as their own dreams may have been made inaccessible, Halemani, Bollina and other women in the SHG are fiercely protecting the aspirations of their children.
Edited by Neerja Deodhar and Anushka Mukherjee
Art by Jishnu Bandyopadhyay
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The hands that bring us India’s favourite beverage are under-nourished as they battle anaemia and rely on foraged produce for their health
Whether they’re sweating it out in the harsh summer–with the humidity hovering above 80%–or standing tall in a heavy downpour, a tea garden worker in Assam has a set target. They are expected to pluck at least 25 kg of tea leaves each day, for a daily wage of around Rs. 200. This reality persists across 800 or so plantations throughout the state. The same tea leaves easily fetch Rs. 50,000 in private auctions after they’ve been processed. The chasm between pay and price only gets wider in the case of specialty tea: In 2022, a single tea estate set a record when it sold the rare, valued Manohari gold tea from the Dibrugarh district at the rate of Rs 1.15 lakh per kg.
What sustains these workers, who pluck some of the costliest tea leaves in the world, to work eight-hour shifts in extreme weather with only an hour’s break for lunch? The answer, tragically, is very little. Our research threw up some uncomfortable truths: Out of 14 lunch-and-dinner meals in a week, most families consumed only two meals with adequate nutrients. Across Assam’s estates, more women are engaged in tea plucking than men. Endless studies highlight the alarming rates of anaemia in these women; prominently, a sample study from the UNICEF finds that 95% of women working in tea gardens are anaemic. The data is grim. Conditions like anaemia can be the result of various factors, but a reigning influence is nutrition.
There are no easy answers to be found to questions about what their daily diets consist of. But the history of Assam’s tea estates is a good place to start.
Assam’s tryst with tea started with the advent of the East India Company’s stronghold in the region in the early 19th century. The Treaty of Yandaboo in 1826 initiated British rule in northeastern India, setting up solid territorial boundaries for the first time. All of this was happening against the backdrop of a race between the British and the Dutch to control tea production in parts of eastern India.
For a long time, almost all the world’s tea came from China–while the British and Dutch raced frantically to establish some hold over the production and export of this highly demanded commodity. All of this changed when Robert Bruce, a British merchant, discovered indigenous tea plants growing in the Brahmaputra Valley. The moist evergreen rainforests of Assam and Bengal had always been home to wild tea trees, which were harvested by native communities on the backs of elephants. Much like the ancient Chinese, these communities revered tea leaves for their healing properties. When the British confirmed that these leaves could be commercially cultivated across the perfect slopes of these regions, they set up an entire industry.
In its early years, Assam’s tea industry had plenty of demand globally, but not enough local, skilled labour to work in the plantations. As a result, several tea estates suffered losses and were forced to shut down. Working on a tea estate was an extremely labour-intensive job, and Chinese workers who were brought in from across the border demanded a fair wage for their skill.
Over a century, as these amalgamated tribes toiled hard in the tea estates, they could hold on to very little of what they brought from their ancestral lands, in terms of their diverse culture, food or even languages.
Instead of giving in to their demands, British tea estate owners employed a network of agents (called arkuttis) who travelled to neighbouring states, found men and women who were desperate for a means to survive, and promised Assam to them as a land of opportunity. However, the compensation and treatment of these workers, once they travelled to Assam, was no less than that meted out to bonded labourers.
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The British indentured mostly Adivasi people from Central India, who belonged to communities like the Oraon, Munda, Ghasi, Santhal, Tanti, Bhumij, Karmakar, Lohar and Sahu. By 1901, over 7 lakh skilled workers had migrated to Assam to work in tea gardens, with over 5 lakh of them from the Bengal Presidency alone.
The amalgamation of these communities in the tea-growing districts gave birth to what is colloquially called as Baganiya culture (roughly, the garden culture). The Baganiya culture soon gave birth to the Baganiya creole, borrowing words from Central Indian tribal languages. The descendents of these migrated labourers in Assam are now often called ‘tea tribes.’
Over a century, as these amalgamated tribes toiled hard in the tea estates, they could hold on to very little of what they brought from their ancestral lands, in terms of their diverse culture, food or even languages. Assam became their new home.
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We met Renu Oraon (name changed to protect identity), a fulltime worker in a large estate in eastern Assam’s Golaghat district. A part of the organised workforce of the tea industry–protected by a labour union–Oraon earns around Rs. 1,200 for six days of work that start as early as 4 am on some days. We followed her through an exhausting 24 hours: Typically, her shift begins at 8 am and is broken into two by a 45-minute lunch break. She can only attend to chores at home after 5 pm. Her routine is arduous and takes a massive physical toll; Oraon can only sleep after 9 pm.

Workers reside in the ‘labour lines’: rows of two-room houses—barely 25 sq. feet—provided to them by the estates. Oraon says that 22 houses in the labour line, including her own, do not have permanent toilets. These houses receive water erratically from two taps situated in a common space that is shared by all the families. A 2022 study by the UNICEF found that most households in these lines depend on tubewells, but about 15% of the houses have piped water that is supplied by tea estates.
The diet on regular, non-festive days comprises rice, rotis, greens based on their ability, sometimes lentils, and a strong reliance on potatoes and onions as they are cheaper than other vegetables.
“The executive staff members received five times more water per day than the labour lines, while the Managers' bungalows were endowed with 25-35 times more water than the labour lines,” the study notes. Oraon remains hopeful that the conditions in the labour lines will improve in the future, and that she can finally own the house she and her family resides in.
Irrespective of her shift timings, Oraon is up early to prepare the day’s meals, including the lunch that she will carry to her workplace. The diet on regular, non-festive days comprises rice, rotis, greens based on their ability, sometimes lentils, and a strong reliance on potatoes and onions as they are cheaper than other vegetables. Snacks remain elusive owing to the lack of time to prepare them, as does fruit, because of prices.

“We do not have the luxury of time to think about meals. Come rain or shine, we have to fulfil the target to get the full day’s wage. In my case, I am the only one in my family employed in the tea garden. I have to work all six days,” she adds, while grinding white mustard seeds and a ghost chilly to a paste on a grindstone. She also throws a few cloves of garlic onto the stone.
Oraon also chopped up pieces of an elephant apple (Dillenia indica) she foraged while returning from her shift, along with some local ferns and herbs. She starts sauteing them with the paste she prepared. “Foraging is an integral part of our identity. Our grandparents learnt it from their parents, who passed down this knowledge about various edible plants and fruits to us. This produce provides relief to the body. I make sure that my children eat it over all the unhealthy fast food that we find here,” Oraon says as she packs her lunch. She sets off, with her box of chapatis, chillies, onions and the sauteed elephant apple fry.
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Tea workers get assigned across different sections of the estate, which could easily be a 2 to 3 km trek through an undulating terrain teeming with surprises. “The company provides us with tarpaulins and umbrellas to wade through these leech-infested gardens for our safety. However, we stay out in the sun or heavy rains, which takes a huge toll on our bodies.” Oraon prays to the tea bush with folded hands, before quickly plucking a handful of leaves from the plant, depositing them in a conical basket. “We are supposed to weigh the produce thrice in the day. Clocking 28 to 30 kg of raw tea leaves every day is not an easy task,” Oraon explains, emptying her basket. She sings a few lines from her favourite song as her hands move deftly through the plants.

By lunch, the sky is overcast. Within minutes, Oraon and others start moving the produce. Carefully avoiding slippery patches of slush and muddy slopes, the workers carry their leaves to the weighing scale under the shed. A few women start filling up their bottles with a red-brown liquid, called ‘chai pani’ or salty water boiled with tea leaves—a practice foisted on tea workers since colonial times, as a means to tackle the serious dehydration they face. The consumption of chai pani over time has been detrimental to tea workers’ health; the excess sodium has resulted in an increase in cases of hypertension and heart and kidney ailments. Additionally, excess tannin–which is a major component of tea–is known to decrease iron absorption; for the many anaemic women in the estate, this salted tea is greatly damaging.
‘Chai pani’ or salty water boiled with tea leaves—a practice foisted on tea workers since colonial times, as a means to tackle the serious dehydration they face. The consumption of excess sodium and tannins has been detrimental to their health.
Although many tea gardens across Assam are supported by globally-aided non-profits working for improved living conditions and better nutrition, such efforts have barely had any impact on the public distribution system that is responsible for providing the workers with food rations once in a week. “We get 1.5 kgs of rice and flour per person, as well as tea leaves as rations. We have to buy vegetables, lentils, oil, sugar and salt from the markets,” Oraon says. Many of these initiatives talk about the importance of consuming protein and fortified foods, while the practice of foraging wild herbs and locally growing fruits remains understated as a source of nutrition.
To observe foraging first hand, we follow Oraon and her comrades, who lead us to a stream that flows swollen from this afternoon’s heavy downpour. She tells us that the freshwater stream also provides the communities with crab and small fish. The women burst into laughter while separating a skunk vine (Paederia foetida) from the undergrowth. “We call it Padra Paat because of its peculiar flatulence-like smell,” she laughs. Across Assam, various communities consider skunk vine as a source of anti-diarrheal properties. Oraon explains that for anyone suffering from stomach ache or indigestion, the medicine is simple: fritters made from skunk vines, mashed into boiled rice.

Within a few metres around the gushing stream, Oraon and others collect ferns, taro leaves, Moringa leaves (Moringa oleifera), Laksa leaf or Vietnamese coriander (Persicaria odorata) and elephant apple. The women relay the health benefits of their harvest–ranging from an antidote to aches and pain, to improving digestion, and acting as effective anti-diabetic medicine.
This traditional knowledge of herbs among the tea workers has also been studied by agricultural scientists from Assam Agricultural University (AAU). In a 2020 study conducted in Dibrugarh district, the researchers counted as many as 20 plants used by tea workers in Assam as medicinal herbs. While pharmacological investigations are yet to be conducted on many of these plants, some of the well-known ones such taro and moringa leaves are considered as superfoods, rich in micronutrients. Yet, Oraon and others caution against eating these plants growing right next to the tea gardens. “We usually do not forage inside the tea gardens because the management uses pesticides and other chemicals to protect the tea. Since the gardens are close to forests and hill slopes, we find our plants there,” Oraon adds
Later, during the lunch break, Oraon and other workers share meals from their ‘tiffin boxes’. “We get about 20-30 minutes to finish lunch. There is enough for everyone as we share our meals, and in between these meals, we poke fun at each other or find a shoulder to lean on when we are upset,” says Oraon. Most workers bring vegetables, ferns and lentils. Oraon eagerly awaits the clock turning 4, when her shift can finally be over.

Surrounded by the warmth of the hearth in her home, Oraon explains the core of what sustains her and others in the labour lines. “For us, our job as permanent tea workers is an asset. One of the family members has to be employed in the tea garden so that we get housing provided by the tea company. We are told that now we will be able to own the land and the house. We want the house to our name. It should happen soon,” Oraon hopes.
In the last few years, the Assam tea industry has witnessed a historic revival; after a period of 25 fallow years, Assam noted an increase in its exports by 40 million kg. The losses in production are owed in significant part to factors of climate change. In June of last year, production fell by 12% entirely due to a 50% rainfall deficit in the tea garden regions. Workers and their livelihoods, thus, are also highly vulnerable to these extreme weather conditions. Oraon and thousands like her continue their fight for better wages and rights over their own land–the land that they tamed for the tea industry to thrive.
Also read: Protecting place and power, not people: The trouble with GI tags
Edited by Anushka Mukherjee and Neerja Deodhar
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Our dinner plates now carry the accumulated chemical burden of decades of systemic lapses, while cleaner, safer food—a basic right—comes at a premium.
Editor's Note: The planet we inherited as children is not the planet we will someday bid goodbye to. The orchestral call of cicadas in the evenings, the coinciding arrival of the monsoon with the start of the school year, and the predictability of natural cycles—things we thought to be unchanging are now at risk. An altered climate, declining biodiversity and warming oceans aren’t distant realities presented in news headlines; they affect us all in seen and unseen ways. In ‘Converging Currents’, marine conservationist and science communicator Phalguni Ranjan explores how the fine threads connecting people and nature are transforming with a changing planet.
As a country where the cuisine morphs every few hundred kilometres, our relationship with food is not merely one of necessity and survival; it transcends an entire spectrum of emotional, cultural, and sensory experiences. Most of us enjoy the rich diversity of flavours that Indian cuisines offer us, but do we know what is really on our plates?
Every bite holds the entire journey of every single thing that it is made of, and made from: the ingredients, soil, water, air, farm animals, decades of chemistry, and centuries of culinary magic and culture—and unfortunately, contaminants. Washing, cooking, and processing can eliminate a significant number of the surface chemicals, impurities, and microbes that come along with our food. However, contaminants like heavy metals, legacy organochlorine pesticides, and veterinary antibiotics can persist in our food despite our best efforts.
This includes the notorious ‘forever chemicals’ per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), which can take hundreds of years to degrade, and whose traces are still found in food globally.
Two chemical properties explain why many of these contaminants stick around in the environment, food, and even in living beings: lipophilicity (being fat-loving) and persistence. Fat-soluble pesticides and industrial chemicals make their way into fatty tissue where they are stored rather than being broken down or excreted. Their molecular structures also resist chemical and microbial breakdown, so they remain intact for years, moving slowly from soil to plant (to animal fat in the case of animal products) to the human diet.
For most of human history, food contamination was accidental and local: smoke residues from fires, naturally occurring plant toxins, spoilage, poor storage, or naturally occurring soil pathogens. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the industrial revolution, rapid urbanisation, mechanised agriculture, and the rise of chemical inputs very quickly altered how food was grown, preserved, processed, and transported.
In the mid- to late-20th century, the Green Revolution brought in high-yield crop varieties and hybrids to boost the agro-economy across the world. Realising this vision required intensive inputs of fertilisers, irrigation, and pesticides, increasing chemical dependence to boost yields. Globally and domestically, food production rose dramatically, but so did the chemical load within agroecosystems, most detrimental of which are persistent organic pollutants (POPs)—pesticides and fertilisers so resistant to degradation that traces exist to date. This includes the notorious ‘forever chemicals’ per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS), which can take hundreds of years to degrade, and whose traces are still found in food globally.
Driven by this very need for yield, around the same time, antibiotics were made mainstream in animal husbandry globally, without stringent regulations monitoring their usage. This laid the groundwork for antimicrobial resistance, with drug-resistant bacterial genes now living on in the environment, making it difficult to treat infections.
While high levels of all these contaminants can cause severe acute side effects when consumed, there are also effects that compound over time, silently. Chronic low-level exposure can cause a range of neurological, cardiovascular, developmental, metabolic, and endocrine complications in addition to organ damage, cancers, reproductive dysfunctions, severe allergies, and even affect the brain. Microbial exposure can result in chronic gastro-intestinal disorders, the permanent impacts of which can cause recurring future infections. Pregnant women, the elderly, immuno-compromised people, and children are especially vulnerable, as low-level chronic exposure is typically only detected when there are clear symptoms, sometimes too late.
The concept of food safety addresses the effects of these contaminants on people as they pose a public health challenge. However, the issue of environmental impacts and animal suffering tends to fall through the cracks. Excessive, long-term pesticide use also negatively impacts the environment in general, including soil fertility and quality. Through runoff and waterways, these chemicals ultimately reach water bodies and the oceans where they affect aquatic life. Heavy metals and legacy pesticides now pass on from mothers to young ones with toxic effects, fish show gill deformities, reproductive cycles are disrupted, and navigation and behaviour are impacted.
Even tiny concentrations can disrupt how bees navigate, feed, and move; and how birds reproduce, communicate, and grow. Most pesticides also cause endocrine (hormonal) issues, resulting in reproductive and physical deformities in animals, from small frogs to large polar bears.
Also read: Bugging out: Why declining insect populations in India spell doom for agriculture
The entry of contaminants into food arises at multiple points in the farm produce-to-dining-table continuum. Airborne emissions settle onto farmlands, contaminated water irrigates crops, residues persist in soil year after year. Plants absorb what is available, animals eat the plants, and we humans consume both.
Soil and water are the most direct routes for contaminants to enter the food chain. Industrial emissions, mining, fertilisers, pesticides, mismanaged sewage, and wastewater release lead, cadmium, arsenic and other heavy metals into agricultural soils, waterways, and the air. Plants take up a share of these heavy metals through their roots, and leafy vegetables often show the highest concentrations. Pesticide sprays settle on leaves and fruits, and some systemic insecticides move throughout a plant’s body to deposit in edible tissues.
Antibiotics given to livestock can leave residues in meat, eggs, and milk when withdrawal periods—mandatory waiting time after administering a drug before animal produce is safe for consumption—are not observed. In principle, regulatory checks should prevent significant residues, but lapses in compliance or weak enforcement mean residues reach the consumer’s plate.

The absorption of chemicals and heavy metals into fats results in biomagnification as the food web progresses. Plants and small animals absorb them, larger animals feeding on them accumulate higher levels, and we ingest a disproportionately larger share when we consume fatty meats, plants (nuts, seeds), or dairy. The same happens in edible fish and shellfish which accumulate contaminants released into marine and freshwater environments; these typically include mercury and toxic persistent industrial chemicals such as polychlorinated biphenyls and perfluoroalkyl substances.
Food processing and packaging can also introduce contaminants along the chain. Milling rice, refining oils, or drying spices may reduce contaminant level, but can inadvertently introduce others. Contact with plastic packaging introduces compounds such as bisphenols, phthalates, microplastics, and perfluorinated chemicals into food, especially in canned or high-fat products. These substances, much like the other contaminants, are widely associated with neurological, hormonal, cardiac, respiratory, and metabolic side effects.
Heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, and arsenic are among the most concerning and common food contaminants because they accumulate without degrading. However, their presence in food can be due to the geology of the region (unavoidable) and industrial activity (uncontrolled), rather than agricultural practice alone.
Plants and small animals absorb them, larger animals feeding on them accumulate higher levels, and we ingest a disproportionately larger share when we consume fatty meats, plants (nuts, seeds), or dairy.
Arsenic, for example, occurs naturally in certain soils and groundwater. High levels in groundwater have been reported from several Indian states including West Bengal, Bihar and Uttar Pradesh, while traces have also been found in rice grown under flooded conditions, making it a significant concern in Southeast Asia.
Industrial processes such as mining, smelting, and fossil fuel combustion, combined with sewage sludge being used as manure, release toxic metals. Once in the soil, they are taken up by leafy vegetables, root crops, and grains, or enter aquatic food webs, ultimately accumulating in foods we eat. Urban and peri-urban agriculture is equally vulnerable due to contamination from traffic emissions, wastewater mismanagement, and industrial emissions.
Also read: Home gardens enrich the soul. Can they improve urban biodiversity too?
Pesticides and herbicides improve yields and reduce pest damage, but toxic residues persist in the crop despite processing. During the Green Revolution, agriculture relied heavily on organochlorines like DDT, lindane, and dieldrin, a group of pesticides so persistent that they remain detectable in soils and sediments even now, decades after their ban. Many of these pesticides were recognised later—perhaps too late—as toxic and potentially carcinogenic to humans, wildlife, or both.
DDT was also, until recently, hailed and abused as a miracle against vector-borne diseases like Malaria. India, once the largest user of the chemical, now remains its sole manufacturer since 2008, even as authorities talk about phase-out plans.
Today, pesticide chemistry has shifted to marginally better formulations. While many are less ‘immortal’, they are still associated with neurodevelopmental, organ-related, metabolic, hormonal, developmental deformities, and other side effects associated with chronic low-level exposure. Farmers and their families, with the highest exposure risks, tend to suffer disproportionately more.

The indiscriminate use of antibiotics in livestock and poultry is a hotly debated topic. Shifting diets and increasing demand for animal protein have driven up production; resultantly, the cramped and unhygienic conditions of large-scale poultry farms often result in disease outbreaks. Antibiotics and anti-parasitic drugs are frequently administered not only to treat disease but preventatively—a practice that has been critiqued extensively, but one that continues, regardless.
Antibiotics and anti-parasitic drugs are frequently administered not only to treat disease but preventatively—a practice that has been critiqued extensively, but one that continues, regardless.
While some countries tightly regulate these practices, drug residues can still find their way into meat, milk, and eggs. Residues in food, even below regulatory limits, can selectively make some pathogens immune to them, reducing the effectiveness of life-saving medicines, as is being increasingly observed in emerging strains of drug-resistant diseases. The implications extend beyond just exposure: the broader global public health crisis of antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a cause for concern, and now affects wildlife as well, making it more difficult to treat infections.
From smallholder farms to intensive dairy operations, India’s food system is vast and diverse, and the pathways for contaminants are just as numerous and unevenly distributed. Traces of heavy metals like lead, cadmium, and iron in vegetables and leafy greens are regularly reported from multiple parts of the country, especially industrialised and urbanised regions, at concentrations far exceeding permissible levels.
A very recent analysis of vegetable and soil samples from Bengaluru found toxic levels of lead in amounts that are 5-20 times higher than permissible limits. 26% of the vegetable samples—some that claimed to be organic—and over 85% of the soil samples from source farms were found to be significantly contaminated.
Whether it is recent reports of potentially carcinogenic nitrofurans detected in eggs, coliform bacteria in milk and curd, fake or analogue paneer doing the rounds, or even adulterated honey, the problem is not new.
A seven-year-long observation (2013 to 2020) of vegetables across Northern and Western India found residues of 56 pesticides in 40% of the vegetable samples including capsicum, brinjal, gourds, and tomato. While the levels mostly fall within permissible non-toxic limits, and a similar trend is reflected internationally, chronic low-level exposure remains a critical concern.
Organochlorine pesticides have been routinely detected in ghee and butter for decades now, while adulteration of milk, spices and condiments have been a widely accepted reality for just as long. Despite reiterated bans and regulations, antibiotic residues in meat and poultry are also routinely detected at levels especially harmful for children.

Whether it is recent reports of potentially carcinogenic nitrofurans detected in eggs, coliform bacteria in milk and curd, fake or analogue paneer doing the rounds, or even adulterated honey, the problem is not new.
The issue lies not with our dietary choices of vegetables, dairy, or meat, but rather, with the regulatory and processing chains. While it is not easy to feed the world’s most populous nation, the kind of economic forces that drive our markets push for quantity over quality, and profits over safety. The global story mirrors India’s, with legacy pollutants, antibiotic residues, and resistance genes sparking concerns. However, that cannot be an excuse to brush domestic issues under the carpet in what is most certainly a systemic failure.
For consumers, transparency through clear labelling and traceability can empower informed choices. However, addressing food contamination requires shifting focus from end-point testing to upstream prevention and improving safety standards and regulation. Quality monitoring needs to become routine rather than reactive. For example, the Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) was recently spurred into action after reports of contaminants in eggs surfaced, prompting a sudden flurry of widespread and deeper testing of eggs while routine monitoring seems to be largely absent.
Improving the processing chain and plugging in the gaps by integrating robust data and technology into food systems, and improving screening, sampling, reporting, accountability, and emergency responses are other areas that need focus. However, the driving of holistic solutions on ground also needs to involve stakeholder collaborations for widespread, equitable, and sustainable adoption.
The bottom line is that modern agriculture, evolving technology, better awareness, and food processing have not eliminated the problem of chemical residues. In fact, unfortunately, some of the sources arise from compulsions to meet demands: intensive agriculture prioritises high yields and protection from pests and infections; untreated or partially treated wastewater is the only alternative in water-scarce regions.
Products from multiple big, ‘trusted’ brands continue to fail independent third-party quality testing, and these brands—and regulatory bodies—only spur into action to address claims instead of proactively stepping up.
What is equally concerning is the socio-economic divide in access to ‘better’ and perhaps ‘safer’.
What should be working and evolving is the regulatory framework and accountability.
It is widely accepted that screening and enforcement is uneven, not just in informal markets and among smallholder farmers who may lack access to safe inputs or proper training, but among the big, moneyed players. As a result, chemicals and drugs meant to protect crops and animals continue to flow into diets, putting millions at risk.
In some ways, these contaminants are not merely chemical intrusions, they are indicators of how we have shaped our environment in the pursuit of ‘more’.
What is equally concerning is the socio-economic divide in access to ‘better’ and perhaps ‘safer’. Foods with a guarantee of being cleaner, safer, and better regulated are now priced at a premium for what should be a basic standard. How much of India’s population would understand contamination or product recalls in the first place? How many are able to pay double for a safer label to feed a family, or pay a premium for a tub of curd when the low cost alternatives carry contaminants?
I cannot think of any foolproof solutions to this, nor do I know if the ‘safer’ choices I’m inclined to pick are even safe—trust is a precious yet fragile thing brands tend to exploit. I do recognise that I have the immense privilege of choice, and access to ‘better’. But what about those who do not? When did it become okay to pay a hefty premium for cleaner, safer, healthier food—something that should be a given?
Also read: Climate change in my cup: Why India’s cocoa and coffee production is at risk
Cover art by Pratik Bhide
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Water bodies help these hardy farm animals regulate their body temperatures in India’s hot summers
With crescent horns and a love for ponds, the domesticated water buffalo—Bubalus bubalis—is a familiar presence across India’s farms and floodplains. Yet, despite its ubiquity in Indian agriculture, one of its most distinctive traits is also the most misunderstood: its unwavering devotion to water.
Buffaloes are often seen submerged in village tanks, irrigation canals, or muddy pits, eyes half-closed in apparent bliss. This is not laziness, nor mere habit. It is physiology: unlike cattle, buffaloes are built for heat differently—and that difference has shaped where they thrive, how they are managed, and why water access is central to their well-being.
India’s summer temperatures regularly cross 40°C. For large-bodied mammals, heat dissipation becomes a daily challenge. All warm-blooded animals must maintain a stable internal temperature; when environmental heat exceeds body temperature, the animal must actively shed heat or risk stress, reduced productivity, and even death.
Buffaloes face a structural disadvantage here. Compared to many cattle breeds, they have darker skin, sparse hair, and relatively fewer functional sweat glands. Dark skin absorbs more solar radiation. Sparse hair means lesser insulation from direct sunlight. And limited sweating reduces evaporative cooling—the primary method by which many mammals lower body temperature.
This is where water comes into the picture. When a buffalo submerges itself in water or mud, it uses conductive and evaporative cooling to regulate heat. Water, being cooler than the animal’s body, draws heat away through direct contact. Mud adds another layer of protection: as it dries on the skin, it continues to cool through slow evaporation while also forming a barrier against biting insects.
In effect, wallowing is a substitute for sweating and an adaptive behaviour. Buffaloes that lack access to wallowing sites show clear signs of heat stress: increased respiratory rate, reduced feed intake, lower milk yield, and altered reproductive cycles. Dairy studies have repeatedly demonstrated that buffalo milk production drops significantly during peak heat unless adequate cooling systems—ponds, showers, sprinklers, or shaded housing—are provided.
In effect, wallowing is a substitute for sweating and an adaptive behaviour.
This reliance on water also explains the geographical distribution of buffalo populations, which flourish in river basins, delta regions, and areas with irrigation infrastructure. Historically, their association with paddy cultivation in wetland ecosystems made ecological sense: fields, canals, and ponds doubled as thermoregulatory resources.
Also read: Water buffaloes: A historical look into their role in agriculture
At first glance, buffaloes and cattle appear similar enough to share identical coping mechanisms. But cattle (genus Bos) possess a higher density of active sweat glands, making sweating a more effective cooling strategy. Buffaloes, in contrast, have fewer sweat glands and lower sweating rates.
Research comparing the two shows that under equivalent heat stress, buffaloes exhibit higher skin temperatures, greater reliance on increased respiration (exhibited through panting) and a stronger behavioural drive to seek water. This reliance on water is not a liability. In fact, buffaloes are remarkably resilient in tropical climates where sweating alone would be inefficient. High humidity reduces the effectiveness of evaporative cooling. In such environments, access to water bodies for immersion can be more efficient than surface evaporation alone, and helps these creatures stay healthy.
Also read: Chicken manure is clucking good
The image of a buffalo immersed in a pond is not a pastoral cliché. Water is not just something the buffalo loves to paddle in. It has evolved alongside India’s wetlands, floodplains, and monsoon cycles. It is part of what allows this animal to endure Indian summers—and continue to power one of the world’s largest dairy economies.
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Safe spaces, outlets for creativity and curiosity, and a connection to the Earth—nature can mean many things to kids
Editor’s note: To know Rama Ranee is to learn about the power of regenerative practices. The yoga therapist, author and biodynamic farmer spent three decades restoring land in Karnataka, envisioning it as a forest farm in harmony with nature. In ‘The Anemane Dispatch’, a monthly column, she shares tales from the fields, reflections on the realities of farming in an unusual terrain, and stories about local ecology gathered through observation, bird watching—and being.
To Ananda, our farmhand Rajappa’s son, herding cows in the forest was familiar territory—like it was for many others from villages bordering Karnataka’s Bannerghatta National Park. Trees were sparse in the area, but there were grasses and shrubs. When he was about 12, he set off with his neighbours to graze the family’s 20 heads of cattle. Like a bolt from the blue, a leopard leapt at one of the heifers, latching on to the jugular vein. Her mother, a tall cow with formidable horns, charged at the leopard and tossed it aside. Ananda and companions warded off further attacks, screaming and shouting on top of their voices.
While all the other cows surrounded the injured calf, a jersey sounded the alarm, bellowing till the menfolk came from the fields. The leopard escaped, but the calf did not survive. Ananda continued to herd during his spare time from school—where encounters with the wild were commonplace: a sleeping python, a sunbathing crocodile, and all the learning that came with them.
Such a job appears to be fraught with risks. By necessity, children and women are often tasked with herding, but it is a community effort with many herders getting together for security and convenience, offering unique learning opportunities. The knowledge of medicinal and edible wild plants was passed down to the youth from more experienced herders, who were also foragers, like Ananda’s own grandmother.
Ananda does not herd cows anymore; he works at a mall, but the chord that connects him with the land is still visible, though frayed. Such connections with nature are becoming rare as we hurtle towards rapid urbanisation—a real, palpable loss because children who bond with nature are likely to value and care for it. Enjoying nature is not the same as living in connection with it. There is no objectification in connection, only a certainty of belonging—a harmony that is felt.
Enjoying nature is not the same as living in connection with it.
Also read: In forest bathing, an invitation to heal by being one with nature
The development of a child is a marvel. An infant who seemed no different to others, who goes through the same patterns of movement and stages of growth, has a unique personality by the age of 3! What we witness is the unfolding of inner potential, from birth to adulthood, through a process of neurological maturation. The early years are crucial because organs like the brain and nervous system are still undergoing changes and adaptations, transforming well into adolescence.
Though genetics are a major determinant, the environment within which a child is raised provides a powerful stimulus for growth. The home environment influences major domains of development, from the linguistic and motor, to the cognitive and socio-behavioural functions. A connectedness to nature during childhood has positive effects on kids’ physical and psychological health and well-being. Conversely, a degradation of nature could have a negative effect.
Nature Deficit Disorder (NDD), a term coined by journalist and author Richard Louv, refers to the combined psychological, physical, and cognitive costs that children in the vulnerable years of development suffer due to alienation from nature. It lists diminished use of the senses, difficulties with attention, and higher rates of physical and emotional illnesses such as depression as possible consequences. NDD can affect individuals as well as families and entire communities.
Growing physical inactivity in children has been identified as a serious public health concern, as it has multiple ramifications. Increased obesity, metabolic risks, cardiovascular diseases, and Type 2 diabetes are on the rise, especially among school-going adolescent children. Inadequate access to playgrounds and green spaces in urban areas, compounded by sedentary habits, contribute to these conditions. Studies support the theory that green spaces enhance both physical activity and emotional well-being.
The introduction to a wider world outside the home begins with an early education system: Kindergarten, a half-way house between home and school. ‘Kinder-garden’ as it is colloquially called here, was meant to be a ‘garden of children’, designed to nurture them much like plants are by skilled gardeners. Established by the German educator Friedrich Fröbel in 1840 in Prussia, it prioritised interactions with nature, including growing plants and observing them, to introduce young minds to the unity of and diversity within the natural world.
Here, learning happens through guided play, songs, and artistic activities, amid peers and friendly adults in a safe and beautiful environment. The process allows the child’s own faculties to unfurl like a plant, as nature intended, prompted by an inner impulse. The changes that occur are biological and social, impacting the child’s ability to act in the world and live an enriched, harmonious life.

Fröbel’s proposition is an idyllic situation, a far cry from reality. In most Indian cities, including smaller ones, education has engulfed the child even before his or her faculties are ready for academic learning. Schooling starts at 2+ years in institutions where ‘gardens’ have given way to enclosed spaces, with undue emphasis on competitive accomplishments; where structured instruction is the norm, and creativity is confined to art sessions and mandatory staged performances on ‘school annual day’.
The process allows the child’s own faculties to unfurl like a plant, as nature intended, prompted by an inner impulse.
To facilitate learning within nature in cities is not impossible. A daily visit to a park or a little terrace, or backyard gardening with the added attraction of birding, could brighten the child’s day—and perhaps his or her future, too. The experience with my own sons at Anemane taught me invaluable lessons in early education which I later applied in my work as a therapist with other children.
Also read: Friends of the soil: A farmer's key allies hide backstage and underground
There was a boy of four
Who was out of the door
In the garden or on the stair
Lighting fire, catching frogs, everywhere
But never, ever, in his chair.
There was a Rose Apple tree in the backyard which hosted squirrels, mynas, bats, and a family of cats—a happening place! I told my son that we’d be doing something very exciting in its shade, excavating a pit like archaeologists to discover ancient buried things. The branch displayed a board that said ‘Laboratree.’ The excavation yielded tea cup shards, rusty shaving blades, a pen, and many other things which were carefully removed and observed. Experiments that rivalled an alchemist’s carried on, as fluids were boiled, a magnifying glass was put to good use to singe leaves or watch worms, and the seeds of a precious Ashoka tree were sown in repurposed cans. The seedlings were strong and deep-rooted.

When he entered school, he gifted them to the garden on campus. He found his roots, too, in the forests enveloping the school, exploring, working with his hands, undertaking carpentry, sculpting under the canopies, and discovering a rhythm that resonated in the dholak—free-flowing, but centered in an intuitive way.
Now, three decades later, he reflected upon the most significant learning of that phase: a sense of security and belonging in wild spaces, keen senses, self-reliance, fearlessness, and physical endurance. These are attributes which shaped his personality.
Imagination is the foundation for original, independent thought, and natural environments contain boundless opportunities for the stimulation of a child’s curiosity and channelling of his or her creativity. The sounds, sights and feel of things, such as the drifting of clouds, the flow of water, and wind blowing through the branches, widen the young mind. When experiences are absorbed and internalised, they become the building blocks of knowledge.
A world of make-believe offers infinite possibilities. When my younger son was a little over 2, we went to the park to play. With watchful eyes, he saw a row of tall, thin trees, swaying in the breeze. One day he found smooth, oval pellets on the ground. With wonderment he picked one up, cradling it in the palm of his hand. Was it a bug or a seed? It was a ‘Tossy-bug’—a name he gave to the seed, which he believed was also a bug, interchangeable, animate. From then on, ‘Tossy-bugs’ were everywhere: in his colourful paintings, conversations and fantasies.
The sounds, sights and feel of things, such as the drifting of clouds, the flow of water, and wind blowing through the branches, widen the young mind. When experiences are absorbed and internalised, they become the building blocks of knowledge.
Today, he is an environmental management professional who says that the seeds entirely altered his mindset. “Even now when I doodle, I only doodle Tossy-bugs, birds, and hills. It opens up an entire alternate dimension of nature, and shapes one’s imagination and ability to not feel alone or afraid while on one's own in forests, because it feels like there are friends and friendly beings all around.”
Young children aged 6 to 12 tend to be more deeply connected with nature, but it is never too early to introduce a child to its mysteries. On a warm day, as birds leapt out of the golden yellow grass, Sriyu dangled his feet in his carrier against his mother’s belly while we walked listening to bird songs. All of 16 months and yet to articulate with words, he gesticulated, directing our attention towards the object of his interest. Released from his carrier, he toddled—looking for twigs, leaves, and anything else he could find, oblivious to scratches and falls. He finally squatted at a stone, placing his findings on it.

A seasoned traveler, he was happy to narrate his experiences through sounds–the roar of a tiger, a tigress with cubs (the two sounds were distinct), the family sighted in a tiger sanctuary, birds, and our cow. His parents believe in bringing him up as close to nature as possible, having themselves benefitted from childhoods amid rambling gardens with large trees and forests. Owing to professional compulsions, they are based in the city, but their hearts remain in the wilderness. Since the age of four months, their baby has witnessed forests, mountains, and the sea. When he met the full-bloomed version of a rare flower and smiled at it, his communion with nature had begun.
What Sriyu’s parents wish the most for their child is clean air, pure water, a green Earth and a life free of pollution. In their view, affluence alone does not ensure happiness or the ability to deal with the vicissitudes of life. Proximity to nature builds resilience and detoxes oneself.
They can already notice the impact of nature on their child, who enjoys long, restful, and timely sleep unlike the disturbed sleep rhythms in the city. They also see how he engages with the surroundings, and the building of his acute observation skills. At Anemane, when Sriyu’s gaze followed the stream of water dazzling in the sunlight, I felt in my bones a hope that all is not lost for the planet.
Also read: Farming under the elephant's nose: Lessons in crop choices
For neurodivergent children, especially those on the autism spectrum, natural environments are therapeutic. The gentle sensory stimuli, a rough terrain and the demands and challenges of outdoor and farm life offer opportunities for movement and coordination with their own rhythmic patterns—quite different to a controlled, manmade environment. Internal bodily rhythms such as sleep and wakefulness are regulated, as they are influenced by nature’s forces like the sun and moon.
Gradually, the foundation for the inner core that we call the self or individual is built from where the child feels secure enough to step out into the world. This could well be the preparation for formal learning and social engagement that current systems do not address.
Aadir, a neurodivergent child and my yoga student of eight years, has matured into a sensitive adolescent who attends a regular school, but loves gardening and music, too. His mother recalls that he loved playing with water and mud. Then he began to take an interest in insects and birds, which elicited emotional responses—a difficult thing for him. Baby fish moved him to pity, and the sea evoked awe as if he is touching ‘the ancient water of Earth’.

Gardening vegetables like okra, onion, and pumpkin engaged his hands and gave him a sense of responsibility. “His feelings have gradually developed over the years, and we are blessed to have the garden. I see a deepening of interest in the living environment. I believe it marks a significant turn in his development as an individual… Every time he spends time connecting with nature, I find him a little more connected to himself. He is more responsive to our emotions, too,” says his mother. Other vital changes that nature induced in Aadir were calmness, relaxation, and sleep regulation.
The way to save the environment is to rescue the child and offer him or her the woods—and these woods could be a garden in the city, too!
Not everyone who experiences this connectedness probably depends on it for a living, or wishes to become a professional in related fields. However, the bond will go on to determine many life choices—especially those that compel one to protect nature and nurture it. The way to save the environment is to rescue the child and offer him or her the woods—and these woods could be a garden in the city, too!
Artwork by Khyati K
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