Tribes  lantana
Panchang ~ Manmohan Singh ~ Sonia Gandhi ~ Stock Markets ~ Gossip
Home / India News / 2008 / March 2008 / March 11, 2008
Tribes use lantana to imbibe traditional skills in Sargur

Top News

Karnataka High Court orders Ramoji Rao to appear in Ballari Court

CCEA approves scheme on National Mission on Medicinal Plants

Magnets could keep sharks at bay!

Pammie was first choice for X-Files lead role!

Chidambaran says government to speed up reforms

ICC chief Haroon Lorgat to meet the media in Colombo

Bossy parents cause older teens to indulge in more sex

Aussies turning in droves to alternative therapies

Tribes use lantana to imbibe traditional skills in Sargur

the Dr. Balasubramaniyan, President of Swami Vivekananda Youth Movement, an NGO who trained these tribes to imbibe their traditional skill said that Lantana was an alternative to the survival of these tribes.

Sargur (Karnataka), A group of tribes in Kakanakote reserve forest aresing Lantana weed growing there to make household articles.

The Jenu Kurubas, Yaravas and other tribes who have been displaced have taken up making a range of products using Lantana.

Puttamma, a tribal leader who has been displaced along with thousands of tribes from the forest finds using Lantana to augment their traditional skills.

"We used to do artifacts using Bamboo but it is not available and the forest department doesn't allow us. We now found lantana as an alternative to bamboo. Forest department has no objection to clear this weed," Puttamma added.

Talking to ANI the Dr. Balasubramaniyan, President of Swami Vivekananda Youth Movement, an NGO who trained these tribes to imbibe their traditional skill said that Lantana was an alternative to the survival of these tribes.

"It can be ingeniously converted into a range of various products including toys, furniture and home décor items. You can take your pick from chairs, coffee tables, garden tables and chairs, bookshelves, magazine racks, baskets of all sizes and so on." he added.

Lantana, regarded as one of the world's 10 most invasive weeds, is almost impossible to control, and has colonised continents from South America to Africa to Asia. It got its stranglehold over India when the British introduced it as an ornamental plant in 1807.

In fact over 60 percent of the forest has been gobbled up by this deadly weed in the Western Ghats. By K G Vasuki

ANI

July 24, 2008

July 23, 2008

July 22, 2008

July 21, 2008

July 20, 2008

July 19, 2008