VoiceReport LogoVoiceReport
    Voice Reports

    By Socratus

    Voice Reports turns spoken civic voices — in any language, from anywhere — into a living, searchable chorus of collective wisdom.

    Speak — Share your voice

    From the Socratus Lab

    • LOKA
    • wystem.ai
    • Voice Reports · you are here

    Explore

    How it works
    The Pulse
    Today

    Part of Socratus

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation

    “Midwives for collective wisdom — surfacing the latent capacity within communities to survive and flourish.”
    Visit Socratus

    Join the commons

    A quiet note when the chorus has something worth hearing.

    Get the Daily Report by Email
    Subscribe to receive a daily summary of community voices directly in your inbox.
    Feedback

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation © 2026 · All Rights Reserved.

    NewsletterTermsPrivacyBrand & Press
    Planetary
    VoiceReport LogoVoiceReport
    The cloudEnvironmental & Food ScarcityHealthy Traditional FarmingSoil Health & FarmingModern Farming TechnologyTraditional Organic CultivationTraditional Farming Livelihoods
    🐂

    A dimension within Traditional Organic Cultivation

    Traditional Farming Livelihoods

    This theme focuses on traditional agricultural practices, including the use of oxen and irrigation, as a means of livelihood.

    150 voices speak to this

    Dimensions within this theme

    Each dimension splits this theme further — keep drilling to see how it breaks down.

    Community Voice Analysis
    An AI-powered summary of 100 submissions for this prompt.

    Neutral

    Overall Community Sentiment

    The Voice Summary

    In your area, citizens express a deep connection to their ancestral farming heritage, highlighting the continued use of traditional farming methods with ploughs and oxen 🐂. Many rely on zero-irrigation techniques to cultivate second crops, preserving and utilizing indigenous seeds for varieties like Kodo, Sawa, Medo, and various pulses 💧. While there's a strong appreciation for organic practices and the nutritional value of chemical-free produce, some voices note the decline of these old ways due to modern machinery and chemical fertilizers, which can lead to economic problems. The community demonstrates a resilient spirit, maintaining livelihoods through these time-honored practices and actively conserving their unique seed varieties for future generations 💡.

    Dominant Themes

    Traditional Farming Methods
    Preservation of Indigenous Seeds
    Zero-Irrigation / Rain-fed Cultivation
    Use of Organic Manure
    Cultivation of Pulses and Millets

    Actionable Recommendations

    • 🐂 🌱 💰Implement programs to support and promote traditional farming practices, including the use of oxen and organic manures, to enhance their sustainability and economic viability.
    • 🌾 📚 🤝Establish community-based initiatives for the conservation, cataloging, and equitable distribution of traditional and indigenous seeds.
    • 💧 💡 🧑Provide educational resources and practical training on advanced zero-irrigation techniques and organic farming to farmers, leveraging their existing knowledge.
    Voice Reports

    By Socratus

    Voice Reports turns spoken civic voices — in any language, from anywhere — into a living, searchable chorus of collective wisdom.

    Speak — Share your voice

    From the Socratus Lab

    • LOKA
    • wystem.ai
    • Voice Reports · you are here

    Explore

    How it works
    The Pulse
    Today

    Part of Socratus

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation

    “Midwives for collective wisdom — surfacing the latent capacity within communities to survive and flourish.”
    Visit Socratus

    Join the commons

    A quiet note when the chorus has something worth hearing.

    Get the Daily Report by Email
    Subscribe to receive a daily summary of community voices directly in your inbox.
    Feedback

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation © 2026 · All Rights Reserved.

    NewsletterTermsPrivacyBrand & Press
    Planetary

    Synthesised from the stories

    AI-synthesised pieces woven from many community voices on this theme. They may contain errors or interpretation — they're a reflection of the stories, not a record of fact.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Cultivate with Old Methods, Even Without Irrigation

    Even without irrigation, our traditional seeds and old farming methods ensure our crops ripen, providing food for our homes.

    🧭 Action recipe· Ancestral Foodways

    Revere Both Grain and Money, Farm with Cow Dung

    Our community remembers a time when farming with natural manure fostered both abundant harvests and deep respect for the land.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Ancestral Seeds, Diverse Harvests

    By cultivating a variety of crops, preserving ancestral seeds, and exploring animal husbandry, we build a resilient livelihood for our community.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Save Your Seeds, Grow a Second Crop

    After the main harvest, we harness the land's natural moisture to cultivate a vital second crop, ensuring food and oil for our families.

    Where these voices come from

    ODISHA, INDIA53 voices UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA34 voices MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA20 voices JHARKHAND, INDIA3 voices RAJASTHAN, INDIA1 voice CHHATTISGARH, INDIA1 voice

    Voices here

    🐂 🌱 🏡

    Even today, we farm with a plough and oxen and earn our livelihood. Since ancient times, our ancestors have ploughed fields with a plough and oxen, and sow only the seeds preserved at home, such as kurthi, sawa, medo, and mijhri.

    — Ram Kumari

    💪 🌱 🌾

    We sow with great effort without irrigation, and cultivate crops by plowing with oxen and a plow. We save seeds for many years, which come in handy.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🌱 🌾

    In our village, earlier, people used to cultivate fields with ploughs and oxen and worked very hard. At that time, they would sow Kodo, Sawa, Medo, and Mizri, and grow them without fertilizer. They used to sustain themselves with that, from which individuals...

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌾 🐂 🏡

    Sawa, Medo, Mijhri are our traditional crops, which our ancestors used to cultivate by plowing with bullocks and a plough. They consumed these crops throughout the year and saved seeds in their homes for the next year's sowing. We still practice farming today.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🐂 🌾 🌱

    They farm using plows pulled by oxen, practicing traditional farming where they sow and grow old varieties, and now they also sow some new hybrid varieties.

    — Ram Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🐂 🌾

    From the very beginning, we cultivate a second crop without irrigation using old methods and traditional seeds. The method of storing these seeds is also traditional, and our fields are ploughed using bullocks.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Balaghat, Madhya Pradesh

    🌾 🐂 🌱

    Yes, on our fallow fields, even without irrigation, we grow other crops and use traditional seeds, ploughing and sowing with oxen according to old methods.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🐂 🌱 🌾

    We do farming with ploughs and bullocks, cultivating crops like saawa, medo mijhri, and pulses such as arhar (pigeon pea), urad (black gram), and baturi. Nowadays, government seeds for pulses are also available. We also cultivate crops like chana (chickpea), matar (pea), and masoor (lentil).

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🚜 🌾

    In ancient times, we used to cultivate with ploughs. We used to cultivate black gram, horse gram, green gram, paddy, etc.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌳 🌱 🚜

    We cleared and tilled land in the forest to create our farms, and today we continue to cultivate that same land. Previously, we used to plough with bullocks and a plough, but now we also use tractors for tilling. Furthermore, pigeon pea (arhar) cultivation can be done without water.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🐂 🌾 💰

    In our home, we do farming using a plow and oxen. We cultivate the fields with them and also earn our livelihood through them. We farm all day; the plow operates, and by evening, it helps us sustain ourselves. This is how we carry out our agricultural work.

    — Ram Kumari

    🧑‍🌾 🐂 🌾

    Before, all of us tribals used to plow the fields with a plow and bullocks. We would sow medo mujri and also kurthi, which was very nutritious food. It was sown without fertilizer and would grow readily.

    — Babulal Ayam · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🐂 🌾 💧

    Before, we all used to farm with plows and oxen, and we also threshed paddy with them. Even for irrigation, we used oxen via a Persian wheel.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🚜 🌱 📜

    Our plows and bullocks till the fields, we sow millet, maize, make furrows, and plant small seeds, and also save seeds for the next year. This is a legacy from our ancestors, which we still have today and which we utilize.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🐂 🌾

    In earlier times, people cultivated crops like Sawa, Medon, and Mijhari using ploughs and oxen. They also relied on oxen for applying various treatments to their fields. They cultivate Batri, a type of pulse, and for pigeon pea, if it receives water just once, a good harvest is achieved. Batri is sown after the rice harvest, requires no irrigation, and the crop ripens on its own.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👨‍👩‍👧 🚜 🌱

    We are a tribal community, we farm using ploughs and bullocks, and we sustain our lives. We clear forests and bushes to make fields, and we cultivate sawa, medo, mijhri, and maize, which were grown by our ancestors, and we also preserve their seeds.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🕰️ 🌾

    We farm using the old method.

    — Amar Lal Dhurwey · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    👴 🧑‍🌾 🌱

    Our ancestors used to farm with plows.

    — Batakrushna Sahoo

    🧑‍🌾 🌱 🌾

    Traditional agriculture

    — Common Ground · Phiringia, Kandhamal, Odisha

    📜 🌱 🌾

    Traditional agriculture

    — KRUSHNA KHILLO · Semiliguda, Koraput, Odisha

    🐂 🌾 ✨

    In ancient times, what kind of methods did your people use for farming? So, they farmed with plows and used oxen for farming.

    — Rajesh Mallik · Boudh, Odisha

    🧑‍🌾 🤲 🌾

    We farm using traditional methods.

    — Sunil oraon · Bero, Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🚜 💸 🏙️

    Earlier, we used to farm with plows and oxen. Today, it's the age of machines, and we farm using them. However, we often face economic problems, due to which we have to go to the city separately to earn a living.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🧑‍🌾 🌾

    Farming

    — Sunita Kumari · Ghorawal, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🐂 🌧️ 🎲

    We have been cultivating without irrigation from the very beginning, plowing and sowing with bullocks. If the rainwater falls properly, then it's good; otherwise, I consider myself a gambler.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    👴 🤲 🌱

    I cultivate pulse crops without irrigation. We save pulse seeds, among which horse gram, black gram, and pigeon pea are the oldest varieties. We save these seeds for cultivation every year. Our ancestors used to cultivate using manure and traditional ploughs.

    — DASHARATH SINGH

    🧑‍🌾 🚜 🌱

    In earlier times, what method did people use for farming? The answer is, they used to farm by applying fertilizer with a plough.

    — Niranjan Lauria · Boudh, Odisha

    🧑‍🌾 🌱 🌾

    Farming and agriculture

    — Sunita Kumari · Ghorawal, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🧑 🐂 🌿

    Tall people farm by ploughing with oxen and grow crops that are very useful and chemical-free.

    — Ram Maravi · Dindori, Madhya Pradesh

    👨‍🌾 🐂 🌾

    Record it in 15 seconds. Yes, I practice traditional farming. I irrigate my fields with my oxen, plow them, and use organic manure from my animals.

    — Vasudev Katara · Bichiwara, Dungarpur, Rajasthan

    📜 🐂 🌽

    In their olden times, marriages and farming took place. Farming was recently done with bullocks, and corn was cultivated in farming.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 💩 🌾

    Our fathers and grandfathers used to cultivate traditional crops earlier, fertilizing them with cow dung, and grew pulses like moong, urad, kulthi, along with millets such as ragi and bajra.

    — Parikshit Majhi

    🌱 🚜 🌾

    Agriculture farming

    — Sunita Kumari · Ghorawal, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 💪 ☀️

    We still have traditional seeds like Kodo, Kutki, Maize, Sorghum, Kulthi, Arhar, etc., which we sow using old methods even without irrigation facilities. Even then, our crops ripen.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🧑‍🌾 🌱 🌾

    We will do farming.

    — Manjusha Marko · Dudhi, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🌧️ 🌾

    We do traditional farming. We save rain-fed seeds and cultivate crops like sorghum and chickpea.

    — Vijay kanesh · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh

    🪵 🚜 ⚙️

    In the past, farming was done with plows made of wood, but nowadays machines are being used.

    — Amar Lal Dhurwey · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We do farming. We save some seeds beforehand and then cultivate. This way, we get many crops, including green gram, black gram, and pigeon pea.

    — Ulapi Sahu · Balangir, Odisha

    🚜 🌾 😔

    From the time of our ancestors, they used to cultivate with a plow. Immediately after paddy cultivation, they would grow mustard, groundnuts, horse gram, black gram, and green gram. Our subsequent generations have forgotten this practice.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    📜 🌱 🤲

    Traditional agriculture and heritage

    — KRUSHNA KHILLO · Semiliguda, Koraput, Odisha

    Sources & credits

    The voices in this theme were gathered by these organisations through their community reports.

    • Atmashakti Trust139 voices

      “Do you practice zero irrigation second crop and follow traditional farming practices and seed protection?” · “If you or your women’s groups are given a seed capital of INR 20,000, what enterprise will you choose?” · +5 more

    • Common Ground1 voice

      “"Love for the landscape" - What do you like most about your village and surroundings?”

    🌰Heritage Seed Cultivation32 voices
    🌱Traditional Seed Saving29 voices
    🧑‍🌾Rural Agricultural Livelihoods29 voices
    🌾Organic Pulse Cultivation26 voices
    🌿Ancient Farming Methods20 voices
    🚜Sustainable Farm Practices14 voices