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 cloudTraditional Farming PracticesTraditional Pulse FarmingChickpea & Pea CultivationTraditional Pulse FarmingSeed Saving & CultivationCultivating HeritageFarming Livelihoods
    🚜

    A dimension within Cultivating Heritage

    Farming Livelihoods

    Exploring agriculture, crop preservation, and the heritage of farming for sustenance.

    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.

    Positive

    Overall Community Sentiment

    The Voice Summary

    Nearby, the primary focus of these submissions is on the preservation and continuation of traditional farming practices, particularly the cultivation of pulse crops and rain-fed varieties. Many citizens express a strong desire to maintain these methods, often citing ancestral practices and the importance of seed saving for future harvests 💧. There's a clear emphasis on organic and low-irrigation techniques, with a commitment to passing these traditions down through generations. The recurring theme is not just about cultivation, but about safeguarding a valuable agricultural heritage for the future 💡.

    Dominant Themes

    Traditional Farming Practices
    Seed Preservation
    Pulse Crop Cultivation
    Rain-fed Agriculture
    Organic Farming

    Actionable Recommendations

    • 🌾 🌱 💰Develop and fund programs that support farmers in preserving and propagating traditional and indigenous seed varieties, ensuring their availability for future generations.
    • 👨 🏫 🌍Establish educational workshops and knowledge-sharing platforms to transfer traditional farming techniques, especially low-irrigation and organic methods, from elder generations to younger farmers.
    • 🔬 🍎 📈Invest in research and development to identify and promote the benefits of traditional pulse crops and rain-fed varieties for food security and nutritional diversity.

    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.

    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
    🧭 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

    Preserve Your Seeds, Cultivate Diversity

    We carefully save seeds from our diverse crops like chickpeas, lentils, and mustard, ensuring we can grow them again next year and maintain our livelihood.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Save Your Seeds for the Next Season's Harvest

    By carefully collecting and preserving seeds from our first harvest, we ensure a second, nutritious crop and maintain our traditional farming methods for generations.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Save the Seeds That Know the Rain

    By preserving our traditional, rain-fed seeds and planting them with care, we ensure food for our families and fodder for our animals.

    Where these voices come from

    ODISHA, INDIA69 voices UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA24 voices CHHATTISGARH, INDIA12 voices JHARKHAND, INDIA5 voices MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA4 voices RAJASTHAN, INDIA1 voice

    Voices here

    🌱 🔄 🌾

    Previously, we used to cultivate all crops like moong, urad, and kulthi, and we want to continue doing so in the future.

    — Jyoti Senapati

    🌾 💧 🤲

    We cultivated rainfed crops like pigeon pea, mung bean, and black gram, and will continue to cultivate and preserve them for the future.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🤲 🌱 👨‍🌾

    I am saving it. Yes, I have been saving it from before. Yes, green gram, yes, chickpeas, yes, now it looks like peas. I am seeing all of it being cultivated. Your ancestors were indeed tied to the yoke (of farming) before. Yes, in the past, everyone used to plow and cultivate. Yes.

    — Santosh Pradhan

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    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

    🌱 🤲 🔄

    This year, we have cultivated green gram, black gram, and chickpeas. We will save the seeds to cultivate them again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We are cultivating moong and urad beans. We have kept seeds and will cultivate again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🔄

    This year, we will cultivate moong, urad, and gram, save the seeds, and cultivate those same seeds again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We will cultivate mustard, moong, and other crops, save the seeds, and cultivate them again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We cultivated moong and urad dal this year and saved the seeds to cultivate again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🔄

    We have cultivated moong and urad this rainy season. We will keep the seeds and cultivate again next rainy season.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We will cultivate mustard, green gram, and other crops, store their seeds, and cultivate them again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🤲 🌱

    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

    🌱 💧 🤲

    We cultivate seeds such as chickpea, lentil, mustard, and horse gram using traditional, possibly rain-fed, farming methods. We preserve these seeds and cultivate them using this traditional agricultural practice.

    — Laxmi Sahu

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We have cultivated green gram this year. We will save the seeds and cultivate again next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Well, I cultivated black gram and chickpeas this year. I will save the seeds and cultivate them next year as well.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We will cultivate green gram and black gram this year and save the seeds for cultivation next year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    For the second crop, we cultivate seeds such as moong, urad, and arhar. We save those seeds to cultivate them again the following year.

    — RINA BEHERA · Hemagiri, Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Yes, we grow other crops and also preserve seeds like black gram, pigeon pea, and green gram.

    — Jagannath Baraik · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌱 🤲 🌧️

    I have cultivated moong and black gram and kept the seeds. I will cultivate again in the rainy season.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🫘 🌾

    The things we used to cultivate before were black gram, green gram, cowpea, horse gram, etc.

    — Batakrushna Sahoo

    🌾 🤲 🏺

    We cultivate paddy, wheat, and pulses in our village and want to preserve this as a heritage.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌾 🤲 🌱

    We have cultivated mung beans this year. Next year, we will cultivate them using saved seeds.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🌾 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

    We used to cultivate various crops extensively. Additionally, I cultivated mustard, moong bean, guava, horse gram, etc. All these seeds are important for my family.

    — RINA BEHERA · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🫘 ☀️

    Yes, I cultivate pulses as a second crop with zero irrigation. Previously, our ancestors used to cultivate this way, and I also save black gram and horse gram seeds and cultivate using this organic method every year.

    — DASHARATH SINGH · Sambalpur, Odisha

    🌱 🧑‍🌾 🌾

    We keep green gram, black gram, and horse gram seeds, and cultivate them in the second crop.

    — Puspanjali Nag

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Our ancestors were cultivating. They grew urad and moong. The soil gave them a different kind of produce, and they nurtured the seeds for it.

    — Mukunda Majhi · Udulibeda, Malkangiri, Odisha

    👴 🌱 🌰

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. And I also cultivate every year using this method, by preserving Urad and Kulthi seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan

    👴 🌱 🌾

    Yes, I cultivate pulses as a second crop with zero irrigation. Our ancestors used to cultivate this before, and I also save black gram and horse gram seeds and cultivate every year using this organic method.

    — DASHARATH SINGH · Jamunkira, Sambalpur, Odisha

    👴 🌱 🤲

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. And I also cultivate every year using this method, by saving black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan · Bhojpur, Sambalpur, Odisha

    🌱 👨‍👩‍👧 💎

    We have traditional moong and urad dal. We cultivate them generation after generation. I will tell you what we have preserved.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🌱 ♻️

    Yes, I cultivate pulses as a second crop with zero irrigation. Our ancestors used to cultivate these crops, and I also store black gram and horse gram seeds and cultivate them every year using this organic method.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan · Jamunkira, Sambalpur, Odisha

    👴 🌱 🤲

    We preserve the pulse crops that we have received from our ancestors.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    👴 🌱 🫘

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. I also cultivate every year using this method by saving black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — DASHARATH SINGH · Jamunkira, Sambalpur, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We preserve old seeds for sowing work, which explicitly includes Moong, Kili, and Mustard.

    — Vijay Kumar bhardwaj · Baloda Bazar, Chhattisgarh

    🌱 🤲 👴

    Yes, pulses are cultivated in this. According to our ancestors, we also preserve seeds.

    — Jagannath Baraik · Bayang, Seraikela-Kharsawan, Jharkhand

    📜 🌱 🫘

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulse crops as a second crop without irrigation, adopting organic methods. I also store black gram and horse gram seeds and cultivate every year using this method.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan

    🌾 🐂 🏡

    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

    👴 🌱 🌰

    Our ancestors used to cultivate pulses as a second crop using organic methods without irrigation. I also cultivate every year using this method by storing black gram and horse gram seeds.

    — Kumudini Chhanchan · Bhojpur, Sambalpur, Odisha

    🫘 🤲 🔄

    Cultivate pulse varieties and save them for the next year, and then cultivate again using traditional methods.

    — Anupama Mahanand · Sundargarh, Odisha

    👴 🌾 🤲

    Our ancestors have been cultivating Kodo, Barnyard, Foxtail, Finger millet, Horse gram, and Barley since ancient times, which are very nutritious. We always preserve their seeds and cultivate them every year.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    Sources & credits

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

    • Atmashakti Trust148 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?” · +1 more

    🌿Seed to Harvest Cycles47 voices
    🏛️Preserving Agricultural Heritage32 voices
    🌱Pulse Crop Farming25 voices
    💚Green Gram & Seed Saving19 voices
    🌾Heritage Seed Cultivation16 voices
    🍎Traditional Food Preservation11 voices