LIVE IN ABUjA: Despite threats and the massive deployment of soldiers, we marched against Tinubu’s incompetence in handling insecurity and his obvious inability to rescue kidnapped schoolchildren. We made it clear—even to the soldiers deployed against us—that Tinubu must either ensure the safe rescue of these children or resign from office. #OccupyAsoRock #TinubuMustGo
We would be sending out orders tomorrow to Lagos and Ibadan for FREE, you will only be responsible for door step delivery fee which costs a token depending on your area, A 3kg pack is #16,000 only, send a dm to secure yours 😎
Our guinea corn flour is carefully processed, stone-free, and smooth
1kg= 3000 Naira
2kg= 6000 Naira
Available in 1-10kg
Send a dm or use link in bio to order.
🌱 EFFECTS OF WRONG SPACING IN PEPPER FARMING
One of the most common mistakes in pepper farming is overcrowding, where too many seedlings are planted within a small area in an attempt to maximize land use. Unfortunately, overcrowding weakens the crop and reduces productivity.
1️⃣ Competition for Nutrients and Water
When pepper plants are too close, their roots compete for nutrients and moisture. This leads to poor nutrient uptake, stunted growth, yellowing leaves, uneven plant development, and reduced productivity, even when fertilizers are applied.
2️⃣ Poor Air Circulation and Increased Humidity
Closely spaced plants restrict airflow, creating humid conditions that favor diseases such as leaf spot, blight, powdery mildew, and root-related fungal infections. Disease spread also becomes faster within the field.
3️⃣ Insufficient Sunlight Penetration
Overcrowded plants shade one another, reducing photosynthesis. As a result, plants become weak and elongated, flowering decreases, fruit production drops, and fruit quality suffers.
4️⃣ Weak Plant Structure
Competition for space and sunlight often produces tall, thin plants with weak stems. Such plants are more likely to lodge during heavy rainfall or strong winds and generally produce fewer fruits.
5️⃣ Increased Pest Infestation
Dense plant canopies provide favorable conditions for pests such as aphids, thrips, and whiteflies. They also make pesticide application less effective due to poor spray penetration.
6️⃣ Reduced Fruit Size and Market Quality
Excessive competition results in smaller, less attractive fruits with poor uniformity, reducing market value and profitability.
⚠️ EFFECTS OF EXCESSIVELY WIDE SPACING
Spacing plants too far apart is also a mistake. It can lead to:
• Underutilization of farmland
• Lower plant population per hectare
• Reduced total yield
• Increased weed growth
• Inefficient use of water and fertilizer
The new Month started with us sending a 6kg unripe plantain flour to Benin.
Funny how I got this client, ran Ads targeting Lagos, Ibadan and Akure, only for Benin to show face 😎 Meta shock me, but then, I learnt from mama Chioma, I shall not be shocked 😂
BJ MUHAMMAD
FOR HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES*
BIDA / GBAKO / KATCHA FEDERAL CONSTITUENCY
African Action Congress (AAC) I, BJ MUHAMMAD, PLEDGE TO YOU
1. SECURITY FIRST – I will demand urgent action to end banditry and protect our farmers, traders, and families.
If Bola Ahmed Tinubu @officialABAT and his service chiefs fail to track down and secure the release of the abducted Oyo schoolchildren and other kidnapped people, we will have no choice but to occupy Aso Rock Villa this week!
Just hours after we proposed a living wage for Nigerian workers, the governors have reportedly responded with their own proposal of a ₦100,000 "minimum wage."
These wicked governors know very well that no worker can live decently on ₦100,000 per month in today's Nigeria. That amount can barely purchase a bag of rice, let alone cover housing, transportation, healthcare, education, utilities, and other basic necessities.
They understand the reality of the economic hardships workers face, yet they continue to impose poverty wages while living lavishly at public expense.
They are in panic mode; they fear that Nigerians may discover that a different path is possible, one where workers are paid real living wages, public resources are used for the benefit of the people, and prosperity is shared rather than hoarded by a privileged few.
A minimum wage should guarantee dignity, not perpetual suffering.
#Sowore2027 #LivingWage #WorkersRights #TakeItBack #RevolutionNow
I’m not a hypocrite, and I’m not here to play politics. I’m just a man looking at the wreckage of his life over the last three years and asking: Where did we go wrong?
They promised us progress, but all I have tasted is a masterclass in suffering.
Look at the math, it doesn't lie. I used to buy fuel at ₦250 a litre. With just ₦3,000, I could feed my V6 engine, drive out to my farm, get the work done, and make it back home. Today? That same litre of petrol is ₦1,332. Yet, the market is frozen in time. A kilogram of live pig used to sell for ₦1,600 to ₦1,800. Three years of hyperinflation later, it’s still hovering at a pathetic ₦1,500 to ₦2,000.
The cost of producing has skyrocketed, but the value of my sweat has been cut to pieces.
And it’s not just my pockets they emptied; they took my peace of mind too. I used to ride my bike home from the farm at 9:00 PM, getting back to my family by 10 or 11 o'clock. Safe. Unbothered. Today? They no born me well to try that. Fear has locked us inside before the sun even goes down.
The ultimate mockery of it all? Look at my wall. I didn't sit around waiting for handouts. I did everything right. I graduated with a Second Class Upper, and I went back to get a Master of Science in Food and Sustainable Agriculture. I am literally trained to help feed this nation. But job? Don't make me laugh. There is absolutely nothing.
This isn’t PR. This isn’t a smear campaign. These are the bleeding facts of my everyday life.
The worst part isn’t even the hardship; it’s the coldness of it all. No sympathy. No accountability. We are drowning, and everyone is too busy defending the rubbish that is destroying us.
I am exhausted. I am broken. I am completely done.