Travel: Village Farming in Suriname’s Amazon Jungle	
  | 
| Penpe village, Suriname | 
You won’t find a lot of Big Ag in Suriname; in fact, you won’t find a lot of big 
anything
 there. With a population that barely eclipses the half-million 
mark—most living along the northern coastal area–the largest venture in 
South America’s smallest country is bauxite mining. And while there are 
some export food crops, primarily rice and bananas, start heading deeper
 into the Amazon Jungle and soon the scale of farming operations 
shrinks.
  | 
| Long bean | 
Approximately 30 percent of Suriname’s land area is protected by law.
 This leaves wiggle room for the village communities that line the 
rivers to clear plots for subsistence farming without doing extensive 
damage to the flora and, subsequently, fauna.
I took a trip down the Suriname River in March of this year and had 
the opportunity to visit one such village. Leaving from Atjoni, on the 
south end of Brokopondo Lake (and also the point where the road ends), 
the journey to the village of Penpe took four hours in a motorized 
dugout. I made the trip with a hired guide named Don, as it’s generally 
both unwise and somewhat impolite to navigate the river without the help
 of a local.
Once in Penpe, Don pointed out a variety of plants which were unique 
to the region and/or that I’d never seen before. One of my favorites was
 the 
Vigna unguiculata, subspecies 
sesquipedalis, or, the long bean.
 The pod grows to about 18 inches in length, and for cooking, tends to be chopped into sections and fried.
Staple crops, such as rice, cassava and peanuts, were plentiful, and 
for the things that can’t be grown, a village shop carries products that
 have been transported down the river. Inventory is limited, but then 
again, so is the size of the consumer base, as is highlighted by the 
little shopper in the photo.
  | 
| Ice cream bean | 
Unsurprisingly, the three Guianas (Guyana, Suriname and French 
Guyana) have a jungle’s worth of medicinal plants (just check out 
this list!).
 Two different kinds were presented for my inspection. First, one that 
looks similar to the edible long bean, but opens up to show a much 
different, fleshy interior and a seed that isn’t edible, according to 
Don. It’s called 
Inga edulis, or ice cream bean, and its 
leaves and seeds are actually used medicinally, against arthritis, 
rheumatism and diarrhea. And then there’s the porcupine-quill-covered 
pod. It’s called the 
Kan-kan udu, Apeiba Glabra (fam. 
Malvaceae). I’d hate to step on one barefoot.
  | 
| Ice cream bean pod | 
  | 
| KanKan Udu | 
  | 
| Awara fruit | 
On the fruitier side of life, I was able to see what the bright orange Awara (
Astrocaryum Vulgare)
 looked like before it was squished up into the tasty juice I’d consumed
 earlier that week in Paramaribo. Small in size, it packs a punch with 
regard to nutrients and uses. Awara fruit is an excellent source 
of carotenoids, as one might guess from its color, with a concentration 
of ß-carotene that is higher than carrots.
 It’s also an important
 source of vitamin B2 (riboflavin). Finally, the oil extracted from the 
pulp contains both saturated and unsaturated fatty acids and is used in 
skin moisturizers and hair products.
Don couldn’t shed much light on the regularity of pesticide and fertilizer use on a village farm plot like Penpe’s, but a 
United Nations (UN) story
 from 2011 alludes to organic farming as being relatively uncommon, and 
highlights a program that the UN had been funding for at least five 
years to promote organic farming in Suriname.
  | 
| Don in the rice field | 
The community of Penpe was chosen for our visit because it’s the home
 village of Chapeau Siesa, owner of the nearby Pingpe lodge at which I 
stayed, and it has an interesting history. Penpe was created by the 
Saramacca people, one of six Maroon tribes in Suriname. They came to the
 jungle in the 17
th and 18
th centuries as escaped 
slaves of African descent and started from scratch (the name Maroon 
comes from the Latin-American Spanish word 
cimarrón, meaning 
“feral animal, fugitive, runaway”). While they now have mobile phone 
usage and generator-powered electricity for four hours a day in Penpe, 
my guess is that some of the food crops in their jungle garden were 
growing long before their arrival.
I’d like to give special thanks to Don Majokko for his guiding skills, and to Linda and Rein at Tropilab for helping me get the correct names for some of my funky flora finds. 
Note: This article was originally published on 
GoodFoodWorld.com.
Source: http://laurazera.com/?p=2139
 
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