Thứ Ba, 01/05/2018, 20:19 (GMT+7)
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Vietnamese PE teacher designs award-winning sugarcane farming machines

ABO/TTO - His inventions received acclaim for their effectiveness and simplicity and are expected to be granted trademarks

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Nguyen Van Nung poses with his first machine in Soc Trang Province, Vietnam. Photo: Tuoi Tre

Two machines designed by a Vietnamese elementary school teacher are being praised for their usefulness in easing the difficulty of cultivating sugarcane, earning their southern Vietnamese inventor much acclaim and several prizes.

Nguyen Van Nung, a physical education teacher at An Thanh 3A Elementary School in Soc Trang Province, is known for much more than teaching sports to children.

When he is not herding children around his school’s courtyard, he is busy inventing machines that turn soil and aid the care of sugarcane crops.

An important stage in cultivating sugarcane, he said, involves laying tilled soil over the roots of young plants to guarantee appropriate moisture.

Another is forming a small compact pile of dirt around the plants to ensure that more mature plants are able to stand firm in their upright position, particularly in areas like Soc Trang, where the abundance of soft, loose soil renders sugarcane prone to falling.

Spotting the need for machines to aid farmers during those two important steps, Nung has developed two different machines that he hopes will revolutionize sugarcane farming.

The concept is simple – as one of Nung’s machines moves between the lines of crops, it ploughs the land and throws the soil at the base of the sugarcane.

Surprisingly, Nung is the first to put the idea into action.

He recalled that his “eureka” moment for the machines first came in 2012 while he was manually digging the ground to care for the sugarcane in his own 20,000-square-meter field – which he uses to earn more money for his children’s education.

The soil-for-moisture machine was completed in late 2014, built from scrap iron he purchased from recycling facilities.

Less than two years later, the invention earned him the top prize in a 2016 provincial competition for technological creativity.

In early 2018, his second machine, which piles dirt around the base of mature plants to keep them upright, won him the highest award in the same provincial competition.

(Source: TTO)

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