25 August,2024 09:00 AM IST | Mumbai | Team SMD
As Ratnagiri sees heavy downpour, Dervan and Sawarde villages in Chiplun taluka is just the right amount of muck to make the Nangrani bull race interesting. This race had 150 bulls from the district participating. This kind of competition is to highlight the importance of agriculture. Some local artists showcase their work at the venue
Villages and towns in Ratnagiri were emptying in 2011. Most farming tools, including the nangar (plough) lay unused, the land untilled and the bulls were sans their rage.
It was during monsoon that the farmers in Tambedi village had a thought: that the fleeing youth needed something to keep practising farming. Hence, was born the Nangrani bull race. Sunil Gangrekar of the Baliraja Shetkari Sanghatana from Sangeshwar, Chiplun, has been associated with the festival since its inception. "At the time, farmers and their children were moving out of villages and heading out to cities including Mumbai. This was emptying out our district and our region, known as the Annapurna of Maharashtra. The bull race was put in place so that the farmer doesn't run out of the practice of driving the nangar and in turn, the soil is not left undisturbed for too long," he says.
The competition is divided into the professional and amateur categories. The former has a first prize of Rs 10,000, the second Rs 5,000, and the third Rs 2,500.
Farmers from across the region come in to show their prowess with the nangar and for many, it becomes a great way to catch up with friends and family. When we ask Gangrekar why the race has grown massively, held every year on August 21 and 22, he says, "It's because of the youth. The up-and-coming generation of farmers is interested in farming, they understand what it means to be able to grow and live off the land. The young farmers don't want to let go of that knowledge."