Horticulture Program Image

Horticulture Program

 
 
Agriculture students at a farm field trip
Agriculture students at a farm field trip
 
According to Liberty Hyde Bailey, an American scholar who can be considered as one of the Fathers of Horticultural Science, “Horticulture is the growing of flowers, fruits and vegetables and of plants for ornament and fancy”. Horticultural science is the only plant science that incorporates both the science and aesthetics of plants. It is the science and art of producing edible fruits, vegetables, flowers, herbs, and ornamental plants, improving, and commercializing them. Horticulture impacts our lives on a daily basis by providing nutritious fruits and vegetables, offering visual enjoyment, and promoting recreational activities (ashs.org). The human body needs vitamins, proteins, mineral and also carbohydrates in their meal or diet and the consumption of fruits and vegetables meet this need. 
 
The Horticulture sector is an important entity which provides products for food and foreign exchange and therefore, a significant source of income. Plants are used as medicine to treat or cure diseases and the consumption of green vegetables and fresh fruits, and juices also prevent us from different chronic or acute disease. It is more profitable since the average income per unit area is more in horticultural crops than agricultural crops. Through the horticulture sector, employment is also generated in doing different field operations like fruit picking, harvesting, grading, packing, and selling. Farmers growing high-value crops, such as fruits, vegetables, flowers, or herbs, consistently earn more than those growing other commodities. Horticulture can be an engine for agricultural and economic diversification. The importance of horticulture in improving the productivity of land, creating employment, improving economic conditions of the farmers and entrepreneurs, enhancing exports and, above all, providing nutritional security to people, is now widely acknowledged.