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Which crop suits your soil and rainfall near Bangalore

The most expensive farming mistake is planting the wrong crop for the land — years lost before the plot tells you. Matching crop to soil, water and rainfall up front avoids it. Here is a simple framework for the Bangalore-Andhra-Tamil Nadu border belt.

Start with three facts about your plot - Soil type: red loam, black cotton, or sandy/gravelly (dig a pit and check). - Water security: borewell yield through summer, not just monsoon. - Rainfall: this belt is semi-arid, roughly 700-900 mm a year, most of it June-November.

Match crop to conditions - Reliable water + red loam: mango, vegetables, mulberry, flowers thrive. - Limited water + good drainage: hardy tree crops — coconut, cashew, tamarind, sandalwood. - Black cotton soil: pulses, tur, cotton; avoid crops that hate waterlogging. - Sandy foothill soil near Thally: coconut and horticulture with drip do well.

Respect the rainfall pattern Because rain concentrates in the monsoon, storage and drip decide whether you farm year-round. A farm pond that banks monsoon runoff turns a seasonal plot into a productive one. Dryland crops that finish on stored soil moisture (millets, pulses) are the low-risk baseline.

The seasonal rhythm - June-September: main sowing, riding the monsoon. - October-December: second crop where water allows. - March-May: the stress test — only well-watered plots stay green.

Bottom line Don''t plant by fashion or what the neighbour grows — plant by what your soil, water and rainfall actually support. Confirm those three facts before you buy, and the crop choice becomes obvious. Our trust reports capture soil and summer-water notes on verified plots precisely so you can match crop to land with confidence.

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