Davao City is casting a wide net to secure its regional food supply, and local land-based farmers are reaping the rewards this May. As part of the annual Farmers and Fisherfolks Month celebration, the Davao City Agriculturists Office (CAgrO) launched a specialized freshwater aquaculture masterclass in the Toril District. This high-fidelity training initiative aims to combat food insecurity by converting traditional land-crop farmers into self-sufficient fish pond operators. With the local government aggressively expanding its footprint in sustainable food production, the seminar provided rural communities with the technical blueprint required to establish resilient, highly profitable aquatic ventures right in their backyards.
The Blueprint for High-Yield Pond Construction
According to CAgrO Agricultural Technologist Joanafe L. Ondoy, the intensive seminar moved far beyond basic farming concepts to deliver highly technical, hands-on instructions regarding freshwater ecosystems. Participants were trained in precision site selection and optimized fish pond design, ensuring that new aquaculture structures can withstand the changing climate patterns of 2026. Experts taught the class the proper methods for soil testing, water quality monitoring, and implementing strict biological controls to minimize disease outbreaks. By focusing heavily on the engineering behind the ponds, the city ensures that local operators can prevent common mistakes like premature bank erosion or catastrophic water leakage that frequently ruin beginner setups.
Fueling Growth with Massive Fingerling Dispersals
The technical training serves as the educational backbone for an ambitious, city-wide resource rollout already underway across various agricultural sectors. To ensure the newly trained aquafarmers can immediately apply their knowledge, the City Government of Davao has already distributed 251,000 tilapia fingerlings and 25,000 hito (catfish) fingerlings as of May 2026. This massive dispersal is supplied directly by the city's specialized hatcheries, which aim to systematically lower retail fish prices across local public markets. Farmers can seamlessly request these free fingerlings directly through their respective barangay offices, which handle the local logistics to guarantee the juveniles arrive healthy and ready for stocking.
Empowering the Community Through Shared Knowledge
For independent farm managers like Arnel B. Labor, the interactive program provided an immediate answer to complex engineering and nutrition questions that previously hindered local expansion. Labor noted that the deep dive into proper fish nutrition and pond preparation completely transformed his approach, giving him the confidence to scale up his operations and share the technical processes with his neighbors. This grass-roots knowledge sharing is precisely what CAgrO hopes to stimulate as they build an interconnected network of micro-aquafarmers across the Davao Region. By fostering a community that values data-driven agricultural methods, Davao City is successfully turning its inland districts into vibrant, sustainable pillars of marine-alternative food production.









