Increasing awareness on the advantages of herbal medicines by health-conscious people has led to a growing market for the products. Experts have turned their localised individual efforts into micro or small business enterprises and are looking for wider markets. |
This is evident from the participation of at least half a dozen small level herbal and ayurvedic medicine manufacturers in the 10-day-long district level industrial exhibition jointly organised by the District Industries Centre (DIC), Government of Karnataka, and the Mysore Chamber of Commerce & Industry (MCCI) in Mysore. |
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Apart from mofussil centres of Mysore district, the exhibition has attracted herbal medicine manufacturers even from far off Davanagere and a few other places. |
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After working under a couple of ayurvedic experts, Nerlige Gurusiddappa began manufacturing herbal medicines in a small way at his hometown of Nerlige in Davanagere taluk. He first sold his home-made preparations in plastic pouches. The very first exhibition at the Taralabalu Math fetched him Rs 13,000 revenue. |
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Thanks to the support and encouragement since then by the Taralabalu Swamiji, Gurusiddappa on Tuesday does an annual sale of around Rs 2 lakh. His herbal medicines come in packed and labelled bottles. |
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Gurusiddappa produces popular herbal powders for diabetes, asthma and skin problems and tablets for obesity and oil for dandruff, published a handbook on the merits of herbal medicines and brings out a magazine regularly. |
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Also from Davanagere, Chandre Gowda, a horticulturist-cum-herbal doctor, who has a herbal garden at his village in Neelanahalli, holds regular camps at Srirangapatna, Mandya and Shimoga also and gives treatment to patients. "Nature has gifted us with a large variety of medicines through plants. We have only neglected them," he says. |
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Another notable participant at the exhibition is a firm from Mysore. The Prakruthi Ayurvedic Foundation, a unit under the khadi and village industries, produces a variety of juices, which it claims can help overcome a number of ailments like constipation, indigestion, diabetes, cholesterol, bronchitis, skin problems and gastric problems. It also produces a variety of powders, oils, mixtures, pickles and other ayurvedic products. |
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It runs a clinic, conducts mobile sales at important centres during peak hours, and publishes a monthly Kannada magazine 'Swasthya Sanjeevini' which has a circulation of 2,000 copies. |
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"Our monthly turnover is Rs 2 lakh and in Mysore alone our business is between Rs 50,000 and Rs 60,000," says S Harish. Traditionally experienced and well-known Barkur ayurvedic pandits of Siddapura manufacture its products, numbering around 50. |
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