Millionaire Farmer, 27, Credits Granny for Teaching Him Skills from Age 10

Millionaire Farmer, 27, Credits Granny for Teaching Him Skills from Age 10

27-year-old youth and 'agripreneur', Segun Adegoke, has explained how his grandmother made him a millionaire starting as a 10-year-old boy. Adegoke, who now owns a thriving agricultural firm called Baay Farms, based in Lagos, made this exclusively known to Briefly News' regional reporter, Adewunmi Adeoye.

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Segun, who grew up with his grandmother, described her as a farmer and a trader who took him through the rubrics of farming and trading.

Adegoke said he never expected the farming skills being infused into him by his grandmother would help his financial status.

According to him, those agricultural skills are now putting food on his table like never before and placing him before kings.

My exposure to farming at 10 by GrandMum makes me a Millionaire, 27-Year-Old Nigerian Graduate
Segun Adegoke was exposed to farming at the age of 10 by his grandmother.
Source: Original

He stated:

"I really want to appreciate and laud my grandmother who raised me while I was growing up, infusing the skills of farming into me as a young lad at 10 years old. My grandmother was a resourceful and hardworking farmer and a trader who was superb in teaching the techniques of farming in order to achieve the highest yield.

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“Growing up, she was always insisting I go to the farm with her in order to help with some things but I was always seeing it as punishment and unnecessary because of my thought that I should be with my friends playing football and the likes.
“I thought all these skills would be wasted not until I started growing up to becoming a youth that it started putting foods on my table and consequently making me a millionaire even at age 27."

On job situation and agriculture as a viable alternative for graduates

Talking about the job situation, Adegoke enjoined his fellow youths to jettison white-collar jobs and research through farm produce, focus on them, invest and expect the unbelievable financial breakthrough in their lives even as everything seems tight due to the economic recession.

Segun explained that food will forever be consumed regardless of the state of the economy, which is the beauty of agriculture.

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“I would therefore like to enjoin my fellow Nigerian youths that we should stop putting all our hopes in one basket by always wanting to wear a shirt and a tie but vigorously and purposefully look at Farming as it is long term turning point in a man’s life.
“This is because human beings cannot stop eating else we want to die. Even if the country enters recession, agriculture will still be in full force.”

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In a related story, Briefly News reported that in recent times, there seems to be an unorganised shift among Nigerian youths towards the occupation of farming. Samuel Ogbole engages in the cultivation business with an uncommon technique.

The young farmer, according to @NigeriaStories does his own farming in the air as against the norm of cultivating it on the earth's soil.

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Source: Briefly News

Authors:
Kelly Lippke avatar

Kelly Lippke (Senior Editor) Kelly Lippke is a copy editor/proofreader who started her career at the Northern-Natal Courier with a BA in Communication Science/Psychology (Unisa, 2007). Kelly has worked for several Caxton publications, including the Highway Mail and Northglen News. Kelly’s unique editing perspective stems from an additional major in Linguistics. Kelly joined Briefly News in 2018 and she has 14 years of experience. Kelly has also passed a set of trainings by Google News Initiative. You can reach her at kelly.lippke@briefly.co.za.

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