Web 3 event planner and Host| Agriculture Engineer OnChain| Sustainable smart farming on-chain finance | Real yields, real transparency

Joined July 2014
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đŸŒ± I’ve watched seeds turn into harvest and ideas bring people together into communities. You might ask? how does a farmer end up co-hosting Web3 Ideathons in Nigerian universities? đŸ€” That journey took me from farm fields to Web3 and eventually to co-hosting @MultiversX
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The Web3 Farmer retweeted
VeryDarkMan sends a very strong message to the spokesperson to President Tinubu, Mr Bayo OnanugađŸ™†đŸŒâ€â™‚ïž
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Bro I couldn't hold the tears 😭
Bro the joy wey Ronaldo don gimme for this life nobody don ever give me before.
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31 years on planet Earth, Many good and sweet memories, so also the worst. But I'm grateful for the life he gave me. A true solider on the path to greatness and freedom. If you see my post, say me a word of prayer. @boniface_jrn and @Zlatan_Ibile una they motivate me lately.
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Capacity and influence
This should be one of the most beautiful story of Alhaji Aliko Dangote you will never hear on the Internet told by Dr Akin Adesina. please listen and share with others
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I have never understood failure only twice in my life. First was in my 200lvl in school. I carried over engineering mathematics due to sickness, u started but couldn't finish the exam after answering one question I had to submit. I wrote a letter but still failed it. The second was in business. Every one of my businesses failed in 2025, and now I understand what it meant to be strong in the face of adversity. I now understand why men commit suicide or have heart attacks, not pain, as when you are the hope of your family, and now Daddy is sick and simple BP drugs you can't buy to keep him alive. I told myself yesterday that when I am done with this phase, most especially paying my debts, I will not let the world rest. My life and story will go around the world. It is never easy starting all over again. It comes with pain. There are days you just wish to die because of how helpless you have become. @john322226 and @LobstarWilde
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How do I explain that after spending millions, we couldn't get even one grain. agriculture can only make progress in Nigeria and Africa when we focus on climate and smart agriculture. The last picture is me during the farming process, and behind was the farm.
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Labor was hell,villagers looked at me with hatred and kept saying “this one, no go work.” Still, I pushed. Spent almost ₩1 million on labor. Slept on the farm many nights. Worked till sunrise some days. Slowly, the place started changing. More people joined in the farming
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One morning, I heard there was a herdsmen-farmer clash, and my farm was destroyed I called my contact, in the community. He told me the truth: the same people I trusted, including the friend who brought me there, had already harvested everything. I got zero bags of rice.
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The Web3 Farmer retweeted
Replying to @AAdeleke_01
It's no doubt you have put in your best for the Good people of Osun state in return of that favour we are going to vote for your re-election come August 15 ACCORDingly IMOLE 2.0👍
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The Web3 Farmer retweeted
Another proud moment. My nephew @davido putting the family, our heritage and state on the global map.

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The sad reality of agricultural investment in Nigeria
The Farm That Promised 40% Profit — But Harvested Handcuffs Instead. Yesterday, I remembered a story that still feels
 a bit uncomfortable to tell. Not because it’s rare. But because it’s too common. It started like most “sweet” opportunities do. A well-dressed man walks into a small farmers’ meeting. Clean shoes. Big grammar. Confidence. > “You don’t need to farm
 just invest.” He said their company had large farms in the North. Rice. Maize. Even soybeans. All structured. All “verified.” Then he dropped the hook: > “40% return in 90 days.” Hmm. Some people smiled. Some people doubted. But many
 calculated quietly. Because let’s be honest— Farming is hard. Stressful. Unpredictable. So the idea of earning like a farmer without touching soil? That thing is tempting. Musa was there. Not a rich man. Just someone who had saved money from years of small trading. He didn’t rush. He asked questions. “Where is the farm?” “Can we visit?” “What are the risks?” The man answered everything smoothly. Too smoothly. A week later, Musa invested. Not everything
 but enough to matter. And he wasn’t alone Teachers, civil servants, even a few real farmers joined. Because the story made sense: “Food is always in demand” “We are solving food scarcity” “You are helping Nigeria grow” It didn’t sound like a scam. It sounded like impact. First 30 days? Updates were flowing. Pictures of green fields. Videos of workers harvesting. Voice notes from “farm managers.” Everything looked alive. People relaxed. Some even added more money. By day 60
 Silence started creeping in. Messages became slower. Calls weren’t answered quickly anymore. Excuses started showing face: “Transport issues” “Security challenges" “Market delay” Still
 people held on. Because hope is stubborn. Day 90 cam No payment. Just one message: > “We are restructuring. Your funds are safe.” That sentence
 eh. That’s when panic entered the room. Two weeks later, the office was empty. Phones switched off. Website gone. And the farm? Nobody could locate it. Musa didn’t shout. He just sat quietly. Because the money he invested wasn’t just money. It was years of effort. Discipline. Sacrifice. Gone. Months later
 News broke. The “CEO” and a few staff were arrested. Not for failed farming. But for something older than agriculture itself: Greed dressed as opportunity. Here’s the part many people don’t like to hear: The problem wasn’t agriculture. The problem was outsourcing understanding. Real farming doesn’t promise 40% in 90 days. Real farming looks like: Uncertain weather Rising input costs Market fluctuations Patience Sometimes profit comes. Sometimes lessons come first. But scams? Scams are always clean. Simple. Certain. No dirt. No risk. No stress. Just numbers. If you’re building in agriculture—or planning to invest—remember this: > If you don’t understand how the farm makes money
 You are not investing. You are donating to uncertainty. Musa started again. This time, small. He partnered with a real farmer. Visited the farm. Understood the process. No 40% promise. But something better: Control. Clarity. And peace of mind. Not every green field is a farm. Some are just well-designed stories. Be careful what you plant your money into.
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This season has been one of the most demanding I’ve experienced in agriculture and business. Rain windows are tight, input decisions are unforgiving, and timing is everything. One delayed action can affect an entire cycle. It’s in moments like this that you truly understand that agriculture is not guesswork it’s experience, judgment, and learning from those who have walked the path before. Many of the delays and mistakes farmers struggle with are not from lack of effort but from lack of guidance at critical moments. This season has reminded me why mentorship matters in agriculture, especially from leaders who have built systems that work at scale. Still learning. Still building. Still committed to feeding the nation. @asr_rabiu #AgricultureNG #FarmingSeason #FoodSecurity
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85 years old and standing still tall for the truth of the scripture. #DLER2026
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The Web3 Farmer retweeted
Interested in ginger farming as a business? Like & repost
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As Good Friday approaches, farming reminds me of one quiet truth: growth often comes through sacrifice and patience. Seeds are buried before they rise. Work is done long before results appear. In agriculture, just like in life, tomorrow’s harvest is shaped by today’s discipline and faith. @realFemiOtedola @jerrytobi @jon_d_doe #GoodFriday #AgricultureNG #Reflection
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One silent factor affecting farm productivity is farmers’ health. When farmers are unwell, planting is delayed, supervision weakens, and small problems grow into big losses. Agriculture depends heavily on physical strength and mental focus, yet health is often treated as secondary. Supporting farmers’ health is not welfare, it is an investment in productivity and food security. @NaijaFarmers @melifew213 #AgricultureNG #FarmersHealth #FoodSecurity
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Traceability is not paperwork,it’s visibility. When farmers are visible, quality improves, trust increases, and value chains work better. This is where large agribusinesses can meaningfully support smallholder farmers. @asr_rabiu #AgricultureNG #Traceability #FoodSystems
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One lesson farming teaches quickly is that labour without supervision is expensive. Many farm losses don’t come from weather or pests, but from poor timing, weak supervision, and small tasks done late or incorrectly. A single missed weeding window or delayed application can affect yield for the rest of the season. Farming rewards attention to detail more than effort alone. These daily realities continue to shape how I think about running farms sustainably. Learning from farmers and entrepreneurs who value discipline and consistency, including @akinwale_cfi
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