MyFarmer, TCGL Agro Industries Pvt. Ltd.

Best Quality

Cost effective price

Self-Sustainable Villages

Products directly from farmer community and benefit them to empower their lives

My Farmer, TCGL is Farmers Enterprise for the Farmers and the Consumers

TCGL is engaged with selected innovative farmer groups, who are growing non-poisonous,chemical free, natural, organic farming. In interest of our customers, we buy healthy products only from selected and trust worthy farmers, no comprise on adulteration and quality of goods.

MyFarmer™ is a Brand of TCGL Agro Industries Private Limited (TCGL) operating at Pune (India).It’s an online grocery e-business shopping portal. TCGL is formed to provide a platform to serve healthy, locally grown 100% Pure, Fresh, Natural, Organic and Best Quality Agriculture products. Our product include variety of grains, millet, pluses, fruits and vegetables, physically pressed pure edible oils etc.

TCGL is engaged with selected innovative farmer groups, who are growing non-poisonous, natural, and organic or zero budget farming for healthier society. In interest of our customers, we buy healthy products only from selected and trustworthy farmers; no comprise quality, zero tolerance on adulteration.

TCGL has the state of the art storage facilities to retain freshness, nutrient value and aroma. Our qualified, self-motivated trained team ensures stringent quality checks, timely delivery of unprocessed, unpolished products and ensure timely support to valued consumers and farmers.

Our objective is to leverage latest technologies to connect consumers and farmers, understand customer choices and demand;search best quality fresh genuine farm products from selected farmers, perform quality checks and delivery directly to the consumers.

Our goal is to establish trust between consumer and farmer, increase direct-to-consumer sale for healthier and blissful society.MyFarmer will be happy to seek feedback for continuous service improvements, and introduce wide range of fresh genuine products.

farmer-icon

Benefits of Customers

  • 100% natural, best quality farm produce at the reasonable price.
  • Unprocessed, unpolished, adulteration free, non-poisonous, pesticide free, chemical free.
  • Fresh farm produce directly from selected farmers to your doorstep.
  • No chain of agents or no middle men for benefit of producers and consumers.
  • Transparent transactions, order best quality products from website.
  • Online booking, on demand home delivery, Cash on delivery payment services.
  • Call center facility will be available soon.
  • Register demand in advance of seasonal products, requirements.
  • Premium quality farm products guaranteed for gourmet customers.
  • Information and health advise by our expert dieticians.
  • Homemade, authentic products available on demand
Read More
collection-bg
farmer-icon

Benefits of Farmers

  • Reasonable and fair price for farmer products, improve yield and profitability.
  • Encourage farmers to adopt best practices in natural, organic and zero budget farming.
  • Agriculture expert's advice, guidance and training.
  • Arrange knowledge sessions on importance of grading and scientifically storage of goods, retain quality and freshness.
  • Provide platform for direct-to-consumer sale of fresh farm quality products.
  • Extend support for genuine seeds, organic fertilizers, farm equipment at reasonable prices.
  • Increase awareness of soil and water testing, access to information to improve productivity and yield.
  • Empower women farmers, women self-help group (MahilaBachat Gat) through sale of their products
Read More
collection-bg
choose-organic-section

Always

Choose

MyFarmer

choose-organic-01

Original

Organic

choose-organic-02

Always

Fresh

choose-organic-03

No

Chemicals

choose-organic-04

Healthy

Family

100persent
100persent
Get what you want

100% organic

Fruits, Vegetables & Lot More

We started MyFarmer as to serve consumer at cost effective price with best quality products directly from farmer community and benefit them to empower their lives.

100persent
100persent
Get what you want

100% original

Fruits, Vegetables & Lot More

We started MyFarmer as to serve consumer at cost effective price with best quality products directly from farmer community and benefit them to empower their lives.

support-icon
Best Support
Support 24/7
100persent-icon
100% Organic
Lab Tested
shipping-icon
Fast Shipping
Best Service
pure-organic-sep-img

Our Products

  • All
  • Vegetables
  • Fruit
  • Spices
  • Pulses (Dal)
  • Grain
  • Dry fruits
  • Oil
  • Jaggery
  • Grocery
  • Seasonable
French Beans श्रावण घेवडा
लाल भोपळा
Tomato Hybrid टोमॅटो हाय
Sweet Potato रताळी
Carrot गाजर
Carrot गाजर
80.00/KG
Tomato टोमॅटो देशी
Ghevada घेवडा
Cucumber काकडी पांढरी
Kohala कोहळा
Chavali चवळी शेंग
Ratnagiri Hapus A1 Quality Large Size
Ratnagiri Hapus A1 Quality Large Size
2000.00/Box 2 Dozen
Ratnagiri Hapus A1 Quality Medium Size
Ratnagiri Hapus A1 Quality Medium Size
2000.00/Box 2.5 Dozen
Custerd Apple सीताफळ
कच्चा पपया
Water melon कलिंगड
Sapotaचिकु
Sapotaचिकु
100.00/KG
Guava पेरू
Guava पेरू
160.00/GM
Banana देशी केळी
Papaya पपई
Papaya पपई
70.00/KG
Rock Salt सैंधव मीठ
Natural Sugar OH Brown
Natural Sugar OH Brown
90.00/KG
तूर डाळ बिगर पॉलीश
Moth  dal or Mataki Dal मटकी डाळ
Masoor Dal unpolished  मसूरदाळ
Chana Or Gavaran Harbara Gram हरबरा
भुईमूग
भुईमूग
120.00/KG
गावरान तीळ 250 ग्रॅम
Chana flour चना बेसनपीठ
Rajma राजमा  गावरान
Hirve moog हिरवे मूग
Black Raisins ब्लॅक मनुका 500 gm
Sugar Cane Syrup काकवी
Oil Safflower Wooden Churner
Oil Safflower Wooden Churner
320.00/Liter
Jaggery  Natural Black
Jaggery Natural Black
120.00/Piece
Red Poha
Red Poha
100.00/KG
Poha 1 kg
Poha 1 kg
60.00/KG
Soap साबण
Soap साबण
40.00/Piece
Pickle  लोणचे
Pickle लोणचे
120.00/Piece
Lemon Pickle लिंबु लोणचे
Mango Pickle आंब्याचे लोणचे
Sandage सांडगे
Shevai शेवई
Shevai शेवई
180.00/KG
Kurdai कुरडई
Kurdai कुरडई
150.00/Piece
healty-deal-sep

Healthy Deals

Get up to 100% Healthy & fresh products .

TCGL formed to provide platform to serve healthy, locally grown 100% Pure, Fresh, Natural, Organic and Best Quality Agriculture produce grocery items. Product include grains, millet, pluses, fruits and vegetables, physically pressed pure edible oils etc

Our Services

Best Services at Your Home

features
Always Fresh
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.
features
Fruit Diets
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.
features
Best Quality
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.
features
Eat Smart
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.
features
Healthy Diets
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.
features
MyFarmer Product
Compellingly optimize scalable niche markets for error-free deliverables. Compellingly impact seamless infrastructures models.

Our Partners

We Are Doing Best

farmers

MahaKisaan

Maha Kisaan Agro Publishers Pvt Ltd registered on 12 Sept 2011 for benefit of farmers in various ways. Providing real-time information of commodity market rates, weather forecast

farmers

Hindustan Grid Electricals

Hindustan Grid Electrical is leader and specialized electrical consultancy, end to end planning, design and implementation and maintenance support.

farmers

Technoplanet

Driven by values and founded on strong business ethics, TechnoPlanet has a unique space among hundreds of so-called Professional Web Development and Web Design Companies.

farmers

ईश्वरी प्रकाशन

'सकाळ'चे उपसंपादक संतोष धायबर यांनी पुणे जिल्ह्यातील शिरूर तालुक्याचे www.shirurtaluka.com संकेतस्थळाची निर्मिती केली आहे.

Latest News

Keep Up To Date With Us

news
Food Corporation of India : The road ahead
30 November 2017

The Shanta Kumar Committee on restructuring FCI has suggested the reach of the National Food Security Act be curtailed to 40 per cent of the population The National Democratic Alliance government set up the high-level Shanta Kumar Committee to restructure and reform the state-owned Food Corporation of India. Instead, the panel ended up providing a road map to restructure the entire farming and food security policy of the government. In doing so, the panel has re-ignited the debate that ran like a fire in a pine forest through the entire second tenure of the United Progressive Alliance government: should the National Food Security Act be as minimalistic as possible or should it be an expansive reform of the existing public distribution system? The Shanta Kumar Committee has made many recommendations on changing what FCI does and how it does it. But it is the big-ticket recommendations on food security that stretch the terms of reference given to the panel to the limits. The panel suggests that in the medium term, the country should move towards cash transfers instead of distributing subsidised grain through FCI. This would also mean that the government's role of buying grain from the farmers at minimum support price will be substantially reduced. In the short run, the panel has suggested that the National Food Security Act be curtailed. Instead of providing subsidised grain to at least 67 per cent of the population across the country, the law should provide 7 kg of grain per person (instead of 5 kg) at a much lower subsidy to a maximum of 40 per cent of the population. Instead of rice being sold at Rs 3 per kg and wheat at Rs 2 per kg, the committee has recommended that this price should be half of the minimum support price provided to farmers - that works out to a three-to-four time increase in the price of grain provided to the poor. The panel headed by senior Bharatiya Janata Party leader Shanta Kumar has moved substantially away from the promises the party made in its 2014 election manifesto as well as its position on the floor of Parliament when the National Food Security Bill was debated. BJP said in its manifesto that " it has always held that 'universal food security' is integral to national security. BJP will take steps to ensure that the benefits of the scheme reach the common man and that the right to food does not remain an Act on paper or political rhetoric." Several BJP Members of Parliament, including Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, had earlier berated the bill for spreading the social security net to fewer people than what was required. Some had even asked for universalisation of the scheme along the lines the Right to Food campaign (closely associated with some of the National Advisory Council members) had advocated. Even Prime Minister Narendra Modi, then the BJP chief minister of Gujarat, had hit out at the National Food Security Act for being less beneficial than being marketed by the UPA government. Before the Bill was passed, he had said, "The method of selecting beneficiaries has been that you set the criteria, do a survey and then identify who the deserving families are for the scheme. Your food security Bill is such that you have already decided a cap on the number of the beneficiaries. And now you are forcing this cap on the states and telling them to find families who fit into this upper limit. This reverse sequence will never let this scheme become a success." He was then referring to the UPA government's decision to provide subsidy under the National Food Security Act to 67 per cent of the population. The states were left to provide subsidy to any extra beneficiaries they chose to bring under the ambit of the Bill. Taking a U-turn The Shanta Kumar Committee has recommended just the reverse of what Modi as Gujarat chief minister had said. It too has advised an artificial cap imposed by the Centre and suggested the number of beneficiaries be restricted to below 40 per cent of the country's population. In fact, the Right to Food campaign has claimed the panel's recommendations, if accepted, would lead to the NDA government imposing a de-facto poverty line of Rs 29.2 per day per person of expenditure in rural India to determine the limit on number of beneficiaries of the scheme, crimping the scope of the Food Security Act. In other words, their calculations based on the latest National Sample Survey data, suggest that any individual spending more than Rs 29.2 per day in rural India and Rs 46.75 per day in urban India would not be eligible for benefits under the Food Security Act. Shanta Kumar has justified his change of stance, claiming BJP had just supported it because Parliamentary elections were around the corner. Media reports have quoted Kumar as saying, "When the Act came in Parliament, many thought 67 per cent coverage was quite high. But you know the political situation ahead of the elections. None of the political parties would have let the Act cover 67 per cent of population if the elections were not around that time...The opposition would have got a point against us. We knew our government was coming and we would correct it." In effect, Shanta Kumar has suggested that BJP's postures and positions during elections are set to be different than its intent once it's in saddle at the Centre. But the Union government itself has not said so or made any comment on how it views the report. What it has done is delay the implementation of the food security law through questionable executive orders even as the Socio-Economic Caste Census runs behind schedule by several years now. The survey was to be the new basis for identifying the poor beneficiaries. Without it, the existing lists of beneficiaries dating back more than a decade remain the base on which the new beneficiaries are added. The Right to Food campaign, the Left parties and the Congress see the Shanta Kumar report as a Trojan Horse set up to attack the food security law rather than bring about mere reforms in FCI. The imprint of economist Ashok Gulati, member on the Shanta Kumar panel, is hard to miss in the report. In the UPA regime as the head of the Commission for Agricultural Costs and Prices, which recommends the minimum support price for farmers, Gulati had expressed the same views through various official discussion papers. At that time, Gulati had fallen on the side of the divide that lost the battle as the Congress party went ahead with the National Food Security Act. Whether Shanta Kumar's report and Gulati's vision find traction this time in the government will depend on how differently Modi acts as prime minister compared to the ideas he professed on food security as the chief minister of Gujrat.

Read More
news
A Price Stabilisation Fund to help farmers in distress
30 November 2017

Since horticultural produce do not have an MSP, this fund can be used to create linkages and infrastructure Prices of horticultural commodities witness a wide. fluctuation in India. There have been instances in the recent past when prices escalated and the produce became unaffordable for consumers especially in the case of vegetables such as onion, potato and tomato. There have also been cases where farmers could not sell their produce in the mandi and preferred to dump their produce on highways due to low prices. To overcome these problems, the Centre’s recent move to introduce a Price Stabilisation Fund would give a fillip to horticultural production as well as market stabilisation. Price volatility It has been a common practice among Indian farmers to move towards a particular crop which fetches higher price in the market during the sowing season. This leads to oversupply in the market and low prices. In addition, other factors such as poor monsoon, dearth of inputs and technology, policies influencing decision related to area allocation, etc., lead to fluctuation in production and finally to volatile prices. Availability of stocks, volatility in international prices, functionality of market, transaction cost and government policies also have an influence on the price. Similar attempt was made in 2003 by the Ministry of Commerce for tea, coffee, rubber and tobacco. If the domestic price falls below 20 per cent of the moving average price, then, the year is considered as one of distress. Other initiatives The fund primarily focuses on supporting farmers during hard times arising due to excessive fall in the domestic price. The scheme is not found to be very attractive in the present structure. Other similar initiatives such as Revolving Fund Scheme of the Karnataka government and the Market Intervention Scheme of Nafed too are yet to gain popularity. Initiatives such as deficiency payment and income stabilisation have also been used worldwide effectively. Deficiency payment is the difference between a target price and the domestic market price, paid by the government to farmers. Under income stabilisation, there is provision of compensation relating to the level of income decline in a particular year relative to the reference level. In addition, producers of most of the foodgrains, oilseeds and fibre crops are protected against market failure through procurement under the minimum support price announced by the Government. Policy implications The Government may have three types of agricultural policies to influence price behaviour, namely production policies (influencing production), trade policies (export/import policy influences domestic supplies) and direct price stabilisation policies such as buffer stocks, emergency reserves, price controls, and prohibition of private trade. Out of the various public interventions, only creation of stocks under direct price stabilisation policies has shown some result. For horticultural commodities, an MSP-like policymay not be very effective as these are highly perishable. Also, while agricultural commodities procured by government are distributed to consumers under the Public Distribution System, there is no such provision for horticultural commodities. However, utilising price stabilisation fund, the government may participate in the market of perishable commodities by developing backward and forward linkages and proper infrastructure provisions for procurement and distribution. The provision for procurement through farmer producer organisations (FPOs) may also prove to be a remarkable move as this will create competitive advantage and boost infrastructure. At the same time, it should also be considered that these FPOs are private companies and while to benefit the farmers, State governments may facilitate them in procuring, during period of scarcity (or high market price), it may not force these organisations to sell at a lower price toconsumers. Under such circumstances, a component of Price Stabilisation Fund should be maintained aiming at avoiding interference to the autonomy of FPOs as well as consumer welfare. The fund will be granted to FPOs releasing their stock at a lower price (stipulated by government or competent authority) than the market price with the aim of stabilising prices. Provisions such as aid for private storage may also be introduced to promote storage of the commodity (by farmers and FPOs during period of low prices) which later can be sold at higherprices. While finalising and floating the scheme, thought must be given to have an approach considering the entire value chain of the commodities and not a single stakeholder.

Read More