Jagdish Devkota, who traveled to Kathmandu, said that he was going to take it to Koseli because the fruits are delicious. He said that he had bought the pants at Ghyampebazar and there was a demand to bring them from home as well.
During Dasain, people traveling through the BP highway have now found a market for wild fruits like koseli. The main markets on the highway, Gyampe, Nepalthok, Jhangajholi, Bohoretar, Mulkot, Khalte, Khurkot, Khaniyakhark, etc., have market for goats.
Antti is also known as Sarifa fruit. Anthi, which sells for up to 100 rupees per kg, is abundant in the forest this season. Farmers have also started commercial farming after the demand for goats has increased.
Jagdish Devkota, who traveled to Kathmandu, said that he is going to take Koseli because the fruit is delicious. He said that he had bought the pants at Ghyampebazar and there was a demand to bring them from home as well.
is not only in the market, the traders go to the place where the vehicles running on the highway are stopped. Both the farmers and traders are happy after they were sold in a rush, which was rotten until a decade ago.
'With no roads, dhakars had to be carried to the Sindhuli headquarter in Dokoma, at that time it was difficult to earn even 200 from one dhakar anti, so now we are excited to have a market at the local level', said Deepa Bohora Dahal, president of Sunkosi Rural Municipality.
He says that now there is no problem of selling after going to the forest and the farm to pick them. In Salinda, from the last week of August to October, farmers set up temporary shops on the side of the highway to sell goats. Antti is produced in Sunkosi Gadtir region.
![Koseli 'aunty' of commuters during Dasain [Photos]](https://assets-cdn-api.ekantipur.com/thumb.php?src=https://assets-cdn.ekantipur.com/uploads/source/news/kantipur/2025/miscellaneous/aati4-sindhuli-2792025053351-1000x0.jpg&w=1001&h=0)