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HOMESTEAD GARDENING

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Homestead gardening has always been a common feature in Lesotho. So what is new ... LRAP helped to bring awareness of the links between gardening and HIV/AIDS. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HOMESTEAD GARDENING


1
HOMESTEAD GARDENING
  • What is new in LRAP?
  • RSDA on behalf of local NGOs

2
The story from local NGOs
  • Rural Self-help Development Association (RSDA)
  • Machobane Agricultural Foundation (MADF)
  • GROW
  • Lesotho Council of NGOs (LCN)
  • Lesotho National Volunteers Commission (LNVC)
  • Catholic Relief Services (CRS)
  • Teba Development

3
What is new in LRAP?
  • Homestead gardening has always been a common
    feature in Lesotho. So what is new in LRAPs
    homestead gardening?
  • LRAP has helped to bring together knowledge,
    experience and good practice on improved
    homestead gardening in Lesotho
  • LRAP helped to bring awareness of the links
    between gardening and HIV/AIDS. The importance
    of vegetables and herbs in providing
    micro-nutrients to boost the immune system in the
    context of HIV and AIDS.
  • LRAP has improved understanding of living
    positively. This has contributed to both local
    NGOs and farming households thinking practically
    about how to deal with the epidemic working
    with individual households and new community
    groups eg support groups, OVC gardens etc
  • In summary LRAP has brought a new meaning to food
    gardens.

4
The technologies promoted included
  • Plot construction - raised plots, keyhole
    gardens, double digging, peace gardens.
    Different garden designs for different people
  • Improving soil fertility - kraal manure, ash,
    mulching. Low external input.
  • Cropping practices Integrated pest control
    methods. Succession planting, crop diversity,
    Machobane farming system. All to promote a range
    of foods available at all times.

5
Key-hole garden
Seen from the top it looks like a key-hole
6
Double digging
7
Technologies promoted cont.
  • Inputs - better quality seeds more available
    (seed multiplication, seed banks, re-packaging
    seeds into smaller, more affordable packets, seed
    distributors linked to trading stores)
  • Water harvesting and conservation homestead
    dams, roof water tanks, drip irrigation kits,
    peace gardens
  • Small livestock eggs and poultry to complement
    nutritional value of vegetables and for income
  • Marketing and food preservation canning,
    drying, linking to local markets

8
NGO services offered to the gardening households
  • Training
  • Inputs such as seeds, water harvesting materials,
    drip irrigation kits and chickens. (but being
    careful about subsidies to ensure sustainability
    of the programme).
  • On-going mentoring and technical advice
  • Linking households to the UES and longer term
    government support
  • Advisory services on marketing.

9
The development tools used
  • The program emphasised working hand in hand with
    the beneficiary households to bring about changes
    required to assure food and nutrition security.
  • The tools such as wealth ranking and action
    learning became very powerful for identifying
    vulnerable households and motivating households
    to move from lower poverty ranking to the next
    one and to grow.
  • LRAP was not only about working with existing
    innovations but it was about also creating new
    learning.
  • The farming households and NGOs were able to
    socialize useful and good practices among
    themselves and ourselves respectively.
  • Documenting lessons learnt were documented and
    produced in a gardening training materials.

10
Lessons Learnt
  • Techniques promoted are affordable as they use
    readily available natural resources e.g. manure,
    bones, farm and kitchen waste, ash, stones, aloe,
    grass etc.
  • Gardening can improved nutrition status of ill
    family members through variety vegetables, herbs,
    eggs and meat.
  • Investment costs are very small. One may start
    with R5.00, but lead in increased income (R30.00)
    through gardening.
  • Increased participation of men and children in
    gardening (traditionally, gardens are womens
    domain)
  • Sustainable people now have the skills to
    maintain their gardens. Some community gardens
    and peer to peer learning within the community to
    improve gardening techniques

11
Challenges
  • How to retain and work hand in hand with the
    existing trained gardeners so that they may give
    a hand in training, motivating and mentoring more
    households.
  • Market disposal for surplus. The strength of
    homestead gardening is in the numbers of
    participating households. The challenge is how to
    help them organize so that can bargain and market
    collectively.
  • The same applies for bulk buying of seed and
    seedlings.
  • Climate change and its impact on water shortage,
    planting calendar, pest management are factors
    which will remain a challenge until the farming
    households know how to manage them.

12
Policy recommendations
  • Ecological production system as an economic
    option for Lesotho
  • Mass communications to support adaptive research
    and dissemination of innovations
  • Fabrication and transfer of appropriate
    technologies
  • Seed policy
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