By Caroline Wambui
Central Kenya's Nturukuma
region is not kind to farmers - its erratic rainfall, desert vegetation and
drying riverbeds push most people into making a living through trade rather
than agriculture.
Jane Kairuthi Kathurima
toiled for years as an animal herder in the semi-arid conditions of Laikipia
County, but struggled to feed her family – until she discovered sack farming,
which has transformed her life and those of her children.
“Being in an environment
where food was scarce and lacking in nutrition, I had to find an alternative
way to survive,” said Kathurima, who is HIV-positive. "If I sat doing
nothing I would die, so I had no choice but to embrace farming in whatever
manner I could.”
Kathurima cuts kale from her sack farm. TRF/Caroline Wambui |
Sack farming involves
filling a series of bags with soil, manure, and pebbles for drainage, and
growing plants on the top and in holes in the sides. The sacks allow people to
grow food in places with limited access to arable land and water.
Two years after setting
up her sack farm, Kathurima now grows enough vegetables - including spinach,
lettuce, beet, and arugula - to feed her family and sell the surplus to the
community.
By bucking tradition and
learning a new way to cultivate crops in Nturukuma's harsh conditions, she has
become a successful, well-respected farmer. Now she is supporting other
food-insecure farmers by encouraging them to think differently.
The group behind sack
farming in Kenya is GROOTS (Grassroots Organisations Operating Together in
Sisterhood), a global network of women-led groups which help women solve
problems in their communities by changing the way they do things.
Rahab Ngima Githaiga,
vice chairman of one of the GROOTS member organisations, says sack farming has
empowered women and changed lives by improving family nutrition and enabling
children to go to school.
After Kathurima joined
Likii Home Base Care, a group that supports people with life-threatening
illnesses, she received training in becoming financially secure and eating
well. She was also introduced to a variety of farming methods.
Read the full story at Building
Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED)
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