By Noah Lusaka and Bob Aston
Rahab Githumbi, an
innovative poultry farmer from Kahuruko in Sipili, Laikipia West Sub County was last week recognized by Food
Tank among 17 heroes from around the world, working for innovation,
sustainability, the environment, and local economy, and doing more than putting
food on our plates.
Her work shows that she
goes beyond cultivating the land, acting as employers, experimenters, keepers
of tradition, and contributors to healthy lifestyles. In her village, she
earned the nickname “Mama Turkey” because of her success in rearing chickens
and turkeys together.
Rahab Githumbi during the EAFIF in 2013 |
According to Food
Tank, farmers are not just food producers. They are businesspersons, they
are teachers in their communities, they are innovators and inventors, and they
are stewards of the land who deserve recognition for the ecosystem services
they provide that benefit everyone.
Food Tank features
innovative ideas that are already working on the ground. Such innovations need
more attention, more research, and funding to enhance replication.
Mama Turkey was motivated
in 2004 to start production and nurturing of turkeys during a farmer- to –
farmer exchange visit organized by the Arid
Lands Information Network (ALIN) through Ng’arua Maarifa Centre.
She is now an expert in
production and nurturing turkeys and chicken for the local market. She
distinctively discovered that the two birds have a great mutual benefit to each
other. She started by buying two poults one female and a male turkey to join
her backyard chickens.
During a three year
period, she had experimented a lot and made observations in managing a mix of
both chicken and turkeys focusing on brooding, hatching and tending of the
young chicks and their feeding patterns. She found that raising turkeys and
local chickens together increased her chicken egg-hatching rate from 70 to
nearly 100 percent because the female turkey brooded the eggs.
Due to her success in
this venture, ALIN profiled her as an innovator and nominated her to
participate at the Eastern Africa Farmer Innovation Fair (EAFIF) in 2013. The
innovation fair brought together farmer innovators from Kenya, Uganda, and
Tanzania.
The Promoting
Local Innovation (PROLINNOVA)- Kenya hosted the event which sought to raise
awareness and share information about how smallholder farmers are innovating,
to encourage innovation, to disseminate smallholder farmers innovations, to
identify and draw attention to more endogenous innovations that are currently
known as well as to influence policy to promote smallholder farmer innovation.
Food Tank believes that
as much as we need new thinking on global food system issues, we also need new
doing. Around the world, people and organizations have developed innovative,
on-the-ground solutions to the most pressing issues in food and agriculture.
Sometimes it is amazing
at some of the small things that people do not knowing that in the end they
will have a global impact and recognition. The recognition of Rahab Githumbi among
the 17 heroes globally just confirms the power of information sharing. Join ALIN in celebrating this noble
achievement by Mama Turkey.
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