Saturday, March 1, 2014

Loss of city eatery led to fingerlings business

Joyce Makaka feeds fish at her ponds in Lurambi, Kakamega County. She supplies fingerlings to fish farmers in Kakamega, Bungoma, Busia and Vihiga counties. Isaac Walle/Nation 
By BENSON WAMBUGU
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Four years ago, Joyce Makaka was running a popular eatery at Shelter Afrique Centre in Nairobi. She would take home more than Sh50,000 a month after deducting a similar amount for savings.
Then one morning she woke up to a rude shock when she was told that her lease for the premises would not be renewed.

She was devastated and confused. She packed her bags and left for her rural home in Eshisiru on the Kakamega-Mumias road to engage in fish farming.
The former Post Bank employee’s decision puzzled her husband, a pilot in Sudan, and her children, but they gave her their full support.

Makaka, 51, was among the first farmers to be trained in fish farming under the Economic Stimulus Programme, which sought to promote aquaculture in the country.
She started with a single pond dug and stocked by the Ministry of Fisheries Development. A few months later, she decided to did two more ponds with a Sh2 million loan her husband secured from a bank and her savings.

But things did not work according to plan after a rectangular tank she had constructed at a cost of Sh1.3 million burst due to faulty design.
She did not know that a circular tank was best because it could withstand a lot of pressure.
“I was very disheartened, but did not give up. I convinced my husband to have faith in what I was doing and go for another loan so that I could carry on with the project to generate enough money to repay what we had borrowed,” she told Seeds of Gold.

Her persistence has paid off. Today, she is a leading fingerlings producer in Kakamega, supplying to farmers in Vihiga, Busia and Bungoma.
In 2011, Makaka supplied 200,000 fingerlings at Sh6 each, bagging Sh1.2 million. While she has been cagey about the figures for fear of exposing herself to crime, she says returns have risen exponentially in the last four years.

From the sale of the fingerlings, Ms Makaka has been able to repay the loans. She has concentrated on Nile perch, tilapia and catfish because of high demand and good prices.
She has now set up nine ponds, a hatchery and five tanks at her fish farm. She built the hatchery for fingerlings at Sh1.2 million. Four of the tanks are for breeding catfish, which preys on young fish if not separated from them.

High cost of food
She has hired six young people from the village to help her.
Her day starts at 5am when she cleans the ponds, feeds the fish and attends to other chores that go with fish farming, and ends well past 8pm.

Makaka has drawn her biggest lessons on how to manage the project from the experience she gained while operating the eatery, and training by the Fisheries department.
The challenges she faces daily include high cost of food and wild birds that prey on the fish in the ponds.

She spends Sh2,000 daily on food. She says fish farming is labour-intensive, but has high returns.
Her biggest wish is for the county government to speed up construction of the Sh70 million fish processing plant at Lutonyi.

This would take away the storage woes, earn them more money and open up a new, bigger market for the smallholders, whose biggest customers are currently their poor neighbours.
Kakamega county executive for agriculture, Penninah Mukabane, agrees.
“We would like the facility to become operational and serve farmers in the region without further delay.”

She said the county government had allocated Sh50 million for rehabilitating fish ponds and to help farmers restock them.
Nearly 5,000 ponds have been set up by farmers in the county. The latest statistics put harvests for 2012 at 271,000 tonnes, earning farmers Sh146 million.

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