While many Kenyans are grappling with an
acute food insecurity occasioned by the prolonged dry spell, a move by
Uasin Gishu County residents to engage in shamba system is paying off
with millions of shilling generated from the initiative.
Residents bordering various
forests in the region have embraced the Plantation Improvement
Livelihood Scheme (PILS) where they engage in cultivation of food crops
as they help conserve forests through various Community Forest
Associations (CFAs).
“The main concept of the project
is that residents adjacent to forests are allowed to do farming as they
tend to trees for a period of three years,” said Uasin Gishu County KFS
conservator Paul Karanja.
Under the initiative, KFS charges residents Sh500 per acre every year where they tend to trees as they plant their food crops.
According to Mr Karanja, the arrangement which started in 2010, wananchi also prune the trees and get some money from KFS.
He
said apart from boosting the community’s livelihoods and helping in
forest conservation, the project has also helped the forest department
rein in wild fires.
“It has also boosted water
catchment protection, reduced soil erosion and climate change
mitigation,” said Mr Karanja during a tour of the area last week.
The
forest department has also set up a tree nursery with more than one
million tree seedlings which are set to be planted during the onset of
the rainy season in a month’s time.
“PILS is
successful because of community support. In the arrangement, farmers are
allowed to cultivate for three years. By then, tree cover will have
closed the canopy and crops will not do well due to the shade,” Mr
Karanja told Smart Company.
“The community has
come to appreciate that we can both co-exist. The project has empowered
the youth by enabling them to buy plots, livestock and even vehicles.”
The
biggest beneficiaries of the project are members of the Kapseret and
Timboroa associations, who are now able to meet their daily needs
including taking their children to school.
Timboroa CFA
chairman Peter Kimani said their group with 1,500 members harvests
3,500 bags of potatoes twice a year at Sh1,500 a bag earning them more
than Sh5.2 million.
“The project has not only improved
the livelihoods of our people but has also boosted food security in the
region. We are assured of plenty of milk throughout the year as we’ve
set aside part of the plantations for livestock grazing,” said Kapseret
CFA chairman Shadrack Koech.
“The public is acting as
forest scouts and reports to KFS any illegal activities. We also get
herbal medicine which are not available in other besides getting fresh
air,” said Mr Koech.
Apart from potatoes, residents also cultivate maize and vegetables.
He
said the project has minimised conflicts, which were the norm in the
past, between the Kenya Forest Service (KFS) rangers and wananchi.
A
spot check by Smart Company at Timboroa Shopping centre revealed that
indeed the project was transforming the region with heavy trucks
ferrying farm produce including potatoes and vegetables. Customers come
from as far as Mombasa.
Schools such as Timboroa
Primary are the biggest beneficiaries of the project as they are assured
of a constant supply of water courtesy of the initiative. The school
head Michael Kiberia said the pupils used to walk for long distances in
the past in search of water.
“This was risky to them
as they passed through the bush to reach the nearest water source. Now
we are enjoying piped water courtesy of this worthy initiative,” said Mr
Kiberia.
-Smart Company
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