Janet Chebet receiving Best Youth Farmer award from President Uhuru
Kenyatta during the 2015 Nairobi Agricultural Trade Fair in Nairobi.
PHOTO | courtesy
Janet Chebet Onganga disappointed her family when she diverted
money set aside for her training as a teacher to venture into farming.
But she has since won three national awards and says her earnings hit
Sh1.25 million a year. She is happy and so are her parents.
Now
aged 30, Ms Chebet married Julius Onyancha in December 2004, the same
year she completed secondary school studies at Kiptere Mixed. She scored
a C- (minus).
When her parents gave her Sh300,000 to
enrol for teaching training. She used the money as capital to start
farming on her husband’s family land.
“My parents were
bitter with me about the decision I had taken and they stopped calling
or sending me any messages,” said Ms Chebet.
She was named the Best Youth Farmer in Kenya in 2015 for her
aquaculture and green house farming. The same year, she won the Best
Farmer award from the National Cereals and Produce Board (NCPB).
In 2016, she won the Most Successful Farmer award from Equity Bank
for having excelled in agribusiness through the loan assistance from the bank.
Her
beginning point from her initial lumpsum was to spend Sh60,000 to buy
two Friesian and Jersey heifers, Sh10,000 on transport and Sh90,000 on a
cowshed.
“I chose to start with dairy farming because
I needed compost manure since I had a big plan to use the remaining
money to start aquaculture and horticulture farming, since manure is
good for the algae needed in fish pond and crop growth,” said Chebet.
“Using compost manure from the cow shed would reduce my cost of buying the manure from other farmers.”
Now,
she has 10 cows of which two are lactating. She gets 10 litres per day
from the two cows, selling each litre for Sh60. This gives her about
Sh18,000 a month and Sh100,000 a year after spending Sh16,800 on feeds.
To cope with the drought, she prepares silage from Napier grass, maize stalks and molasses to feed the cows.
“I got full approval by the Ministry of Agriculture of Nyamira County
in December 2012, after the officers from the ministry came, looked at
what I was doing and asking questions to find out whether I had
knowledge in farming,” she said.
This encouraged her,
and she spent another Sh200,000 from her dairy income to build two fish
ponds of 300 square metres each. She bought 2,000 tilapia fingerlings at
five shillings each.
Today, she has 2,000 tilapia fish
in her two fish ponds. She does a major fish harvest twice a year,
selling each mature fish at Sh200, translating to over Sh200,000 of
annual income.
She aimed to use water drained from the fish pond to irrigate crops in greenhouses and an open field in her four-acre plot.
“Water
from fish ponds is rich to crops because it has fish waste and this
also helps me to cut costs on manure and water usage since I rely on
harvested water.”
Ms Chebet, who is now harvesting
tomatoes from her 10x40 and 8x30 metre greenhouses, started greenhouse
farming with a capital of Sh350,000 in late 2013. She has other two
greenhouses measuring 8x15 and 8x30 metres under vegetables and
decorative plants, including kales and spider plants, awaiting tomato
planting next season.
The greenhouses are now her main
agribusiness, and what earned her a State award and recognition. “My
four greenhouses keep me busy the most, especially when I am harvesting
tomatoes. I invest Sh450,000 in tomato production and I earn over
Sh750,000 return,” she said.
She also grows butternuts
on part of her farm. One butternut plant yields her about five fruits,
each of which goes for Sh20, meaning from the 1,000 plants she has right
now she expects to earn Sh100,000.
She hosts other farmers and university students who visit to learn.
Her
parents have come to appreciate and encourage all her activities. “They
have come to respect my decision and have become my great supporters.”
Ms
Chebet attends agricultural training organised by among others, the
Ministry of Agriculture and World Vision — an NGO — and gets financial
knowledge from her husband, a procurement officer at Nyamira County.
- African Laughter
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