JM Social Icons

    Sambazia

    By George Munene

    New to the Kenyan market, Mombasa/Siambaza is a highly nutritious grass variety (14%-16% crude protein content) that is tolerant to both drought and high temperatures. The fodder crop can as well withstand both leaf rust and red spider mite attacks.

    Approved by the Kenyan government for propagation last year it is suited to areas with altitudes of between 30 and 1500 meters above sea level. These include Kisumu, Kwale, Voi, Embu, and Cherangany.

    Mombasa has a fresh weight yield potential of 20-30 tonnes per hectare. It is best suited to cut and carry, although it can be grazed directly. The grass can be stored as high-quality hay and silage.

    Related News: KALRO commercializes grass varieties that increase milk by 15 to 40 %

    Related News: Super Napier grass yielding 4X regular varieties introduced in Kenya

    The grass's first harvest takes 2.5-3 months, with subsequent cuts at 1-2 months. The grass is perennial and can reach up to 165 cm in height. It is also characterised by a high persistence and regeneration capacity.

    It is highly palatable and digestible with a 75 per cent in vitro digestibility that owes to its high leaf/stem ratio. 

    The grass performs well in acidic soils and in moderate soil salinity; thriving in a pH range of between 5 and 8.

    Related News: Advanta Seeds introduce disease resistant, high yield Raja F1 tomato

    Siambaza grass is sown on a bed for proper establishment. It is then rolled, compacting the soil and ensuring good contact with the seeds. Sowing is done in rows 50 cm apart when the main use is mowing and hauling and 30 cm when it is mainly meant for grazing. The sowing rate is 8 to 10 kg per hectare for a perennial crop and 10 to 12 kg of seed per hectare for an annual crop. Sowing depth should not exceed 0.5 cm. It can be sown in with a legume provided that precautions are taken to prevent the grass from suffocating the legume.

    In Kenya, Mombasa grass seeds are distributed through Advantage Crops Limited (ACL): +254715519922

    Write comment (0 Comments)

    Kibet Kienyeji vegetables

    By George Munene

    Founded by Cindy Jemtai, Kibet Kienyeji Vegetables supplies dried ready-to-cook traditional vegetables farmed in Kenya to consumers in the United Kingdom and Europe. 

    “Many Kenyans I meet in Europe often spoke longingly of how much they enjoyed indigenous veggies, but, like myself, they only ever have a taste of them, on the rare occasions relatives fly in from Kenya with some dried ‘mboga’,” explained Cindy who lives in Kent, UK.

    Working for health food store chain Holland & Barrett has given Cindy an appreciation of how big the health food & supplant market is. As well as the realisation that the value of traditional African veggies on your dinner plate extends beyond nostalgia; they have tremendous health benefits offering a varied diet that is rich in important micronutrients, among them vitamin A, iron, and zinc. 

    The impetus to the business founding was unfortunately derived from the tragedy of Cindy’s son's unexpected death in October 2020. “We lost our son, Sean Kibet, right at the prime of his life, at just 22 years of age, this left us distraught,” said Cindy’s husband Mark--a British native. His wife’s grief, he felt, was further compounded by having no family members in the UK to see her through her pain. At his suggestion, she traveled back to Kenya to spend time with family and friends and spread Sean’s cremation ashes in a country he held a great affinity for. While still back home scrounging as much veggies as she could carry back, the mom of three pondered on a way she could eternally pay tribute to her son's memory. It finally hit her; perhaps she could make sense of her tragedy by setting up a business in Sean’s name, one that brings back that warm feeling of home to many Kenyans abroad.

    Related News: New international markets opening up for African vegetables

    Related News: Siaya group excel in collective marketing of traditional vegetables

    With her husband's help, the couple set out to first establish a brand, as well as the designing and procuring of packaging and labels from Kenya. Basing herself in Nanyuki, Cindy buys fresh veggies from farmers in Kisii and Mt Kenya regions, washes and sorts (removing the stalks and picking the best leaves) them before drying and shipping everything to Mark in the UK for packaging and sending it out to customers. “A white English man extolling traditional Kenyan vegetables strikes some as odd. With my wife back in the UK, more dubious customers I feel will be more receptive to her. She can also better engage with the Kenyan/African community to develop our customer base and establish links with restaurants,” said Mark. 

    Amongst the vegetables they deal in are Managu (African nightshade), Sagaa (Spider plant), Terere (Amaranth), Kunde (Cowpea leaf), Pumpkin leaves, or Seveve, Nderema or Vine spinach, and Jews mallow, colloquially known as Mrenda.

    “We started promoting our stuff through UK and European Union Kenyan diaspora Facebook pages to sass out any responses. There was an immediate positive reaction and orders started coming in,” Mark elucidated. 

    To the couple's delight, the feedback on the quality and the taste of the veggies has been very positive too. With inquiries for their mbogas as far out overseas as Norway, Australia, and the US, they’re developing a loyal customer base that is just as particular and in love with good food as they are. ”I had never tasted such incredible food as I have since meeting Cindy!”, Mark elatedly proclaimed. 

    Related News: Processor guarantees prices for organic and traditional outgrowers

    As with any other budding business, it's been no smooth sailing.“It is a tedious and costly undertaking in air freight, clearing, customs e.t.c. It being a nascent idea we were also not certain it would pan out. All the same, nothing ventured, nothing gained!” remarked the couple.

    Orders outside the UK had also temporarily suspended due to complications with international deliveries as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic and Brexit vote. 

    Cindy is currently working on their next shipment of Managu, Terere, Mrenda, Sagaa, Kunde & Kahurura. They are also looking at other Kenyan produce that may be added to the product lines in the future. 

    Write comment (0 Comments)

    Migori sweet potato preocessing plant

    By George Munene

    Kenya's first sweet potato processing plant located in Migori county is scheduled for completion by the end of the year. The Sh110 million Getonganya sweet potato factory is expected to offer the crop’s cultivators a ready market and a better price for their crop. 

    Sweet potato production employs over 6,500 farmers in the Kuria region who produce close to 0.3 million tonnes of sweet potatoes yearly. Ministry of Agriculture data also shows that Migori County is Kenya's second-largest producer of the internationally sought-after orange-fleshed sweet potato (OFSP), with 11,312 hectares under its cultivation. Neighbouring Homa Bay County is the country's largest producer at 24,268 hectares.  

    Related News: Local & export demand for orange fleshed sweet potato grows with superfood classification

    Related News: Agritech startup giving market to small-scale banana, pumpkin, sweet potato, arrowroot & yam growers

    Constructed on five acres at Mabera sub-county, Kuria West, the plant is expected to process over 100 tonnes of sweet potatoes daily; this will enable farmers to increase their production area. 

    The plant’s opening was scheduled for July last year but was scuttled by delays occasioned by the Covid-19 pandemic.

    “This Covid-19 thing has really taken us back. Our people would be enjoying the sweet and medicinal bread made from their own crops. That notwithstanding, jobs, good prices for their potatoes, and a good business environment will be created by the factory,” the county’s governor, Okoth Obado said.

    Sweet potatoes will be processed into flour, biscuits, and crisps.

    The plant will offer farmers a ready market as well as better value for their crop. This will lessen the broker stranglehold on the sweet potato agricultural sub-sector. Rising demand, farmers hope, will also raise the tuber’s price. 

    Related News: Proper planting for over 10 tonnes from acre of sweet potatoes

    The Migori Sweet Potato Value Chain Stakeholders Forum is working to build the capacity of stakeholders in the crop’s value chain, ensuring that there will be minimal hiccups in the factory’s running once its engines roar.

    The factory was funded by the European Union to the tune of Sh100 million, with the national government footing the rest of the bill and providing land for its construction.

    Write comment (0 Comments)

    Editor's Pick

    All News

    Powered by mod LCA

    Sign Up

    Sign up to receive our newsletter
    FarmBiz Africa © 2020