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    Farmers in semi arid areas, knocked by weather patterns are learning new techniques to beat the weather vagaries like planting before the rains start and buying seeds suited for their climate. The techniques which have at times failed remain their only option at the moment.

    James Mativo from Makaveti Village in Kyanzasu sub-location in Machakos County is one such farmer. He proudly displays a healthy crop, with green maize ripe for plucking to recent visitors. “I planted just before the rain season began, to ensure that the crop would sprout when the rains came,” he explained.

    For many farmers in the semi-arid Eastern Province in Kenya, preparing fields ahead of the rains is not enough to guarantee a good harvest. Having the right seed is vital too. Mativo buys certified seed, suited to the area’s climate, from Dryland Seed Company in Machakos town. “For these dryland varieties, the first rains are very important,” explains Peter Mutua, a Dryland agronomist. “It allows the farmers to take full advantage of this scarce resource from germination. This is particularly important as most farmers grow maize under rainfed conditions in Kenya, even in the semi-arid areas.”

    Just as a relay is a team effort, so is the process of delivering quality seed to farmers. It takes many people, working together, to ensure that farmers get the best seed suited for the climatic conditions in their locales. Take the case of drought tolerant maize varieties: the process starts with breeders who develop the germplasm and share it with research partners, who pass the baton to the seed companies, who produce large quantities of the seed, which smaller-scale farmers buy from the seed companies. The companies cross-pollinate sources of desirable traits to develop maize varieties relevant for the farmers. Often they start with sources from public research organizations like the CIMMYT.

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    “We try to improve the existing varieties and come up with varieties that are better than those in the market,” says Peter Setimela, a CIMMYT maize breeder. “With climate change, varieties developed 20 years ago no longer suit the changing environment” Breeders working under the Drought Tolerant Maize for Africa Initiative led by CIMMYT have developed varieties known as the Kenya Dryland Varieties (KDV) series. KDV 1 – 6 varieties were released to farmers by the Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI), as well as the companies Freschco and Dryland Seed. The fourth variety of the series is the one now growing on Mativo’s quarter-hectare farm.

    It is not only climate change that concerns breeders; they want also to develop varieties that are disease resistant and relevant to farmers’ other needs – proper milling and cooking quality or flavor, for example. “This is why we have farm trials,” explains Peter Setimela. These trials are done in collaboration with the national research organizations, such as KARI in Kenya. “We look for traits that farmers prefer,” says Setimela, “Farmers in Kenya prefer white maize for making ugali. In Zimbabwe, some people prefer ZM309 because it is sweet when roasted.”

    The seed companies and KARI multiply seed to furnish adequate supplies for farmers’ demands, but also depend on farmers they hire to produce that seed. “We work with groups of farmers who have at least five acres (2.5 hectares) per farmer,” says Ngila Kimotho, Managing Director of Dryland Seed Company. The seed company clusters the farmers by sub-location and trains them. This, according to Musa Juma, a contract farmer for Dryland in Kibwezi, Eastern Province, is ‘risk free planting.’” “This is because you are planting for a known market, you don’t have to start worrying about looking for where to sell the produce as you plant,” explains Juma. “An additional perk is that the company provides the seed.”

    Seed companies also use local demonstration farms to exhibit the performance of various maize varieties winning over farmers’ to the new varieties they see outperforming traditional ones. Dryland Seed Company also uses vernacular radio programs to disseminate information on the most productive maize varieties. “These are interactive shows and we have farmers calling in to find out what is the best variety to grow when and where to obtain the seed,” explains Kimotho. According to Kimotho, farmers prefer open pollinated varieties as that are early-maturing and drought tolerant and thus better suited for the region’s short rains.

    “The basic need in the dry areas is food security,” says Kimotho, adding that farmers only sell surplus seed when they have a rare bumper harvest. To cater for the diversified market, Dryland markets seed in packets from 100 grams to 1 kilogram, so there is an affordable option for every farmer. The 100 gram package is popular with those who are keen to try out new varieties. “Even students buy it for their parents to try,” says Kimotho. Smallholder farmers, most of whom are women, also choose this option to ensure a subsistence maize crop for their families.

    By the same token, farmers are reluctant to place all their trust in a single variety. On Mativo’s farm, he spreads the risk by planting hybrids alongside beans and cowpeas. “When the rains are good, the hybrids do well and have high yields, but if the rains are not so good, I still have food from the KDV,” says Mativo. “It would be very sad for a farmer to lack food. When I have food, then my neighbors are also food secure,” he adds. Mativo uses ox drawn ploughs on his farm, but he also occasionally employs a few manual laborers, some of whom he pays in kind with maize grain, at their request.

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    In the rare years that farmers get a bumper harvest, they need to sell the surplus. But when there is a high supply of maize, the prices are low, and storage becomes an even more vital component of the value chain: the grain requires a pest-free mechanism that also saves the maize from fungal infections, some of which can produce deadly toxins. Working with jua kali artisans, the Catholic Diocese in Embu and South Nyanza, CIMMYT has helped smallholder farmers store up to 20 bags of maize at home in airtight metal silos.

    Surplus grain is thus safe until market prices become favorable. “I have enough to feed my family and even some left over that I can save and later sell, when there is a shortage in the market,” says Pamela Akoth, a farmer in South Nyanza. Thanks to the metal silo, Akoth says, she no longer experiences grain losses. In this way, the farmer and the jua kali artisan benefit, as do the young men who are trained in making the metal silos, allowing them to earn a living from the trade.

    Ultimately, every participant in this value chain, or relay, is focused on one thing – food security. To ensure that ugali can be served in every household, everyday, everyone in this chain needs to pass the baton and play their part in ensuring that farmers have access to quality seed. This race may be slower but every transition, just like the relay, is as important as the next, with everyone playing an integral role in the process. From the start of the breeding process, to the harvest itself, every part of the ‘race’ is just as important as the photo finish, showing the family enjoying their meal.

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    Farm­ers who have struggled to tame pests are re­cord­ing in­creased yields and re­duced pest in­fest­a­tion on their crops thanks to cer­tain crops like sorghum, napier grass and des­modium among oth­ers which are nat­ur­ally cap­able of con­tain­ing pests at min­imal or no cost.

    The crops known as trap crops have also as­sisted farm­ers cut on the cost of pesti­cides which eats up to 30 per­cent of all farm­ers’ ex­penses. In Mar­im­anti area of Tharaka Nithi farm­ers have re­duced the de­struc­tion of maize by stem borers by plant­ing maize along­side sorghum.

    "With a peri­meter ring of sorghum plants around the maize plots, we have noted less dam­age from birds and the borers. Birds such as weaver birds prefer the sorghum thereby sav­ing our maize from at­tack", ob­serves Kag­wiria Mun­yua, a farmer in Kam­a­tungu vil­lage.

    The farm­ers have also real­ised in­creased yields after sur­round­ing their crops with napier grass as well. Re­search con­duc­ted at the Kenya Ag­ri­cul­tural and Live­stock Re­search Or­gan­isa­tion (KARLO) ) in Kib­wezi has shown that pi­geon peas planted along the bor­der­line of an okra plot sig­ni­fic­antly re­duced aphid in­fest­a­tion-in­creas­ing yield of the okra crop.

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    A sim­ilar study car­ried out in West­ern Kenya also shows that using a trap crop ' of napier grass sur­round­ing maize and an in­ter­crop of the legume des­modium, re­pelled the in­sect pests and sup­pressed a para­sitic weed, Striga her­monthica.

    The re­search­ers say trap crops con­cen­trate the pest in the bor­der area, re­du­cing num­bers of pests and dis­ease spread on the un­sprayed cash crop in the centre and pre­serving nat­ural en­emies. Re­search­ers, however, re­com­mend that trap crops such as sorghum should also be har­ves­ted and their re­mains burned or bur­ied deep into the soil as they may act as a pest reser­voir in the fol­low­ing sea­son. For in­stance, the larva stages of stalk borers bore into the stems of sorghum wait­ing the rainy sea­son for them to trans­form into adults but­ter­fly and lay eggs on the young maize. Burn­ing the crop residues of sorghum and maize stalks at the end of the sea­son breaks the cycle.

    "This tech­nique elim­in­ates the use of broad-spec­trum pesti­cides on the cash crop, which helps pre­serve nat­ural en­emies and helps pre­vent re­sur­gence of the primary pest pop­u­la­tion, sec­ond­ary pest out­breaks and ad­di­tional spray­ing. "It res­ults in im­proved crop qual­ity and dra­matic pesti­cide sav­ings. It re­duces the cost of pro­duc­tion and im­proves qual­ity of pro­duce as the amount of chem­ical residues in the har­vest is lowered. It also delays de­vel­op­ment of pesti­cide res­ist­ance," says the re­port by Kari.

    Bey­ond the primary role of con-trolling pests, trap crops can be be­ne­fi­cial to farm­ers. "While we are not very in­ter­ested in their grain, we still har­vest some sorghum, which we can use as por­ridge flour or use it to feed chicken. The dry sorghum stalks can be used as fod­der or fuel wood es­pe­cially in the cold sea­son in July," noted Mun­yua as she tends her three-and-half acre price of land.

    In the West­ern Kenya study, re-search­ers noted that there was im­prove­ment in soil fer­til­ity lead­ing to in­creased maize yields from 39 per cent to 129 per cent. Cattle were also able to ob­tain fod­der from napier and des­modium legumes. Of fur­ther im­port­ance is the re­por­ted sup­pres­sion of Striga weed by trap crops.

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    Striga re­duces maize and cowpea yields by up to 80 per cent in Sub-Saha­ran Africa, threat­en­ing over 100 mil­lion people. "Striga cur­rently re­mains the biggest threat to maize pro­duc­tion, par­tic­u­larly in the East Africa re­gion where maize is the staple for mil­lions of in­hab­it­ants," said Mel Oluoch, head of the In­teg­rated Striga Man­age­ment in Africa pro­gramme at the In­ter­na­tional In­sti­tute of Re­search in Trop­ical Ag­ri­cul­ture (IITA)

    The weed at­taches it­self on the root suck­ing the sap and starving the crop of vital nu­tri­ents ab­sorbed from the ground. A com­bin­a­tion of a napier grass trap crop and a legume in­ter­crop in a plot of maize has been known to sig­ni­fic­antly de­cline the pop­u­la­tion of Striga weeds ul­ti­mately boost­ing over­all yields. Ag­ri­cul­tural ex­ten­sions work­ers have re­com­men­ded trap crops to limit the dam­age to im­port­ant food crops by pests.

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    As the mar­ket for tra­di­tional crops be­come sat­ur­ated and dis­eases rav­age tra­di­tion­ally luc­rat­ive crops like maize and wheat, farm­ers keen on max­im­ising their in­come are turn­ing to fruit farm­ing which has seen them more than triple yields and in­comes.

    From yel­low and purple pas­sion fruits, Red Roy­ale paw­paws, bass avo­ca­dos and apples, van­guard farm­ers have found gold mines in these fruits with de­mand com­ing from both local and in­ter­na­tional mar­kets.
    In Kenya for ex­ample a health con­scious middle class with an af­fin­ity for spend­ing are driv­ing the de­mand for fruit farm­ing as are soft drink com­pan­ies who prefer to buy from farm­ers rather than im­port the highly priced fruit pulp.

    Among the fruits though, pas­sion fruits- both the yel­low and purple vari­et­ies are a notch higher in the pop­ular­ity. "Pas­sion fruits are luc­rat­ive and easy to make money from. I have been able to ex­pand my orch­ard re­ly­ing mainly from the pas­sion fruits pro­ceeds," said Charles Mureithi, a high school teacher and a fruit farmer in Dim­com vil­lage in Si­pili, Laikipia dis­trict.

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    Charles Mureithi a farmer in Laikipia is among pi­on­eer farm­ers in fruit farm­ing with an orch­ard that has man­goes, avo­ca­dos, apples, or­anges, lo­quat and cher­imoya. The pas­sion fruits however stands out. The over 1200 vines are his cash cow.

    “Busi­ness is good as far as pas­sion fruits are con­cerned. In­fact i am in­creas­ing acre­age under cul­tiv­a­tion of my pas­sion fruit and have already se­cured four more acres. A quarter of my house­hold spend is catered for by pro­ceeds from pas­sion fruits sales,” said Mureithi who also teaches Swahili at Lanai Day Sec­ond­ary School.

    When he was test­ing the pro­ject three years ago with only 150 pas­sion trees, he could earn Sh80,000 with a kilo fetch­ing Sh30.

    And with the luc­rat­ive nature of pas­sion fruit busi­ness, a group of seven local farm­ers have moved and ex­pan­ded their orch­ards to meet the rising de­mand for the fruits from neigh­bour­ing towns.

    "I have been able to edu­cate three stu­dents through high school using pas­sion fruits re­turns. I can com­fort­ably ad­vise that one may well re­tire and rely on fruits farm­ing in old age", said a middle aged Joseph Gatama, an­other of the local farm­ers. A bishop with a local church, Gatama has 250 pas­sion trees on his three-acre farm. "Every two weeks, we are able to sell Sh2,300 worth of pas­sion fruits and I ex­pec­ted to earn more as the newly es­tab­lished orch­ard comes to mat­ur­a­tion," he said.

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    He re­mem­bers a year he was able to make Sh60, 000- a pricey sum for rural farm­ers- from sale of pas­sion fruits. Loc­ally the pas­sion fruits have two pick­ing sea­sons the Au­gust Novem­ber and the April-May-June sea­son. The Novem­ber sea­son has big­ger and more fruit that the May one, ac­cord­ing to local farm­ers. However, with the dry con­di­tions that punc­tu­ate the semi-arid Laikipia dis­trict, the local fruit farm­ers have to in­vest heav­ily in water sys­tems to cush­ion their valu­able fruits.

    "We have to con­struct un­der­ground water tanks to store sur­face run­off for use as ir­rig­a­tion water. A full tank, of five metres wide by five metres depth is able to sus­tain the orch­ard till the rainy sea­son," added Mureithi, who has since con­struc­ted such a tank of his flat piece of land. On his part, Gatama-with a sim­ilar stor­age fa­cil­ity on his farm- has pur­chased a water pump and in­ves­ted in pipes to ferry water to the plants. "An ini­tial in­vest­ment of less than Sh100,000 is eas­ily re­couped once the har­vest­ing sea­son ar­rives. We are un­able to meet de­mand for fruit as buy­ers ar­rive on our farms seek­ing fresh ripe fruits," said Mureithi.

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