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    farmer max kenya

    By George Munene

    On some 10 acres of farmland in Muramati, Laikipia county, Max Armbrust, keeps 5,000-6,000 chickens, 20 sheep, and 5 dairy cows. His, however, is no standard livestock farm. Farmer Max, as he is commonly known, is Kenya's first adoptee of large-scale regenerative livestock farming, using free-range broiler chickens raised on pasture to reclaim depleted soils.  

    This management practice leverages intensive poultry grazing to restore soil fertility while at the same time raising healthier animals that are free of antibiotics, steroids, or hormones. The chickens are not confined but allowed to exhibit all their natural characteristics— foraging, scratching, and running around— leading to an improved quality of life.

    According to a research paper on the Economics of Land Degradation and Improvement in Kenya, the costs of land degradation due to land use and land cover changes reached the equivalent of Sh141 billion annually between 2001 and 2009. Moreover, the costs of rangeland degradation calculated through losses in milk and meat production, as well as in livestock live weight decreases reach about Sh8.7 billion annually. Furthermore, the costs of deterioration in soil physical, chemical, and biological properties led to lower yields for wheat, maize, and rice estimated at about Sh29 billion annually. The cost of taking action to rehabilitate degraded lands was found to be lower than the cost of inaction by four times over a 30-year period, i.e., each dollar invested in land rehabilitation is likely to yield four dollars of returns.

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    “When we first bought the property in 2019, it was typical of many small to medium-sized farms where conventional farming methods have been employed; heavily tilled, grazed, and depleted,” Max pointed out. 

    Continued tilling causes carbon to be released from the soil, which in turn diminishes the number of microorganisms in the soil which depend on it for sustenance. With time this leaves the soil unable to supply essential adequate plant nutrients and water for plant growth and reproduction. Overgrazing for its part exerts pressure on vegetation which acts as ground cover. This leaves the soil bare and unprotected raising its temperature to levels that are unsustainable for hosting soil microbiomes.

    Two years on, from having big patches of barren soil, 99 per cent of the farm’s land now has vegetative cover. “From an aerial view of our farm, you can clearly tell where the chickens have grazed as the vegetation is visibly lush. The idea is that when the soils are healthy, pastures are healthy, animals are healthy, we are healthy, and the planet is healthy,” Max said.

    Once the chickens are out of their brooders, they are introduced to foraging pastures on portable coops. Rotating the chickens daily is essential as it avoids vegetative depletion as well as preventing disease buildup.

    Before chickens are introduced to new pastures, cows are grazed on the piece of land 10 days prior. They graze the grass down to about six inches. When the chickens are introduced, they find cow dung patties that are full of natural proteins— this serves as a supplement to their feed. The litter left behind by the chicken is rich in nitrogen which fertilises the soil and helps in its regeneration.A herd of sheep then trail the chickens— they help to maintain pasture at a height that is suited to the chicken as well as further fertilising the soil.”

    Farmer Max BeforeFarmer Max After

                          Before                                               After

    As different ruminants forage on a diverse range of grasses, this forms a virtuous cycle that imparts nutrients back into the soil. 

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    Farmer Max’s Chicken is amongst the two farms practicing regenerative farming in Kenya, the second being Tamalu Farm in Timau which employs agroforestry. 

    Regenerative agriculture refers to farming/grazing practices that restore the soil’s organic matter and repair degraded soil biodiversity and improve its ability to hold water. This increases microbial life making pastures lush and healthy as well as resulting in carbon dioxide removal.

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    NAVINA RABBITS

    By George Munene

    At Navina Rabbit Farm, George Kanyingi’s herd of over 400 rabbits is proof that rabbit farming is no child’s play but just as lucrative an agribusiness as any other. What started out as a hobby for his kids is now a lucrative venture that sees him supply rabbit meat to one of Kenya's leading supermarket chains. 

    At his farm in Malaa Town along Kangundo Road, George charts his seven-year journey to making a success of rabbit keeping that started out with just two rabbits, all the while casually navigating a rabbit carcass. 

    “We observed a clear gap in the market and were determined to fill it. As a source of white meat, rabbit meat is far cheaper to fish, it also doesn't suffer from the religious and cultural constraints associated with pig consumption. Though popular, chicken meat for its part is quite common; rabbit meat offers an alternative that is just as tasty but not as ubiquitous,” he explained.  

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    Anchoring the success of any profitable agribusiness is a stable market. In an effort to introduce rabbit meat to a wider consumer base, at the business's onset, he knocked on as many doors as he could, networking with potential buyers.

    “Initially, we sold one or two rabbits daily to individuals, but being prolific breeders, by the end of the year, we had close to 200 rabbits. This meant casting an even wider net for potential consumers,“ Kanyingi said. 

    Five years on, thanks to the many contacts he had made along the way and his visibility, he was able to win a contract supplying 70 rabbits weekly to a major retail outlet.

    Navina rabbit

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    About 90 per cent of his herd is sold to farmers as breeding stock, meaning he is always seeking out other rabbit farmers to help him meet his orders. He buys rabbits weighing a minimum of two kilograms at Sh225/kilogram live weight. 

    For Kanyingi, rabbit rearing is full-time employment, deserving absolute dedication. Over the years he has worked to breed hardy, fast-maturing rabbits. “Most of my rabbits achieve slaughter weight (two kilograms) in just three months--this is a rarity for Kenyan rabbits which are often bastardized--I cannot breed them first enough as the demand is always rising with farmers looking to establish their own rabbitries,”  he said.

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    WhatsApp Image 2021 07 15 at 21.54.13

    By George Munene

    When Francis Faluma started growing arrowroots (nduma) in 2019, the farmer who lives in Matungu, Kakamega County, deep in the country’s sugarbelt received incredulous reactions from his neighbors. “Sasa ameanza kulima vitu za mababu wetu” was a common refrain he heard. “They now see trucks and pickups streaming in to pick arrowroots from my farm, and I have created jobs for hundreds of youths in the village...trust me, they are all rushing to buy the crop's seedlings to establish their own farms,'' he said.       

    Faluma refers to nduma as a ‘golden tuber’ with good reason. While his counterparts chase down sugarcane mill officials for delayed payments and grapple to convince themselves of a business case for selling a 50-kilogram sack of Irish potatoes for Sh1000; he sells 90 kilograms of his arrowroots for between Sh6,000 and 5,500. The earnings he quoted seem incredulous; “Conservatively I earn between Sh200,000 and 150,000 an acre which costs Sh30,000-20,000 to produce,” he said. For first-time farmers, this is pushed to Sh80,000 or Sh60,000 given 10,000 seedlings are required to establish an acre and cost 4/5 bob. He currently farms his arrowroots on 30 acres of leased land with each crop taking six months to mature. I'll pause while you take out a calculator and pick your jaw off the floor. Francis offered a word of advice; “Put down that pen, go back home and start growing this crop before everyone hops on the bandwagon.” 

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    For Faluma who is a professional veterinarian working for the Kakamega County government, his sojourn into arrowroot farming was born out of an examined demand for the tuber crop that persists to this day. “Whenever ndumas were available in the market there would be a mad dash for them and they would all be gone”, he observed. Even now, he pointed out, if buyers from Nairobi were not teaming to his farm to scoop up his crop he could take his harvest to nearby towns like Kakamega or Bungoma and he would have emptied his truck in 30 minutes. There is also a growing demand for healthier food options to the usual carb and gluten-filled options. Tubers such as cassava for their part are not as palatable to most urban consumers.

    Previously, Francis majored in watermelon farming and poultry keeping. Though his melon business had birthed favorable returns it had two drawbacks; diseases and pests were a hustle to contain and once the melons matured in 80 to 120 days they demanded to be harvested immediately—whether you had a ready market for them or not. 

    A 14 percent Value Added Tax (VAT) on feeds made commercial chicken rearing a financial high-wire act for anyone who had anything less than about 1000 birds. 

    “I started out on just half an acre expecting to make Sh20,000 but wound up raking in Sh100,000. I knew I had hit on a winning hand; I wound down my other agribusiness interests and went in full throttle into arrowroot farming,” he said. In a year's time, he had expanded to 10 acres. 

    WhatsApp Image 2021 07 15 at 21.57.22

    With his sights set on even further expansion, he went into Equity Bank and requested a commercial agriculture loan. Initially, it was a hard sell; nduma growing is not farming sub-sector banks are asked to finance every day. To the bank's credit, once a loan officer went through his books and visited his farm—a stretched-out canopy of flopping green—four days later half a million shillings was deposited into his account. Francis just finished paying off the loan. “Whenever I am up for taking up another loan they told me not to hesitate. They don't need much convincing now,” he heartily remarked.

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    Drawing inspiration from him and others who have taken the leap of faith and shown the potential in large-scale arrowroot farming, more farmers are refocusing their gaze on this ‘old’ and previously shunned crop. For Francis, who evangelizes the transformative impact the crop has had on his quality of life, this is welcome news and he doesn't anticipate the tuber crop’s market getting flooded any time soon. “Unlike most crops which mature in three months, on average, arrowroots take half a year. In well-drained soils, without the threat of them rotting, farmers have the discretion of leaving them in the shamba for up to 12 months,” he explained.   

    “With the strides, I have made in such a short time, reach me a year from now, I will be in a different stratosphere, '' he signed off.  

    Francis Faluma: 0724821186

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