Let's begin by being visionary. I was quite blown away when the farmers started to produce their 5 year visions. These are the farmers from Olwal and Parabong (the 2 original groups from the north) who, when I met them in 2008, couldn't imagine what tomorrow would hold for them, let alone 5 years down the road.
Here is Patrick sharing his group's with me and I am rendered speechless, which doesn't happen very often I can tell you! There are over 40 farmers in the group, but many of them were out in the fields as the rainy season was just starting and everyone was frantically sowing their seeds. I felt quite guilty in keeping them away from their fields, but when they showed me this - wow. You can see plenty more photos of the farmers and updates on our facebook page - www.facebook.com/seedsfordevelopment
Update on the child-mothers
The girls are doing really well and have changed a lot since I first met them last March. They have a dignity about them and are showing real determination to improve their lives. They have changed their name to "we shall transform our lives". We have advanced ground-nut (peanuts) seeds to them and they are being stored in the local village until the autumn when the girls will have fully prepared the land and be ready to plant them out. We were really keen that they knew that we had kept our word and that the seeds were ready for them. The girls agreed as a group to wait until the second rainy season to plant them.
You might remember that Last November together with my fellow trustee Sally and her husband Ed, we visited the girls. They told us that they were setting up a saving scheme and Sally and Ed contributed £10 (about $16) to get them started. When I visited them last month the scheme was going from strength to strength and they now have over £300 in the kitty. The young mothers are all benefiting from the scheme including Jennifer who I spent 30 minutes with listening to her heart-breaking story. Jennifer was just 9 when she was abducted by the rebels in the year 2000. She spent 4 or 5 years in the bush where she gave birth to a baby. Six months pregnant with her 2nd baby, she escaped and spent a week eating raw potatoes and cassava whilst she made it home. Today she is living with the abusive father of her 2 other children. She is unable to see the first "bush-babies" due to him physically beating her and the children - the bush-babies are living with her grandparents (her parents are dead). The scheme is a life saver for Jennifer as she can borrow money to buy food for her children. Her husband forbids her to work in the fields (I don't understand it either) and has destroyed most of her kitchen utensils.
I'm not telling you this to depress you, more to highlight how far such small amounts can go and the difference it can make. That £10 is supporting all 45 young mothers and their families and they are showing just how smart they are by growing it so much and so quickly.
The new farmers During this recent trip, I also met 6 of our 12 new groups. They are excited about their future and are showing the same enthusiasm and grit as our other groups to transform their lives. One of the groups gave us lunch and I am going to have to put in a lot more practice before I have mastered the art of eating gloopy sauce and greens with one hand, so you aren't going to see any photos of that. Also, I don't recommend seeing 3 groups in one day. The distances are not huge but the roads are so bad that it takes hours to get from one to another. We all jumped around on this bridge before abandoning Vincent as he tenderly drove the pickup over it!
Time for coffee
I hope that in 3 years time, you will be enjoying the results of our first coffee crop and that one day Excellent Coffee from Uganda will be sitting in your kitchen cupboard.
Here are the babies... and now the next BIG challenge is how on earth do you take 30,000 coffee seedlings more than 300 miles to Gulu... ideas on a postcard please!
Parabong Primary School
The school is at the heart of the community and it shows that we really are making a positive impact on peoples lives. Please do watch this last short video of the 100+ children in the first year singing a welcome.
I love the way James starts off with "one, two... off we go" !