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GARDENS FOR GRANDMOTHERS IN UGANDA

SUPPORTED BY PERMAFUND’S DONORS

Thanks to the generous contributions made to Permaculture Australia’s gift fund, Kitgum Permaculture Practitioners Association was one of the 20 organisations that received a Permafund grant in 2024. Their community is in the Alango ward, Pandwong division and Kitgum district of Northern Uganda. 

Project manager Patrick Paul Kidega has sent us this report about their Grandmother Kitchen Gardens project.  “It came about in response to the urgent need to solve the food crisis affecting elderly people, mostly widows & widowers,  as a result of their grandchildren not caring for them by providing basic needs since most of them stay by themselves and as such, cannot keep up to speed with their daily needs.”

“Our association conducted a needs-based assessment which highlighted the need for this project. It was also backed & supported by the local council and the Lowest Administrative Units where the elderly people stay.”

“Using permaculture principles and ethics, especially that of care for others and incorporating zoning, we designed a very simple, effective and efficient kitchen garden system that is manageable by the elderly.”

“This Project was designed to benefit 30 elderly widows, single mothers and also a widower. It has a multiplier effect since these elderly have dependents, mostly grandchildren, who have been left behind by their children either as a result of HIV AIDS-related death or divorce. According to our survey of the 30 households we found that this project will directly support 134 people, which is something to be proud of.

                       Objectives of the project

1. To provide instant affordable food supplies to the elderly in need.

2. To use permaculture and its principles to help answer the community’s most pressing problems such as poor food security and bad agricultural practices such as chemical-related farming.

3. To help spread permaculture to the local community through demonstrations, since it is still a new concept.

4. To help enlighten the community that we can farm anywhere and that it doesn’t require much land to farm, using the different gardening styles;

                           Steps taken in project implementation

A. Identification of the beneficiaries was done by the field staff of the organisation with the support of the local council leaders. This was followed by the immediate selection of the 30 successful beneficiaries based on their needs and ability to contribute to the project by offering labour such as watering, weeding and daily care to the garden which can’t be done by our organisation. Those who were a little bit strong and had grandchildren stood a better chance of selection but also we included those whose neighbours promised to help them do the work.

B. After the selection we spent 3 days training the beneficiaries. We gave them background on the project and its benefits, We trained them in simple management skills like fencing their gardens to prevent animals from eating their produce. We taught them the basic principles of permaculture and the importance of using organic materials and not chemicals, the need to water the gardens and keep them mulched.

We also taught them about the types of veggies that they would need and useful tree seedlings to select. The meeting was well attended and was much appreciated by the beneficiaries.

After the inception meeting, as an organisation completed these steps

CHALLENGES ENCOUNTERED:

WAYS FORWARD AND RECOMMENDATIONS: We recommend that;

Conclusively the Grandmother Kitchen Gardens project is a big success and an eye-opener as many people took an interest and copied the ideas, tried them in their homes and requested for more information to be extended to them. The little grant fund was timely and so much appreciated since it enabled us to realise our objectives and goals for this project.

In this report, there are photos of some of the kitchen gardens we developed. It is amazing to see how simple ideas of permaculture can greatly impact and transform the lives of the intended recipients.

With this illustration, I hope and believe that there is value for money in any permaculture project done honestly with a people-centred approach, and do encourage us all to embrace permaculture to help solve our current problems and I, therefore, call for more funds to be directed towards permaculture since it has proven to be the most pragmatic approach to problem-solving. In permaculture there are no wrong or right answers, everything we experience is a response that requires us to fully be in union with Mother Nature as the response to our actions tells us either or what to be done or not done.

Much appreciation to the Permafund team for the trust placed in us.”

Your donations make projects like this possible. Thank you for your support. Contributions to Permafund over $2 are tax deductible in Australia and can be made here

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