Lots of updates since
our last post...
Pumpkin harvest time! |
April brings yet
another record hot month with the beginning of the Theravada Buddhist New Year.
We wish a very Happy New Year from everyone at our Khom Loy office here in Mae
Sot. Our staff enjoyed much needed rest, relaxation and
water-tossing fun during the observed Thai New Year on April 14, 15, & 16.
Our mama pig enjoys green snacks, getting closer to having piglets, eta: Early June 2014. |
Our Newest Member
Our newest team member, Intern Moe Thu! |
On March 31, we welcomed our newest team member: UPLIft Program Intern,
Pwint Moe Thu. As a Wide Horizon Student, Moe Thu comes to Khom Loy with a
great deal of training from Khom Loy (in both gardening and financial literacy)
and various CBO’s under her belt. In addition, she has spent 2 years
already working as a trainer in Mae Sot for Sa Na Yar Thi Pan Women’s Centre, an organization
devoted to supporting and empowering women. The UPLift team is very
excited and grateful to have such a talented and experienced intern to join our
ranks! Welcome, Moe Thu!
Laying Hen Pilot
Since March 16, our Agricultural
Officer Sai Aung has been overseeing the care of our chicken pilot project at
Irrawaddy Flower Garden School. Part of the pilot's purpose is to test
the efficiency of feeding a low-cost homemade fermented feed to chickens versus
store bought feed. Therefore, we have two sets of 10 chickens with
different feeds, Group A & B. The ultimate goal is to figure out a method
of feeding that is both efficient for egg production/good health as well as low
cost and easy to acquire. Since this is Khom Loy's first go at chicken rearing,
it's a learning process for everyone--hopefully another method of natural
farming we can add to our repertoire!
Having chickens at the school allows children a learning opportunity (for caring & tending chickens), offers a local source of protein (eggs), and provides ready to use garden fertilizer!
Having chickens at the school allows children a learning opportunity (for caring & tending chickens), offers a local source of protein (eggs), and provides ready to use garden fertilizer!
As of now/approximately 6-weeks into the pilot, we have observed the following...
Group A
No egg-laying yet
Average 0.15 kg less weight that Group B (1.3-1.5kg)
Healthy looking and regular eating habits
No egg-laying yet
Average 0.15 kg less weight that Group B (1.3-1.5kg)
Healthy looking and regular eating habits
Group B
Begun laying eggs 2 weeks ago
In the last week, lay an average of 8 eggs/day
Average 0.15 higher weight than Group A (1.5-1.7)
Healthy looking and regular eating habits
Sectioned off in 2 separate areas (10 each) , chickens continue to grow from differing diets of homemade & store feeds. |
Some of our first eggs! Now we receive about 8/day. Old tires provide the perfect nesting beds. |
Currently, we are
looking into adding more protein to Group A's diet in order to jump-start egg
production. We'll have more updates as this pilot progresses!
Business Trainings & follow-up at PSD
At the Migrant Community, Paseidan, we
were able to support two additional women in small business startup this month.
One of our business entrepreneurs started up a service business, which
provides landline calls to and from Burma for people in the community at
4THB/minute. Pictured below with phone in hand, our new entrepreneur
eagerly starts her first business. Fast-forward to now (3 weeks into her
business) and she is almost ready to repay 50% of the loan per our loan
agreement--3 months in advanced!
Cho Sang receiving her phone and viewing the details of KLDF Contract. |
Cho Sang, Phone service entrepreneur signing her terms of use contract with Khom Loy Staff in early April 2014. |
Entrepreneur #2
just set up her business this last week after a great deal of preparation and many revisions to
her business plan. With support, she is launching a wholesale business in
which she buys goods (such as coffee, onion, garlic, soap, shampoo, etc) and
sells to another remote migrant community. She is building upon an
already established business relationship she has with this community who
happens to have limited exposure to basic market goods.
Intern, Moe Thu works on business planning with another entrepreneur, Kim Ba Sang, proposing to wholesale goods. |
Financial Literacy Training with UTY
We continue to expand trainings on financial literacy--particularly for
our own staff. This month as part of on-the-job training, our intern Moe
Thu has been conducting one-on-one financial literacy training with our farm
manager U Tin Yu and his wife, Mae Thaeng Yi. See Moe Thu discussing savings
plans during a recent training (below). With ambitions goals this year,
we hope to train all 80 TPC teacher trainers on financial literacy modules
along with another community this Fall (similar to what we did with the
community at Paseidan this year & Cattle Yard last year). Ideally, U
Tin Yu will not only benefit from this training by feeling more empowered and
knowledgeable to save money but also serve as a trainer for financial literacy
in the future.
Moe Thu & Ko Lynn (supervising) conduct financial literacy traning with our farm manager, U Tin Yu and wife, Mae Thaeng Yi. |
Revised Land Plan (Land next to TPC/Teacher Prep College)
In the past month, our team has spent lots of
time reflecting on the farming experience next to Teacher Prep Center (TPC) on
our 2.5 rai of land. For a while now, our observations have told us we
need to revise to our original land plan; which, required us to think
critically about what we will do with produce from our farm now and in the
future. These observations led to the following assertions...
1.
It does not necessarily make sense to grow crops to sell locally when
there is a school (Teacher Prep College/TPC) full of 80 students, running 9
months out of the year right next door to our farm that could use vegetables.
2.
Khom Loy is able to form a closer relationship with TPC Students by
allowing TPC students to tend vegetables in exchange for using them for
food--particularly since both organizations (TPC and KLDF) receive funding from
Thai Children’s Trust/TCT for vegetable buying and growing purposes.
3.
TPC receives a food budget supported by TCT, the same donor Khom Loy
receives funding from for School Gardens. Our team agrees that the obvious
relationship between the Khom Loy farm and TPC Students should be that TPC
students get as many vegetables as they can from our farm, therefore,
alleviating some food costs.
4.
To bring depth to our relationship with TPC, our team believes we could
minimize the cost of outsourcing additional labor if we had TPC students
routinely assisting in caring for the land and therefore, benefitting by
receiving all the produce/ “fruits of their labor”.
5.
We will still have to set aside some plots for animal feed.
6.
We can simplify our land plots by growing vegetables that are more
in-demand (by TPC students & the local community) & easier to grow.
Corn, for instance, being a hard crop to grow with little demand would
not be part of the new land plan. Morning glory, on the other hand, which
is easy to grow and in great demand (also good for pig food) will most
definitely be upscaled.
In summary, we have a
newly revised land plan requiring less labor and additional manures; and minimizing
crops that are harder to grow and less in-demand. In conjunction, we are in the
process of forming a closer, more interactive relationship with TPC Students
during the coming school year (beginning June 2014).
More on these revisions as we move throughout the year!
Visit by ACU
In mid-April, we
received a visit by students and professors from Australian Catholic
University (ACU). ACU students learned about the many
methods Khom Loy uses to teach Natural Farming skills, along with an overview
of financial literacy, small business development, and agriculture innovation
with local Burmese Migrant Schools and Communities. Some of what they saw
(see below) consisted of our ever-expanding seed nursery, blossoming crops of
chili peppers and morning glory. Also, included in learning about our Natural
Farming methods, visitors observed the production and use of Indigenous
Microorganisms/IMO's as natural fertilizers (see our staff making new IMO's
below).
Sai Aung Tun, adds on to our nursery beds at the KLDF Land. |
Chilies and tomatoes coming up nicely on our raised bed plot. |
Morning Glory grows amazingly on our land and serves as an important "green snack" for our mama pig. |
Sai Aung and Moe Thu work on making a fresh batch of Indigenous Microorganisms, natural fertilizers. |