Have had a lovely day today helping with some Tree Planting which is taking place on the land of 4 families whose children attend the Kids Joy nursery here at college. The trees were paid for by voluntary donation from each nursery child’s family, and the land for planting on was offered by the 4 families.
The trees have been planted by teams of college students and staff, plus
the nursery child linked to the land where the planting was being done.
All 4 of the families who offered land are farmers, growing a
mixture of food crops and cash crops. The cash crops tend to be coffee
and maize, plus one family also grew vanilla for sale.
As well as cash crops, the food crops that I spotted for home
consumption were maize, pumpkin, cassava, pineapple, beans, passion
fruit, banana (plantain and matoke varieties), vanilla, papaya and
ssechunga (big orange, as opposed to muchunga which is little orange). I
expect there were more foods that I didn’t spot.
The trees being planted were spread across the land, to provide
boundary markers and shade protection, and the varieties were all
indigenous trees. Some were also fruit trees.
The tree planting was done as a demonstration of local response to
the fight against deforestation and climate change. It will be repeated
every year unless the parents want to do it more frequently.
A big shout out to college students Edwin, Gillian, Lawrence, Matthias, Swabulah, Florence and Rena, plus nursery pupils Hellen, Maria, Jo-anne and Samwiri who all helped get the trees in the ground.
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