Fat worms produce fat long beans! (Goducate Livelihood project in Laguna, Philippines)

So far our Goducate workers have been able to produce large quantities of quality organic fertilizer from unwanted grass and vegetation using our hard-working earthworms (African night crawlers).

Hard working worms
Hard working worms

However, the price that our workers get from the buyers of organic fertilizer is low. This problem of being squeezed by middle-men is one of the main reasons why Asian farmers are stuck in the poverty cycle. To overcome this problem, our Goducate team is presently working with a partner to find the right markets in Manila and abroad.

Outsize organically fertilized long beans versus normal long beans
Outsize organically fertilized long beans versus normal long beans

Another way we hope to bypass middle-men is to use the organic fertilizer ourselves. One of our workers tested the quality of our fertilizer by planting a row of long beans in his garden. He fertilized some of his plants with our fertilizer and the others with “normal” fertilizer. All the other conditions were identical – same seeds used, same soil, same method of planting and tending – so that the only difference was the fertilizer used.

The result was quite amazing. The plants that were fertilized with our organic fertilizer had long beans that were almost twice as long and more than twice as thick as the ones that were fertilized using “normal” fertilizers.

We will be further developing our production of organic fertilizer and growing of vegetables in our new model-farm in Laguna. We hope to encourage the poor to use the simple methods that we develop to produce good food for themselves. We will also be using these methods to teach our Goducate trainee workers in our Goducate Campsite in Iloilo to produce food for themselves.

One of Goducate’s main means to help poor Asians to help themselves is to help them to feed themselves with decent food.

Goducate believes that every child deserves decent nutrition and decent education.

Goducate training camp site (3)

Our 2 agriculture consultants
Our 2 agriculture consultants

Last week about 40 people attended our Goducate Campsite ground-breaking ceremony. These were dear men and women who have offered to help to develop the camp.

Among them were 2 young men, Mike and Jeru, who have will be leaving for USA later this month on a “scholarship” from the Wilds Camp of North Carolina. The Wilds Camp has generously provided their airfares to USA and will train Mike for about 6 weeks and Jeru for 2 weeks at their campsite. Mike and Jeru have been helping at our camps for poor kids for the past year and have proven themselves to be good camp leaders.

Helping Asians help themselves by teaching them to produce food
Helping Asians help themselves by teaching them to produce food

An architect, Hermes, has also offered to help us to plan and design the camp. He is an old friend who has previously worked in Singapore for four years.

An eminent professor of soil science, Prof Hope, was busy inspecting the characteristics of the camp soil. Prof Hope’s gut feel is that the soil in the valley portion of the campsite is fertile and suitable for vegetable production. After the ground-breaking, soil tests from different portions of the campsite were taken for lab tests.

Accompanying Prof Hope was Dan, an expert in sustainable organic vegetable farming. Goducate hopes to not only produce enough food for our trainees but also to teach our trainees how to grow good crops without polluting the soil and our bodies. In the group of experts was an enterprising young aqua-culture researcher who will help us to develop our own fish-farms.

Before we begin to build, we want to plant the right trees in the right places because building will take months to build but trees take years to grow. Also, we realize that if Goducate wants to help poor Asians to help themselves, then one of the most important things to teach them is how to grow enough food for themselves!

Goducate training camp site (2)

Flat piece of ground in the valley
Flat piece of ground in the valley

When we first negotiated with Nanay Gonzales to buy the land in Alimodian, Panay, Philippines, it was a “remote” rural place. However, over the past year amazing unexpected developments have taken place!

Each time I visited the site from Iloilo City, I noticed changes along the way. Firstly, I noticed new residential subdivisions were sprouting out along the road. So what had earlier seemed like a rural campsite was now only about 15 minutes from middle-class housing projects. Secondly, the pot-holed road has been largely transformed into a nice national road. A possible reason for this upgrading is the new city airport nearby.

Though the city is fast “encroaching,” the campsite still has a nice camping ambience because it is a 5 minute ride over rough rural track from the national road. Furthermore, the terrain of the campsite – a valley between two hilly ridges – offers a nice, secluded country atmosphere.

Forest of mahogany trees
Forest of mahogany trees

We had earlier thought that the land was over 9 hectares but after a proper land survey we found out that it is 8.2 hectares (about the size of 20 soccer fields). The hilly portions of the land are covered with fruit, mahogany and bamboo trees. The flat valley portion is planted with rice and vegetables. Two springs of water provide adequate water supply. According to the owner, these springs continue to provide water, even in the dry season. This is very important because the camp hopes to produce enough vegetables, fruits and food (except rice) for our trainees.

Due to financial constraints, we will divide the development of the campsite into phases. The first phase of development will occupy about a quarter of the land area and should begin as soon as funds come in. Hopefully, we can gravel the roads, set up the electrical lines and build the multipurpose hall before the rainy season sets in in a few months time. Hopefully, we will take in our first batch of Goducate trainees by the last quarter of this year!