Official opening of the girls workshop in Goducate Children’s Home Cambodia

Yesterday was the official opening of the girls’ workshop at the Goducate Children’s Home in Prey Nob, Cambodia.  The ceremony was attended by two personnel from Goducate HQ.

Two sewing machines donated by supporters from Singapore have been set up in the sewing room.  Some of the girls will be trained in sewing. In the baking room, the girls had prepared delicious durian cupcakes the night before, and they showed off their decorating skills.

The Home has received orders for cakes from Rawlings Institute, a training school in Cambodia, and the girls will be able to bake regularly and draw a small income from the orders.

The ribbon cutting at the official opening of the girls workshop
The ribbon cutting at the official opening of the girls workshop

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Two new sewing machines
Two new sewing machines
decorating cupcakes
decorating cupcakes

 

 

 

 

Boys from Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia take part in soccer league

The boys from the Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia spent 2 days and 1 night at a sports fest taking part in a soccer league organized by the Rawlings Foundation and held at the Rawlings Institute soccer field, an hour’s drive away from the Home.

The Goducate Children’s Home sits on about 7 hectares of land, and among the facilities there is a sports area with a junior soccer field. Kicking a ball around is one of the boys’ favourite leisure activities. There is no formal soccer training. The boys pick up the game playing among themselves and with the staff.

There were 9 other teams from different parts of Cambodia in the league. Prizes were given for the first 2 teams, but all went back with a consolation prize for participating in the league.

Warm-up time
Warm-up time
Our team
Our team

Making ornamental orchid plants at Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia

People in third-world countries have their own creative ways of survival, and the children at the Goducate Children’s Home in Cambodia have been introduced to one of these. The Home was privileged to have been visited towards the end of last year by a remarkable woman, Mrs Purita Tabanao, an agriculturist by profession, who had been involved both in the government sector and later in a non-governmental organization’s community-development efforts in the Philippines, in Cebu province as well as in several places in Mindanao.

In her more than 30 years of experience, she found that an easy way of earning some extra income is to plant orchids and other ornamental plants for sale. All it needs is some extra time every morning for watering the plants, and some extra time at the weekends for propagating them.

During her stay at the Goducate Children’s Home, she taught the children a novel way of growing orchids for sale. The orchids are not grown in containers. Instead they are mounted on pieces of wood, a method suitable for humid climates. The bark is removed from pieces of wood, which is left to dry for a week. Then the cuttings are tied to the wood with thin strips of stocking material and sprayed with water morning and evening. The ties are removed when the cuttings have grown into the wood.

This method costs us nothing. We had a few dozen pots of orchids growing near the staff house, mainly as gifts for visitors, so cuttings could be obtained from these plants. The small pieces of wood are available from the grounds of the Home, and the larger ones from nearby mountains. The plants are generally sold whole, together with their mounts. Hotels often rent these ornaments for big functions.

The first flowering is expected in July or August. The project is suitable for both the boys and the girls, who have taken to it enthusiastically, and there is healthy competition to see which dorm’s or orchids will flower best.

We hope to make turn this project into a business in the future.

Preparing the  wooden mounts
Preparing the wooden mounts
Tying cuttings to long pieces of wood mounted in concrete
Tying cuttings to long pieces of wood mounted in concrete