Baa baa white bundles of joy at Goducate Training Center

Six white bundles of joy arrived past midnight at the Goducate training center in San Miguel, Iloilo, The Philippines, a fortnight ago. The ram and five ewes are gifts to Goducate from Mr. Manny Delleva, a successful agri-entrepreneur from nearby Negros Island. They are hair sheep—ie, they grow more hair than wool, and are thus easier to take care of.

The ram is of Katahdin breed while the ewes are of St. Croix’s. The parental stocks were imported by Mr. Delleva from the US Virgin Islands in 2010. These sheep are excellent breeders. If allowed to fall in love unrestrained, each mature ewe can lamb twice a year with twins and occasional triplets and quadruplets. They have sweet faces and disposition, don’t jump on you, over you, or over the fence, and thus make excellent pets. They eat practically anything, even gmelina seeds, so they are excellent weed eaters and lawn mowers. They taste good and are an excellent source of lean organic meat. They adapt easily to tropical environment and are resistant to parasites and diseases common to small ruminants.

Eldest ewe (L) and ram (R) under restraint.
Being handfed seeds from Gmelina, a pulp tree endemic at the training center.

On their first day at the training center, the hierarchical “leadersheep” was immediately evident. The eldest ewe took charge and, being accustomed to range management, it led the flock in exploring the hillsides where they liberally took bites at whatever greens they found. A team of camp workers went after them, roped the leader, and towed it back. Sheep have a strong instinct to follow the one in front of them, so it was easy to bring back the rest of the flock into the open field. From then on, every day the eldest ewe has been harnessed by a rope secured to a stake to avoid a repeat of the “wandering” incident. The ram has also had to be restrained because it tends to take a secondary “leadersheep” role leading the younger ewes to the vegetable patch on taste-test sorties.

Goducate Orchestra plays at shopping mall

The Goducate Orchestra in Laguna, The Philippines, was invited to play at a shopping mall on Dec 22. It was good exposure for the orchestra. Shoppers stayed back not just to take photographs with the members of the orchestra, but also to invite the orchestra to play for private functions and also to enquire about possible tuition. We are in the process of trying to rent premises for a studio. When the studio is ready, the members of the orchestra will be able to use the place to give music lessons and thus earn some money for their living expenses and school allowances.

The mall gave the orchestra a grocery voucher worth PHP3000 ($68), which was used for a party to celebrate hitting the target of the fund-raising concert, Concert for a Cause, which was held earlier in December and which raised PHP33,700, sufficient to support 4 college students for a year.

The mall has also invited the orchestra to play again there in February.

Performing at the shopping mall
The party
The party

Progress at extended Goducate Model Farm

In mid- November, Vic and Ric, the Goducate agricultural consultants from Iloilo visited the newly extended model farm to give our workers a short training session. Workers and volunteers soon got to work preparing plots and raised beds and planting a wide range of vegetables, including sweet corn, bell peppers, tomatoes, calamansi, papayas, string beans, bittergourds, “pechay”, okra, eggplants, and cucumbers. A return visit was made in early December to assess progress.

The scanty rainfall meant that much effort had to be put into manual watering of the plants. The efforts have been rewarded, with some of the plants starting to bear fruit by mid December.

The farm has also been experimenting with hydroponic gardening, or the use of water and a nutrient solution rather than soil for the growing of vegetable. This method saves on weeding and the use of expensive fertilizer. In addition, no tracts of land are needed. The plants can be grown in trash such as plastic bottles and Styrofoam containers.

Fetching water from improvised reservoir
Bittergourd bearing fruit at 1 month
Lettuce being grown hydroponically