Goducate student volunteers earn pocket money by collecting water hyacinths

Seven of Goducate’s young volunteers in Laguna are collecting water hyacinths to earn money to cover some of their school or college expenses. They borrow a small fishing boat to paddle out to where water hyacinths grow wild in Tagumpay Village, near Laguna Lake. They are paid PhP 150 ($3.20) per 1000 pieces. Working in the mornings before class, or in the afternoons after class, each can earn an average of PhP300 a week, enough to cover expenses such as fares to school or costs of some school projects.

These students are part of Goducate’s music program. Two of them are already teaching younger children how to play the recorder, and two are in the Goducate College Scholarship program.

The water hyacinth project is run by a Goducate volunteer, who dries, cleans and flattens the stalks and then sells the harvested material as woven sheets 16 inches by 16 inches in size. These sheets can be assembled into bags, slippers, coin purses, table mats, vases, and so on. The project organizer is also learning how to make these finished products. The aim is to be able to get these products made locally and create jobs for the villagers. By doing so, he also hopes he can increase the rate he pays those who harvest the stalks.

Returning with harvested stalks
Returning with harvested stalks
Woven sheet from water hyacinth stalks
Woven sheet from water hyacinth stalks
Finished products (bags and vases)
Finished products (bags and vases)

Goducate agricultural team gave lectures four higher educational institutions in North Sumatra

Recently, members of Goducate’s agriculture team gave separate lectures at Universitas Prima Indonesia, STAKPN, STTT, and GMKI/STT-HKBP in Medan, Tarutung, Parapat, and Pematang Siantar, respectively, in North Sumatra. More than 700 faculty and students attended the four lectures.

At Universitas Prima Indonesia, the topic focused on vermicomposting for palm-oil plantations. The university has a school of agrotechnology whose students are assured of employment in the palm-oil industry after their graduation. It appeared that the majority of students had previously heard about vermicomposting but were clueless on how to raise worms for converting palm-oil-mill wastes into organic fertilizer. The lecture generated a lot of questions after the process was explained with the aid of graphics from Central Plantations Group, which had last year received technical advice from us on how to improve its vermicomposting project with palm-oil-mill wastes as primary substrates for earthworms (see blog, July 3, 2015).

For the STAKPN, STTT, and GMKI/STT-HKBP audience, the topic focused on Moringa production, processing, and utilization. The faculty and students of these higher-educational institutions regularly do community work, and they find Moringa most relevant in improving the lives of the needy in the populations they serve.

By teaching the students on the importance, production, processing, and utilization of Moringa, Goducate expects that they will pass on the knowledge to their parents, relatives, neighbors, and the communities where they will live or work after graduation.

 

 

Lecture at Universitas Prima Indonesia
Lecture at Universitas Prima Indonesia

Goducate assists food security needs of households displaced by volcano eruptions in Indonesia

The intermittent explosions of Mount Sinabung have displaced more than 22,000 families in the Karo highlands of North Sumatra. The volcano started emitting gases in September 2013, which eventually intensified into pyroclastic flows stretching as far as three kilometers away. The hot ashes had, on many occasions, blanketed the vegetative cover and caused significant damage to horticultural crops, poultry, and livestock. The smoke also triggered respiratory-related problems among the affected population.

Upon invitation from an organization based in Kabanjahe city that is providing civic support to Mount Sinabung victims, we briefed their officers on food-security matters that Goducate has been sharing with Indonesians during the past three years. These include topics on Moringa production, processing, and utilization; systems of rice intensification; hydroponics and aquaponics; vermicomposting and vermitea brewing; container gardening; food always in the home (FAITH) gardening; effective microorganisms for crop production; and, improved coffee, cacao, and chili production practices.

Two days after the briefing, we gave a detailed presentation on the benefits from Moringa to some Mount Sinabung community leaders. After the lecture, we visited Kampong (village) Siosar, the government designated resettlement site for households displaced by the Mount Sinabung eruptions. Kampong Siosar is a 45-minute drive from Kota Kabanjahe.

The 300 resettled families in the village have each been provided with a decent house and 5,000 sq m land. The plots of land are about 2 km away from the resettlement site.

Some households had strawberry grown in polybags in their frontyards, but only enough for home consumption. All the 300 families face strong headwind on matters of food security.

We recommended that each family starts by planting at least two Moringa seedlings in its backyard. Because of the 1500-meter altitude of the site, the most suitable Moringa type is PKM1 first introduced in India. In the near-term, we hope to empower the displaced households with more knowledge on holistic and sustainable farming practices to help them achieve food security and earn a stable income.

Presentation to community leaders
Presentation to community leaders
Strawberries in frontyard
Strawberries in frontyard
At land allocated to one of the displaced families
At land allocated to one of the displaced families