Helping poor Asians – one backyard at a time! (Part 1)

In my travels through Asia, I am saddened by the poor nourishment of many Asian children. My training as a doctor helps me to pick up signs of malnourishment (eg. under-sized children, late maturity, general lethargy) in almost every Asian country – whether rural or urban.

The average traveler is more likely to be impressed by the nicer clothes that they wear, the newer electronic gadgets in their hands and the slickly packed snacks that they eat and assume that these children are doing well.

An average meal for many Asian children is a plate of rice, topped with a little instant noodles (from a pack that is shared among the whole family). This convenient, tasty meal may satisfy the child’s taste buds and fill his belly but will surely not adequately nourish him. Sad to say, such meals are becoming more common as we “progress”! After all, to many mothers the slickly packaged instant noodles suggests a “scientific” meal for the modern mum!

I do not believe that Asian mothers deliberately want to under-nourish their children. I believe that ignorance contributes significantly to this state of affairs. And I believe that this trend can be reversed – one backyard at a time!

For the past year, Goducate has been experimenting with different aspects of bio-intensive backyard farming and we are convinced that with the right type of organic fertilizers (easily produced by earthworms), the right type of seeds (easily obtained from agricultural organizations) and a little encouragement, Asian mums can produce enough “organic” vegetables to feed their children in their own backyards. With today’s agri-technology, there is no reason why the poor cannot enjoy the freshest, most nutritious meals from their own backyards.

Goducate presently is developing two farms in the Philippines – one in Iloilo (in the central part of the Philippines) and the other in Laguna (in the northern island of Luzon) – to train community workers for Asia.

Goducate hopes to help Asians help themselves – beginning with one backyard at a time!

Beginning of Goducate model farm, Laguna Philippines

A few days ago, our team of workers struck good cool water when we dug a 30 meter deep well in our model farm in Laguna, Philippines (2 hours south of Manila airport).

Yesterday, the first load of building materials were delivered to build the little farm house. There is an urgency to get things going before the rainy season starts and hinders construction.

A kind donor has donated a vehicle for transportation of farm goods. And another donor has donated funds for a shredder to shred the decaying vegetation needed for the production of organic fertilizer (by our hard-working earthworms – through the process of vermi-composting.)

We hope to have the farm ready to produce vegetables for our Goducate workers’ families soon. More importantly, Goducate staff will be teaching the poor in the communities where we serve to produce vegetables for their families. Excess fertilizer and farm produce will be sold.The funds from these will help to fund Goducate work in Laguna.

Goducate believes that scientific, small-scale, sustainable farming will be a useful means to help poor Asians help themselves.

Therefore this little farm is a simple but vital link in our plan to help the poor to help themselves.

Water source for Goducate model farm in Laguna Philippines

Last week, our Goducate workers and Goducate volunteers finished installing a hand-pump water system for our model-farm in Laguna, Philippines. (For those city-dwellers who get water from a tap and have never used a hand-pump to get water, a hand-pump water system is one which has a lever that needs to be pumped up and down to get the water to flow. You get a free work-out while getting your water!)

The part of Laguna where our model-farm is situated is famous for its sulphurous hot-water spa-resorts. Our workers were joking that it would be good if we drilled into a hot-water source so that they could enjoy the spa-life of the rich and leisured! However, hot, sulphurous water would be disastrous for our worms (which produce our organic fertilizer) and for the crops which we hope to raise on the farm!

Since our farm is within 10 Km from Mount Makiling where there is a large Geothermal Power Plant our chances of drilling into a hot water source was very high. Most of our neighbours had hot sulphurous water from their hand-pump water systems and had to spend much time and effort to cool their water before using it for their crops or cattle.

As almost all well-drillings over 10 meters resulted in hot water, we were thankful that our drilling to 30 meters produced cool water!!
We now have a good source of water that can be used for our farm and can also be shared with our neighbours.

We are looking forward to the day when beautiful crops of leafy vegetables, brinjals, ladies fingers (okra), long beans, bitter gourds, water-melons will be produced on that farm – all fertilized by the abundant source of organic fertilizers that our worms (African night crawlers) produce.

We are looking to the day that our workers will be self-sufficient in producing food for their families and more importantly setting the example to others in the community that it is possible to use nature’s abundance (plus a little technology and diligence) to produce food for their families.

This is one of Goducate’s ways of helping poor Asians help themselves in this typhoon-prone area of the Philippines.

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