New projects at the Cambodia Goducate Children’s Home

The raining season in Cambodia is over, and construction on a few projects commenced at the Goducate Children’s Home in Prey Nob, Cambodia, in Dec 2010. One of the projects was to build a security fence around the farm area. Fruits and vegetables used to disappear, or else get trampled or eaten by wandering cows or buffalo from outside the Home, and we hope that the fence will keep future intruders out.

Work has indeed started. We built a low brick wall along the front perimeter and the fence will be fixed above this brick wall. For the other 3 sides, we will not build the brick walls.

Front Fence

With the completion of the fence within another month, the children at the Home will commence once again with planting and tending to their little plots of vegetables. Rice and corn will also be planted, and all these will provide the residents with a good supply of wholesome, organic food for the dinner table.

Progress at Goducate’s first backyard farm

On Dec 13 I reported on how Goducate model-farm manager went to Dayap village to help start up our first backyard (or frontyard) farm. He has since returned to Nanayanita’s vegetable patch. The pictures show how the long-bean plants have grown.

Nanayanita and two other women from Dayap also visited our model farm to learn what can be done. These other two women have also started frontyard farming at home.

Nanayanita's long-bean plants at 2 weeks
Nanayanita's long-bean plants at 3 weeks
Women from Dayap at Goducate model farm

Helping poor Asians – one backyard at a time (Part 2)

I was told by a Filipino friend that many Filipinos don’t plant vegetables in their backyard because their neighbors will simply help themselves to the vegetables. And most Filipinos would rather lose their vegetables than lose the friendship of their neighbors!

I believe that this is a real problem because many Asian countries share this same communal characteristic. However, I believe that for every problem there is a possible solution. And my solution to this problem is that we should help the whole community to grow vegetables so that all will have vegetables of their own!

Of course, the next question is how do we get a whole community to produce their own vegetables? In every community, there are hard-working people and lazy people – and usually the lazy ones outnumber the hard-working ones. However, I believe that the power of envy is a very powerful motivator – even to the lazy ones!

I believe that if our community worker himself starts with his own little backyard plot in the community then after 3 months, the sight of his juicy tomatoes, red chillies, over-size bitter gourds, extra long long-beans, crunchy pakchoy will evoke enough envy among the neighbors to ask not only for freebies but also for a few earthworms (to produce good fertilizer) and a few tomato seeds and long-bean cuttings!

A little envy, greed and competition among mothers may just be what’s needed to turn Asia’s idle backyards to productive food machines for Asia’s poor!


Goducate believes that the key to the success of this plan is to train community workers who can first turn their own backyards into “model-farms” and then let envy drive one neighbor after another to turn their backyards into model-farms.

The first batch of community workers in Laguna are already being trained in the Goducate model farm there. The large farm in Iloilo will hopefully take in their first batch in December.