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Rural CBO perfects seed production for native vegetables

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By Kimani Chege  (email the author)
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Posted  Tuesday, August 17  2010 at  00:00

Paul Okong’o, a retired teacher from Yala in Nyanza, chairs a community-based farmer’s organisation called Technology Adoption Through Research Organisation (TATRO).

The CBO trains farmers on how to produce certified seeds for the traditional leafy vegetables in both Nyanza and Western provinces.

At his age, you would expect Okong’o to be slowing down, but he says his dream of a community that is able to feed itself through simple farming techniques keeps him going.

Every morning he calls various trainers across 11 districts in western Kenya to plan for the daily activities which include farm visits and hosting groups of farmers at demonstration sites.

“The small-holders discovered a market for their indigenous vegetables. However, they needed seeds that would produce high-yield, diseases - free varieties,” Okong’o says.

The rising demand for traditional vegetables played a key role in the birth of the CBO.

However, to produce seeds, Okong’o and his group faced a new challenge.

The production and sale of seed must follow strict guidelines provided by Kenya Plant Health Inspectorate Service (KEPHIS).

Unlike Tanzania which has a system that allows farmers to produce ‘declared’ seeds, in Kenya they needed partnerships.

Among the collaborators who came to the rescue were CAB International, Kenya Seed Company, Kenya Agricultural Research Institute (KARI) and KEPHIS. Also in the loop was Arusha- based World Vegetable Centre.

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Participatory approach

At the several demonstration sites across 11 districts, farmers are taught best practices in seed handling, controlling weeds and pests and packaging.

The group works closely with the Kenya Seed Company which is licensed to produce certified seeds.

Through this, the farmers are contracted to produce seeds that meet the required standards.

Okong’o says the group started seed production in late 1999.

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