Biointensive Garden Izalco, El Salvador Organic Mini Far… · Biointensive Garden Izalco, El...
Transcript of Biointensive Garden Izalco, El Salvador Organic Mini Far… · Biointensive Garden Izalco, El...
Biointensive Garden
Izalco, El SalvadorUpdate to the Board
June 19, 2010
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Structure of talk
• Background on El Salvador and Bio-intensive
gardens
• Detail of Rainbow support for program over
past 6 years
• Challenges
• Outcomes
• Path Forward
Rainbow of Hope Philosophy
• We believe in the value of caring for the earth and its people and that love has no geographical boundaries.
• We believe in the dignity of, and justice for, all people, regardless of sex, race, creed, religion, or culture.
• We believe that as members of our global family, we have a responsibility to work towards this vision.
• We have abundant hope that together we can make a difference
Rainbow of Hope in
El Salvador
• Two of the United Nation‟s Millennium Goals, agreed to by all of the countries of the world, and which are implicit in Rainbow‟s philosophy, are:
1. to eradicate poverty and hunger and
2. to promote environmental sustainability.
Bio-intensive Mini-Farming
One of the options to
achieve these goals
involves the use of
organic “biointensive”
mini-farming techniques,
which enable
marginalized people to
become food self-
sufficient.
Land Base: 100 km x 200 km
Climate:
Wet Season (tropical): May-October
Dry Season: November- April
Economy:
Agriculture: Coffee,
sugar,corn,rice,beans,oil
seeds, cotton, sorghum,
shrimp, beef,dairy
Industry: food processing,beverages, petroleum,
chemicals, fertilizer, textiles,
furniture, light metals
El Salvador: Geography
Location of garden
El Salvador: People
Population
• 6.2 million
– 49% below poverty line, earning less than 3$ per day
– 10% unemployment
Demographics:
• 0-14 yrs: 38%
• 14-64 yrs: 57%
• * 60% of the population is less than 25 years old
• 65+: 5%
Labor Force:
• 49% agriculture
• 15% industry
• 55% services
Diet of the poor consists mainly of corn and beans – imported food products are expensive
Agriculture Situation in El Salvador
Millions of agricultural workers have been displaced and their condition
worsened due to:
• Destruction of cotton production during the 1980‟s civil wars
• Collapse of the sugar industry in mid-1990‟s
• 3 years of drought severely reducing coffee production, followed by global
slump in coffee prices in late 90‟s
• Hurricane Mitch in 1998 and earthquakes in 2001 caused major economic
disruption
Adoption of large scale agricultural practices is not affordable to those most in
need– and are not environmentally sustainable
The large younger generation has little first hand agricultural experience, and minimal access to land.
Providing people with the training to grow their own food and supplement their incomes with the minimal resources they have has the potential to be the seed for elevating them out of grinding poverty
Back ground: Biointensive
Organic Mini-farms
• There are numerous organic agriculture techniques/models that can be followed to enhance small farm food security
• In the case of the Rainbow sponsored projects in El Salvador, the “bio-intensive” approach has been adopted.
Back ground: Biointensive
Organic Mini-farms
• The techniques being used, which are actually centuries old, have been scientifically enhanced and adapted for impoverished regions around the world by such people as John Jeavons of Willits, California for the past 30 years.
• A national university in Mexico City has trained 2 million Mexicans in biointensive techniques over the last 15 years and has targeted to introduce these techniques to all countries in Central and South America in the next 5 years
Bio-intensive farming techniques
The key benefits of these techniques, which make them ideally suited to marginalized people world wide, are that they:
• Increase production up to 4 times per unit area relative to commercial agriculture
• Are focussed on people with minimal land and resources, with farming techniques developed and optimized for very small individual, community and village plots
• Do not require any machinery
• Reduce water consumption by 50%
• Reduce dependence on petroleum based fertilizer by extensive use of composting
• Focus on utilization of natural insecticides and companion planting with insect repellent plants
Overview of the Site and the
Bio-intensive Method
Biointensive gardening- key practices
• Use of compost
• Double digging
• Close spacing of plants, correct crop rotations, companion planting
• Organic methods of pathogen and pest control
• For more detail see John Jeavon`s book “How to Grow More Vegetables”
• Composting is a critical component of any sustainable gardening method
• At the Izalco garden, various forms of composting are employed including:
Conventional biointensive methods,
bocashi (composting and fermenting) and
Vermiculture
• All of which are used to improve soil fertility, and eliminate the need for inorganic fertilizer
Francisco and Santos
assembling a
compost pile
Mauricio watering a bocashi pile
Bio-intensive Gardening Methods: Composting
Double Digging is the second key component in the Bio-intensive method. It involves:
1) Carefully digging out the topsoil to expose the mineral subsoil
2) Compost is then added to the subsoil, and is mixed in thoroughly
3) The topsoil is then returned to the surface of this newly enriched layer.
This process increases the depth of productive root zone, and hence improves productivity
Bio-intensive Gardening Methods: Double Digging
The bottom line :
Great soil = great production
Brenda showing how deep the fork can be
easily sunk into a bed which has been double-dug,
The good soil extends even deeper.
• The crops are planted in a closely spaced pattern
• This provides for more production per unit area
• But more importantly, the closely planted seedlings provide shade to lower
evaporation ( improved water use efficiency) and to discourage weeds.
• Crops are rotated between the beds to prevent pathogen accumulation and to
enrich the soil by alternating nitrogen fixers with heavy feeders etc.
One of the
farmers leading a
workshop and
demonstrating a
plant spacing
frame to help
with seedling
placement
Bio-intensive Gardening Methods:
Plant spacing, companion planting,
crop rotation
An array of biologic pest and pathogen control methods are
utilized at the site including an extract of these peppers
which is sprayed on soil and leaves
and which acts as a pesticide
Bio-intensive Gardening Methods:
Organic pest and pathogen control
Amendments such as lime
are also used
The site at Izalco is organized into 150 beds, which are each 4 feet by 25 feet.
Rainbow Organic Mini-farming
Demonstration Site : Izalco
• The Izalco site, whose name derives from that of the Izalco volcano that towers over the locality, is the focal organic mini-farming demonstration site.
• The site itself is the property of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary who also manage the Izalco Orphanage, where they care for and feed around 90 children.
Objectives for Izalco Demonstration
Garden
• Create a demonstration site for organic and bio-intensive agricultural techniques and adapt those techniques to Salvadorian climate, soils and plant species
• Train farmers from the region in basic agricultural skills, and who also agree to train other residents of their local communities
• Supplement the normal corn and beans diet of the orphanage with organically grown vegetables and fruit
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Support provided for 6 years 2004 through 2010
inclusive.
Support provided in the form of :
a) equipment and infrastructure
b) salaries
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Equipment and infrastructure :
Drilling and installation of water well for irrigation and drinking water,
including payment of montly power bill for groundwater pump
Purchase and installation of drip irrigation system for 100 beds
Purchase and installation of greenhouse for seedling production
Purchase and installation of vermiculture compóst system
Gardening tools, seeds, fruit tree seedlings, other miscellaneous materials
and equipment to support garden over the 6 years
The site for the garden was a donated 3 acre field near the orphanage.
It had been used for sugar cane and corn production.
• Work started in 2004 with drilling and installation of a well and water tower to allow for
irrigation of the garden through the dry season (November through April)
• This allows for year round production from the garden
Drip irrigation installation 2004
Drip irrigation reduces water
consumption and allows
continuous cultivation even
through the 5-month dry season –
November to April.
Irrigated beds 2009
Water Tower
November 2004
Water Tower
April 2009
Papaya Trees over time
Check out those
Papayas!
Panorama of garden as viewed from the water tower
April 2009
• In 2006 Rainbow sponsored construction of a greenhouse for starting the seedlings used for out-planting, and for growing tomatoes and peppers, which cannot tolerate the intense sun in El Salvador
Original greenhouse for seedlings, and shade cloths for tomatoes (2004)
New greenhouse for seedlings and tomatoes being constructed 2006(l), and in April 2009(r)
In 2007, Rainbow funded the construction
of a pair vermiculture compost units
Alec enjoying the
worms
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Salaries
for 55 farmers over the 6 years
approximately 6 farmers per year until 2009 when reduced to 3 farmers
per year
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Salaries
for organic agriculture technical support:
agrologist specialized in organic agriculture who provided:
√ training workshops for farmers,
√ trouble shot pest and disease problems in the garden as they arose and thereby trained the farmers in plant pathology and methods of organic pest control,
√ trained farmers in a variety of composting methods including vermiculture and bokashi Mauricio, our agrologist
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Salaries
√ for monthly visits to the
orphanage by a nutritionist
√ to assess childrens‟
nutritional status,
√ provide advice and
√ track changes in their
nutritional status as a
consequence of increased
consumption of organic
garden vegetables
Support provided by
Rainbow of Hope for Children
Salaries
√ For El Salvadorian
project coordinator who
coordinated all
purchases and training
and documented results
and financial aspects of
the project for required
reporting
Brenda Carpio, our program coordinator, without
whom the project would never have succeeded,
here with Juan, a boy from the orphanage
Challenges
• As with all projects, the first few years were ones of learning and trial and error,
• Seed supply issues: – donated seed from Europe, North America had poor germination,
– finding local seed sources with good germination was also a challenge (suspect old seed in many stores- i.e. foreign suppliers „dump‟ expired seed into third world markets)
• Suitable crops– some crops were not successful due to the elevation, very hot
temperatures encountered in Izalco (eg. Brussel sprouts, tomato)
• Disease/pests– Optimizing early identification and treatment with the appropriate
organic pest controls took time as the farmers learned and techniques were adapted
Outcomes
• Over time the vegetable production has steadily increased
• This is because of:
the improved soil conditions due to use of double digging and compost amendments
Improved soil conditions result in healthier plants, and greater fruit/vegetable production
Also, with Mauricio‟s excellent help, much greater knowledge about organic controls for insects and pathogens have been imparted to the farmers, leading to much healthier crops.
Also, over the last 2 years we have had Santos as a lead farmer- this consistency at the training site has been crucial. His presence, his ability to put into practice all of the biointensive and organic methods taught by Mauricio, and his excellent mentorship and leadership with the other farmers has led to improved productivity of the site.
Outcomes
At Izalco, the farmers have
produced 47 different types of
vegetables, various medicinal
plants and fruit trees
Outcomes
Year of project
Outcomes: Economics
• Please note that for the previous and upcoming graphs, the productivity is recorded as value of the crop in dollars
– This is because most of the food from the garden was utilized to feed the 90 children at the orphanage, only noni fruit was sold as a cash crop
– The graphs show the value of the garden to the orphanage, as these costs were NOT incurred, rather the money that would have been used to purchase these vegetables before, could then be redirected to purchase of other necessities
Outcomes All produce from the garden has gone to
feed the 90 children of the orphanage-
with yields increasing over time from
$6,0000 to $15,0000 dollars worth of
food annually
Outcomes The children play in the garden and, when it is possible, the
older children participate in some of the farm activities like
planting and harvesting
Playing in the orchard
Madre Ursula has set up
a playground with donated
items
Some of the boys
having fun planting
Outcomes
55 farmers have been employed and trained in a range of
organic agriculture techniques at the site
work terms ranging from 1 to 12 months
Outcomes
• Shorter 1 and 2 day training sessions have also been
conducted for local farmers and community groups, as well
as demonstrations for visitors from Universities in Central
America, environmental organizations and international and
national governmental and nongovernmental organizations.
Outcomes
• Since 2004, approximately
600 people have come to
visit and/or have received
demonstrations or training.
The site has also been
featured on national El
Salvadorian T.V. and radio.
Conclusions
• The Izalco Mini-farm demonstration site has been very successful
• In 2009 we achieved our goal of a self sustaining garden, where the amounts of production now exceed the monetary inputs!
Conclusions
• This on top of meeting all of our other goals to adapt the biointensive organic techniques to Salvadorian
climate, soils and plant species,
train farmers from the region in basic agricultural skills who also agree to train other residents of their local communities (55 farmers with intensive training, over 600 visitors received workshop level training, new gardens being established in adjacent communities)
supplement the normal corn and beans diet of the orphanage with organically grown vegetables and fruit ($6,000 to $15,000 of fruit and vegetables provided for the 90 children each year)
expose children to a working farm where they periodically help with planting, weeding and harvesting.
• This is a remarkable achievement and is a testament to the hard work of the farmers, our agronomist Mauricio, and our El Salvadorian coordinator, Brenda
Ongoing Funding
• In order to be truly self sufficient,
the garden would have to start
selling some of its produce, which
would lessen the amount of food
going to the orphanage
• We would like to continue
supporting this very important
project and the orphanage by
continuing to support:
– wages for the farmers and
– electricity costs to run the pump
for the irrigation.
Ongoing Funding
• We are asking Rainbow of Hope supporters to consider “adopting a farmer”.
– One farmer‟s wages and training for 1 month cost $150
• If this money can be raised:
the garden can be maintained at its full capacity and
continue to feed the children of the orphanage while
reaching out to the communities to improve their food security through training in organic agriculture.
Thank You for
Your Time !