印度尼西亚小型农场发展的新领导者 2015-04-28

YAS 项目经理 Hermansyah 与 Anthony 和 Kusnadi 夫妇一同参加了在泰国召开的 2011 年 ECHO 亚洲农业与社区发展会议。他们的目的是与像他们那样的其他个人与组织建立联系,并了解可以在其领域实施的技术。在会议期间,到梅州大学蠕虫堆肥设施的考察对他们影响极大,该蠕虫堆肥设施专注于使用蠕虫分解有机废物,以便生成高质量的堆肥与蠕虫液肥。受到实地考察所见的启发,团队返回棉兰,开始进行各种蠕虫堆肥系统的实验。

Asia   Vermiculture   Small Farm Resourc...  

Bike-powered Appropriate Technology featured in Smithsonian Magazine 2015-04-20

The coffee team from IDDS Tanzania was highlighted in Smithsonian Magazine this month with a story about how a self-taught Tanzanian inventor, nonprofit workers, and MIT students collaborated on a potentially life-changing tool for coffee growers.

East Africa   Bicycle   Coffee   Appropriate Techno...  

Research Update: From The ECHO Global Farm 2015-04-06

Two new field experiments are being established this month at ECHO’s Global Demonstration Farm in southwest Florida. Both studies involve tropical legumes, which provide farmers with a source of green manure, grain, and/or animal fodder.

Research  

Community Member Highlight - Jean Apedoh 2015-03-31

ECHOcommunity member Jean Apedoh is a trained agronomist from Togo who has become a recognized authority in West Africa on a technique used to increase rice yields called SRI. Jean first came across the System of Rice Intensification (SRI) at the 2010 ECHO West Africa Forum through a presentation given by Erika Styger of Cornell University.

SRI is a system for planting and maintaining rice crops that has proven, under certain conditions, to increase yield while reducing plant density and water application.

West Africa   SRI System Of Rice...  

Compost Heap Impact on Habari Maalum 2015-03-24

The Habari Maalum Tree Nursery, outside of Arusha, Tanzania, provides over 200,000 tree seedlings per year to the surrounding villages. Until recently, HM has relied upon forest soil collected from the Olmotonyi Forest on the lower slopes of Mt Meruto replenish their nursery.

Increasingly, there is opposition and expense to travel the 10km up into the forest to obtain this soil. While the nursery has permission to harvest this soil, the Forest Department frowns upon this activity, and it interferes with other farmers who are interplanting their farm crops under the early canopy of the plantation forest, a method called "Taungya."

East Africa   Composting  

Resources from the Wheaton College 2015 HNGR Symposium 2015-03-16

The 2015 Symposium sponsored by the John Deere Foundation explored the complex linkages between conflict and hunger and underscored the fundamental importance of reconciliation work for regaining food security in post-conflict settings.

As the Symposium Plenary Speaker, Dr. Emmanuel Katongole addressed the role of reconciliation in the multiple dimensions of post-conflict recovery, with a focus on regional examples from East Africa that directly address agricultural initiatives as integral to the process of rebuilding peaceful communities that support healthy agrarian societies.

 

ECHO Asia Notes Issue 23 2015-03-10

Many of the forages that farmers currently provide to their livestock are of low quality but are perceived as being readily available and low in cost. However, the opportunity costs of spending time seeking forages is often not considered; the time spent herding and tethering animals to find feed is also time away from other educational or income generating activities. I propose an alternative method: to integrate tropical forages into the smallholder farming system, in order to improve farmers’ livelihoods.

Asia  

Kacheri Woman Reaps Benefits From TOGETHER Program Poultry Vaccinations 2015-03-02

Robert Okumu-Obonya, ECHO Technical Advisor for the TOGETHER Program, an initiative of ECHO, Church World Service, and MAP International, with funding support from St. Mary’s United Methodist Church Foundation, reports on progress being made through a poultry vaccination program being implemented in the Kacheri sub-county of northern Uganda.  The initiative, which facilitates the vaccination of rural chickens against Newcastle disease, is one of several TOGETHER Program efforts being implemented to improve the short- and long-term livelihoods of community members in Kerheri and neighboring sub-counties. 

Viral Newcastle disease is evidenced by gasping, contorted birds with greenish/watery droppings which results in an almost 100 percent mortality rate among poultry where the disease is not under control.  Such outbreaks are a major setback for the typical rural household for which chickens contribute a huge economic and nutritional resource.

East Africa   Newcastle Disease   Vaccination   Chickens   Together Project  

On The ECHO Global Farm: Grazing Management Systems 2015-02-23

ECHO's recent activity to integrate livestock more effectively includes revamping the farm's pastures and grazing approach. While for many years ECHO has demonstrated cut-and-carry forage feeding systems for goats, in early 2014 our interns and staff identified goals for minimizing the labor needed to feed the animals while increasing the carrying capacity of grazing animals on the farm's pastures.

Potential for Reducing Smoke and Improving Soil Fertility in Northern Thailand 2015-02-16

Every February-March, rice fields are burned throughout Thailand. These very low temperature burns produce huge amounts of smoke that causes serious public health problems, as well as greenhouse gases, smog precursors, dioxin and furans. This practice also destroys valuable organic matter contained in the straw and kills the micro-fauna in the soil.  In comparison, the field prototype that Warm Heart is developing utilizes the rice straw as a resource by pyrolyzing it. Charring the organic matter at high temperature in the absence of oxygen reduces the noxious gases released and is virtually smokeless. 

Asia   Biochar