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Maendeleo Vijijini
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It last rained in Makueni County some seven months ago, and all the seasonal rivers are dry and water is scarce.
In
Songeni village in the heart of Mbooni East constituency, however,
things are different. Members of Mukaso Self-Help Group have plenty of
water, which they are using to farm.
The villagers collected the water when it last rained in February, stored it in sand dams and are using it for irrigation.
“Access
to water has been our biggest nightmare in this village for some time,”
says Rose Mutinda, a farmer and a mother of five. “But with the dams,
we now grow our crops without worry.”
A sand dam is
made by building a thick wall across a seasonal river. Therefore, when
it rains, water is stored on one side of the wall.
Residents then use the water, and more is trapped underneath the sand, which the wall also blocks from being washed downstream.
Once the top water is finished, one can easily dig into the sand
to access the stored water. The sand normally protects the water
beneath it from evaporating.
Mukaso group grows French beans on two acres for export using the water from the sand dam.
“We
sell our produce to Kenya Fresh Ltd, a company that exports the harvest
to Europe. So far we have harvested twice,” says Harrison Kitaa, the
group’s chairman.
Since July when Mukaso group started
selling the beans to Kenya Fresh Ltd, they have accumulated a total of
Sh89,000 in their account, after deducting all the expenses. The company
pays Sh60 per kilo of French beans.
BEST WAY TO HARVEST WATER
Makueni
County receives annual rainfall of between 150mm and 650mm in the best
case scenario, according to data from the Kenya Agricultural and
Livestock Research Organisation.
According to Africa
Sand Dam Foundation, some 93 groups in Makueni and Machakos counties are
benefitting from 256 sand dams built across various seasonal rivers
since 2010.
The dams support an average of 12,732 households.
“Drought
and famine are somehow culturally accepted norms in many arid and
semi-arid areas,” says Matheka Cornelius Kyalo, the Executive Director
of Africa Sand Dam Foundation.
“But with the
construction of sand dams, the burden is eased as two birds are killed
with one stone. First is that residents do not spend much time and
energy in search of water and they grow crops for sale and subsistence,”
he says, adding water in a sand dam can last one year serving tens of
households.
Some 3km from Songeni village, Kee group in
Ngilani village, also farms sukuma wiki, spinach, cowpeas, tomatoes and
onions using water from a sand dam built on River Tawa.
Joshua
Mutua, the group’s chairman, says all their 69 members have farms
ranging from half-an-acre to an acre where they grow vegetables,
tomatoes and onions, which they sell at local markets.
“What we need is water and we will farm because we have vast agricultural land.”
Jamlick
Mutie, an irrigation and water resources engineer, says sand dams are
the best way to harvest water in arid areas because they are constructed
across a seasonal river and they don’t affect people downstream.
SOURCE: NATION MEDIA
SOURCE: NATION MEDIA
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