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Peter Mwathi in his farm in Gichira, Nyeri County demonstrates how his
simple macadamia dehusker works. The dehusker projects to reduce farmers
workload by over 60 percent. PHOTO | IRENE MUGO | NATION MEDIA GROUP
By IRENE MUGO
The weather is chilly as Seeds of Gold team ventures into Peter Mwathi’s macadamia farm in Gichira, Nyeri County.
It
is currently the harvesting season in Nyeri and other neighbouring
counties where the crop is grown, including Embu, Kirinyaga, Meru and
Murang’a.
Wearing a white apron, Mwathi is surrounded
by a group of farmers on his two acres as he demonstrates how to use a
dehusker he has fabricated.
Traditionally, after
harvesting the produce, farmers collect the nuts in a sisal sack and
hire men to thump them to remove the husks.
Mwathi’s
machine, however, does the work effortlessly, reducing the workload by
over 60 per cent as it removes the husks 24 hours after harvesting to
prevent deterioration.
The husks are high in sugar and gum and if not removed early enough, they attract mould reducing quality of the nut.
His machine is made of metal, a mortar and a wheel which rotates squeezing the nuts to separate them from the husks.
At the top, a plastic bucket with an opening at the bottom is fixed against the mortar where the nuts are filled for dehusking.
On
the side is a metallic knob that a farmer rolls to push the mortar to
remove the husk off the nuts. Mwathi, an agricultural economist trained
at Egerton University, says he was inspired to fabricate the machine
last year due to the need to eliminate the tedious process of dehusking
macadamia nuts.
“Being a macadamia farmer, I knew the
challenge of dehusking the nuts and worked on an easy and cheaper way to
do the task,” he says. For now, his machine is manual but he says he is
working on making it electric for more efficiency.
The
chairman of Mt Kenya Macadamia Association, which brings together 50
members, notes the machine is currently going for Sh5,500. On the other
hand, prices of imported machines range between Sh60,000 and Sh70,000.
SHOULD NOT COMPROMISE EFFICIENCY
“The
machine can dehusk 200 to 500kg of nuts per day. We are leasing it to
farmers at Sh200 each day,” he says, adding farmers sell a kilo of the
nuts to Jungle Nuts Company at Sh120.
On the other hand, farmers hire people to dehusk and sort the nuts at ShSh300 per day.
Mwathi,
who has 60 mature trees that produce 2,000kg of nuts per year, says
macadamia is the new frontier especially as fortunes dwindle in coffee
and tea, once the main cash crops in Mt Kenya.
Macadamia nuts are used to make butter, cooking oil and cosmetic products such as soaps and shampoos.
David
Waweru, a senior technologist at Jomo Kenyatta University of
Agriculture and Technology’s School of Engineering, says a good
innovation must be simple to be attractive to farmers as it can be
easily transported and used without spending more.
“In
the case of the simple de-husking machine, the waste material from the
process can still be used in making briquettes and compost manure to
improve soil health.”
Edwin Mwango, an agricultural
engineer in Nyeri, notes that for such a machine, what matters is the
speed at which it dehusks the nuts, the likelihood of breaking them,
allowance of nut size given that some macadamia are big in size and
weight.
“The farmer is also supposed to look out for
the moisture content of the nuts, which should average 4 per cent to
enable them to crack easily. The cost of production of the machine
should not compromise efficiency and agronomic values,” says Mr Mwango.
Additional reporting by Brian Okinda.
NMG
NMG
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