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Friday, March 30, 2012

Project Update: Dental Bamtaare Tooro Demo Garden


I am in the process of starting a demonstration garden at the office space of my counterpart Kadiata Ba. She is the president of an organization called Dental Bamtaare Tooro which if Pulaar for Group for the Development of the Tooro (a region of northern Senegal where Taredji is located). Dental’s activities focus on the development of the Toroor region by focusing on women. They primarily operate a milk processing business (see more types of milk) but also host trainings in their 29 partner villages on Pulaar alphabetization, democracy and citizenship, animal husbandry, and now agriculture. With the help of Peace Corps/Senegal, we are building a garden to train women in the 29 villages Dental works with to do small-scale gardening.

So far, I have written a grant to get tools and fencing for the space, designed the garden space, and am now waiting on the money to arrive. In the mean time, I have started a tree nursery at my family’s compound. My host dad Ousman Ba also works at Dental and has a small section of fencing around a TV satellite for a TV that is broken in a house that has electricity that can only support one small light bulb. Because the trees have a very limited time frame for being seeded before the rainy season starts, it was important that we did not wait for the fencing to arrive before getting the trees going.

A majority of the trees will be used for a live fence: a fence made out of trees that is more reliable than “dead” fencing and cheaper if more labor-intensive. With the help of Peace Corps and Dental, I have chosen three different thorny species that can be pruned into a thorny hedge to keep out animals and children (both of which are my worst enemies when it comes to gardening).

In addition to the live fence, I am also including some small fruit trees and nitrogen-fixing trees for alley cropping, a practice of integrating trees between rows of planting in order to act as windbreaks, diversify your space, provide additional income, and/or improve the soil. For fruit trees, we are using papaya, guava, and pomegranate because they don’t take up very much space and start producing fruit quickly.

In total, we have about 300 trees that will be used for a 59x26 meter space. I have just seeded the nursery and will keep you updated on the progress of the garden. 

Friday, March 16, 2012

Project Update: Podor Hospital Garden


One of the projects I am working on is a hospital garden in the city of Podor (see more pictures of Podor), which is about 20 to 25 km from Taredji depending on who you ask and is right on the Senegal-Mauritania border. Podor is a much more metropolitan city than Taredji; there are fancy hotels, internet cafes, a small amount of mainly French tourists, paved sidewalks, restaurants and bars, an old colonial fort, and a big hospital. (Side note: If you ever want to check out the weather in my area, Podor is the only place nearby that you can find online)

The garden was started by another volunteer who used to live in Podor and has now completed his service. There are two full-time gardeners who run the project; I am only there for technical assistance and come out to the garden once a week to check things out. The vegetables that are grown here supplement the hospital food bill that is quite large due to the number of overnight patients. The garden is watered by hand from a water basin that is filled everyday by a motor pump from the river.

Right now is the end of the cold, dry season, which is the prime veggie-growing season in Senegal. By the end of March or so, we should have carrots, eggplant, tomatoes, lettuce, cabbage, bitter tomato, melons, and squash. I have been trying to work with the gardeners on better spacing techniques, the importance of weeding, composting, and planning for hot season gardening. Hot season gardening is something that not many people in my area do in my area because temperatures can get up to 140°F, but we are going to try to find crops that can withstand the heat including heat-tolerant lettuce varieties, tomatoes, hot pepper, and radish. We are also trying to incorporate more fruit trees into the space like papaya, guava, and pomegranate.

In the more distant future, we plan on potentially having some training sessions at the garden for interested gardeners in Podor as well as for some young men from the military compound nearby that want to start a garden of their own. Besides that, I hang around the garden, help out with weeding or other garden activities, play with our garden cat, and watch the comings and goings of the hospital. 



Bitter Tomato 

Some shabby looking moringa trees. The leaves are packed full of vitamins.