By Isaac Paul | Young Adult Training Center Volunteer
**Donations made today matched! Details below!**
Four months ago, I packed my bags and flew to Ghana, West Africa to work with farmers to help them better feed their families. The farmers I’ve met are not so different to the farmers back home in Iowa: they’re hardworking stewards of the land, seeking to provide for their children in the best way they can.
One of my favorite days here in Ghana was when we went to the village of Bedaabour in April to plant demonstration plots near the local school for all to see. We use these demonstration plots to show, not tell, farmers how these practices can help them grow more food.
By intercropping and utilizing cover crops, farmers are able to increase land efficiency and food production, control weeds, decrease evaporation, enrich the soil, and reduce runoff and erosion. Crops like corn – called maize in Ghana – mine the soil and do not add nutrients. Legume crops like mucuna, cowpea (black-eyed pea), and groundnut (peanuts) can be grown intercropped or planted as individuals for crop rotation and will effectively fix nitrogen in the soil in addition to providing food to eat.
This trail is showing farmers how to increase land potential and how to control weeds with intercrop canopy. All four demonstration plots contain Quality Protein Maize (QPM), a high protein corn that the local school uses to make a breakfast porridge for their students. One plot is QPM planted without a cover crop, QPM planted with green gram (a small pulse crop), QPM with cowpea, and QPM with groundnut. The latter two cover crops can be harvested and mixed into the school porridge for even further added nutrition and ensure the kids are able to get the nutrients they need to reach their biological potential.
Days like these are my favorite. I love the opportunity to go to rural communities and meet farmers, they are the heart of Ghana. Self-Help’s model works to not only ensure children are fed for the day in school, but also that their parents are able to provide for them at home and for years to come. Today, their parents are growing more food and more nutritious food. Through these improved practices, we’re alleviating hunger by helping people help themselves.
--
ACT NOW: Today, Wednesday, July 12th, GlobalGiving is matching all gifts to this project with a 50% bonus beginning at 8:00 AM Central / 9:00 AM Eastern, while funds last. By donating today, you'll increase your impact so that more communities like Bedaabour can better feed and educate their children! The funds are limited, so donate as early as possible after 8:00 AM Central to ensure your gift is matched! Details available here.
Links:
By Frankie Opoku | Training Center Staff Member
By Paul Simon Anane | YATC Project Coordinator
Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.
If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can recieve an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.
Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.
Start a Fundraiser