Vandana Shiva, a renowned Indian scholar, environmental activist, food sovereignty advocate, once said, “Seed is not just the source of life. It is the very foundation of our being. These words have come to be the clarion call for a group of women in the semi-arid part of Nakuru County.
Vexed by expensive farm inputs and especially seeds and buoyed by the drive to ensure they are food secure, groups of smallholder farmers in Naivasha and Gilgil are is changing the narratives on overdependence on agro-dealers and is charting a new path on seed independence.
For more than two years, several groups of mostly women and a few men in Naivasha and Gilgil Sub-Counties have been meeting weekly to discuss issues related to seeds.
Besides seeds, the small-scale farmers also learn and exchange ideas on how to agroecological grow their crops and ensure their food and nutrition security.
Some of the group members have learnt a lot such that they have become seed ambassadors, training farmers from different parts of the country and beyond on seed selection and saving.
One such member is Racheal Wanjira, a woman whose experience as a teenager drove her to resolve to ensure that she fends for her family and ensures it is well fed regardless of the status of her marital partner.
As Wanjira narrates, one time when she was in form two, she slept hungry because her father did not bring home maize flour that day.
INDEPENDENT WOMEN
“My dad was a good provider but on this one day, he did not get money and it really hurt me that mom was not empowered to supplement, it was at this early age that I made a resolve to always be in a position to feed my family,” she says.
The chairperson of Karamaru Seed Savers Network says the assurance of having seeds at all times at her individual seed bank and the one owned by the community is a great relief and a guarantee to food security and nutrition.