Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project

by Kenya Water, Energy Cleanliness and Health Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project
Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project

Project Report | Dec 22, 2021
Steady Progress Towards the Project Launch

By Constance E Hunt | Executive Director and Secretary

Croton Seedlings
Croton Seedlings

Dear Donors:

Over the last few months, we have been making steady progress on all of the components of the Kakamega Rainforest Restoration Project: restoration within the forest, income-generating activities on farms surrounding the forest, spiritual animation of small farmers surrounding the forest, and catchment rehabilitation. We have:

1. Developed a final draft of our agreement with the Kenya Forest Service that will govern the core of the project, which is restoration of five sites in the forest over the project's five-year life. Fellow board member, Alfred Mulamba and I met with the KFS Kakamega Ecosystem Conservator, Maurice Wanyiri, in November. KFS Forester Osinde followed up our discussion with a visit to our nurseries in December, where he provided technical advice to the farmers.

2. Discussed our obligations under the Nagoya Protocol of the Convention on Biological Diversity with Luke Otipo, Chair of the Kakamega County Technical Advisory Committee on Access and Benefit Sharing. Our partnership with the County is key to the successful involvement of small farmers in the IGA component of the project.

3. Laid the foundation for spiritual (Laudato Si) outreach to farmers in the vicinity of our first tree planting site in Iloro Forest. I met Fr. Augustine Lubanga, Parish Priest of the St. Joseph the Worker Shibuye Parish, who will most likely host the launch ceremony at his new outstation church, St. Mary's, which is under construction in Iloro. I followed up by touching bases with Very Reverent Fr. Vincent Mukokho, Vikar General of Kakamega, just to keep him posted on our progress. The Kakamega Diocese will be key to coordinating the recruitment of an inter-faith cadre of clergy to keep our farmer's souls, as well as their bank accounts, satisfied through participation in our project. They already support an extemely active tree-planting program in their Diocese.

I also had the opportunity to chat (face mask to face mask, not online!) with the newly installed Archbishop of the Catholic Archdiocese of Nairobi, Philip Anyolo, who hails from the project area. I shared some information about the project and he responded enthusastically. I hope he will be able to spread the good word with Nairobi faithful!

4. Visited the Iloro Primary School, which is near St. Mary's Church, to select a likely staging area for tools, seedlings and workers in preparation for the first planting of the seedlings next year. The school grounds contain a large, open area directly overlooking the forest.

5. Delivered a request for the donation of 5,000 fruit tree seedings to Joseph Irungu, the Permanent Secretary, Kenya Ministry of Water, Sanitation and Irrigation, through KWENCH board member, George Muruli, who is the Personal Assistant to Cabinet Secretary for the Kenya Ministry of Interior and Coordination of National Government. It is our hope to be able to give the seedlings, along with sweet potato vines, which we hope will be donated by GIZ (the German development agency) to local farmers in the project area during the launch.

The combination of fruit tree seedlings and sweet potato vines has the potential to arrest erosion in degraded catchment areas that drain into the Kakamega Rainforest while producing extra income for the farmers (see link to the agrilinks article, below). The fruit trees are likely to be avocados, a very important export earner for Kenya (see the link to the Kenya Star article, below). Sweet potatoes, like our other proposed IGA products (honey and other bee-related commodities, mushrooms and native hardwoods) have multiple value chains and can threfore penetrate markets at many levels.

6. Speaking of catchment rehabilitation, the Chairman of our partner organization, Isiukhu Water Resource Users Association (WRUA), Paul Agoi, attended a workshop on catchment rehabilitation in the Kambiri area in early December. Kambiri, which drains into the Kakamega Forest National Reserve, is suffering from a high rate of soil erosion and is the first target of our project's catchment rehabilitation component. The workshop was co-hosted by GIZ and ICRAF, the World Agroforestry Center.

7. Finally, but most important, our seedlings are thriving and will be big enough to transplant into the forest at the beginning of the long rains in March 2022.

Thank you so much for your support and have a very happy holiday season!

Markhamia Lutea, Nile Tulip
Markhamia Lutea, Nile Tulip
Olea Welwitschii, Elgon Teak - a hardwood treasure
Olea Welwitschii, Elgon Teak - a hardwood treasure
St. Mary's Church, proposed launch ceremony site
St. Mary's Church, proposed launch ceremony site
St. Mary's Church interior (under construction)
St. Mary's Church interior (under construction)
Iloro Primary School Headmaster Kizito Muhazia
Iloro Primary School Headmaster Kizito Muhazia
Catchment Rehabilitation Workshop, Kambiri
Catchment Rehabilitation Workshop, Kambiri

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Organization Information

Kenya Water, Energy Cleanliness and Health Project

Location: Nairobi, Westlands - Kenya
Project Leader:
Constance Hunt
Executive Director
Nairobi , Westlands Kenya

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