KGA has signed a three-year agreement with the Australian Government

Joint Media Release

22 September 2011

Respected local NGO, Kastom Gaden Association and the Australian Government have signed a three-year agreement that will provide thousands of families throughout Solomon Islands with improved varieties of food crops and advice on more effective farming methods and family nutrition.

The SBD20.18 million (AUD 2.53 million) agreement extends previous Australian support over the past two years for Kastom Gaden’s five-year program called Strengthening Food Security for Rural Livelihoods in Solomon Islands Program.

“Our program aims to improve the amount of quality food grown in rural areas and to support income generation activities for Solomon Islanders”, said Kastom Gaden Manager, Mr Clement Hadosaia

AusAID Counsellor for Development Cooperation, Peter O’Connor, said Kastom Gaden was an organisation that improved the lives of Solomon Islanders by using local ideas and local expertise delivered at the local level.

“Kastom Gaden is helping Solomon Islands to adapt their agriculture to the changing environment through improved methods and more productive crop and livestock varieties,” he said. “Importantly, it delivers its services at the village level where more than 80 percent of Solomon Islanders live.”

Kastom Gaden supports Solomon Islanders through its Plant Material Network and by providing training programs for people in both rural and urban areas. The Plant Material Network provides members with improved seed and rootstock varieties and vital agricultural information.

Kastom Gaden works through partnerships with around 100 community based organisations. Some are formal organisations like churches and Rural Training Centres, Others are community-based organisations such as the Rokotanikeni Womens’ Association in southern Malaita.

Kastom Gaden provides training programs to these organisations on subjects such as plant and livestock husbandry, farming methods, pest and disease management, nutrition, health and use of simple technologies suited to local conditions. Services reach some of the most isolated areas of the country.

As part of it nutritional health component, Kastom Gaden supports a child and maternal health nutrition project with the Ministry of Health and Medical Services. The project is run out ofSasamuqaHospitalin Choiseul andAtoifiHospitalin central Malaita, both chosen because they service areas of several thousands of people where food security and infant nutrition is a concern.

Under the new agreement with AusAID, Kastom Gaden will provide training over the next three years to an estimated 11,000 people while increasing the number of households with access to its basic services through the planting network to at least 30,000.

“Our work is seeing young people in provincial areas across the country getting involved in farming and selling their produce to markets,” Mr Hadosaia said. “This creates a local and healthy food source, and gives young people the chance to improve their own lives with their own hands.”

Kastom Gaden also works with a range of international partners such as theAustralianCenterfor International Agricultural Research and the Secretariat of the Pacific Community.

This new agreement with AusAID continues more than ten years of Australian support to Kastom Gaden. The funding is provided under Australia’s country-to-country aid program with the Solomon Islandswhich is called the Partnership for Development.

The Partnership for Development is a government-to-government agreement that focuses on areas like health, education, livelihoods and transport infrastructure.

Kastom Gaden provides basic information and advice via newsletters and holds a weekly radio program on SIBC.

For more information about Kastom Gaden and to join its Plant Material Network contact Mr Clement Hadosaiaon Phone 39331 or email clementh@tc.net46.net

 

Kastom Gaden Manager, Mr Clement Hadosaia and AusAID Development Counsellor Peter O’Connor inspect seedling trays at Kastom Gaden’s main office and plant distribution center in Honiara.

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Empowerment training for woman completed in Japan

I have attended the empowerment training for woman funded by JICA in Japan, for the last 2 and half months. The training was attended by 10 female participants from 8 countries, 1 Zambia, 2 Sri Lanka, 1 Tonga, Ethiopia, 2 Pakistan,Laos, East Timor and my self from Solomon.

Visits was made to one of the famous farming business area the one village one product in Oita, this village is famous for its products. which is an interesting place and other places who do the integrated approach for the development.

A visit was also made to Horishima war memorial museum.

I would like to thank JICA for their support in making this training possible for me to attend which will help woman in the rural areas, in income generation: Also thank you to all staff for the support in making my training a success, not forgetting Sr. Catherine who has helped with the component while I’m away on this training.

Photo album

Group role at OISCA training centre

Party at OISCA meeting

OISCA trainees and JICA training with School children at OISCA

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Kiko stove training at OISCA training centre, Japan

Yukiko and I run a workshop on kiko stove making for 16 participants from 13 countries from Asia, pacific, Africa at OISCA shikoku training center, Japan on Monday 18th July. Participants are interested in the stove, some participants from countries like pakistan, sri lanka, Tibet and others have similar stove but this is their first time to see how a clay  stove is made.

Some of the participants wants to try this in their country like PNG, Africa, tonga, and asian countries, which they think they can maybe modified it so that is adapted to their countries needs.

Thanks to Oisca Director  Kakinuma for giving us the opportunity to teach other woman from other countries and also for Yukiko who have fly from Tokyo to Shikoku island for us to do the training.

participants of the stove training

participants of the training with the stove made during the training

Participants moulding clay for the stove.

Yukiko and I with participants

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KGA staff and partners complete Results assessment training

Senior staff at Kastom Gaden Association along with representatives from three partner organisations have completed a two day training workshop on results assessment. The aim of the training was to help senior staff to understand and plan how they measure more than just activities – but also the impact or results of activities.

Participants looked at what they are already doing which included a mix of household surveys, story collection, taking photos and record keeping. These qualitative and quantitative tools were then combined into results assesment frameworks for each of KGAs components:  Capacity Building and Networking, Women and Nutritional Health, Small Livestock, Organic Farming.  Turusuala Community Based Training Centre, Rokotanikeni Womens Association and Vanga RTC also joined the training.  Staff are now busy using the results chains they mapped out in the training to complete their frameworks. Participants learned that results assesment is very important for organisational learning – improving programs and planning new activities based on what were the actual benefits of earlier work.  It also will help KGA to report to its donors and other stakeholders.

The training was facilitated by TerraCircle’s Tony Jansen. TerraCircle has assisted KGA to develop an information management system and a household survey of PMN members as well as a database to track members and distribution of planting materials.  This system is now being expanded to include expanded results assessment activities.

 

An Example of a results chain developed in the training - this one for the Marketing Component of Kastom Gaden. The chain links activities through to final goals to improve rural livelihoods.

 

 

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Tuvaruhu SSEC woman’s group trained in making nursery

Tuvaruhu woman’s group in Honiara have been trained in how to establish a nursery and also they have started their sup sup. The training was done by Janet Rose and myself and catherine with the woman’s group for 2 days.in May this year.

The woman learned how to build a nursery and how to do soil mixing of germination and seedling boxes, and also who to do transplanting of the seedlings to the field.

WN will continue to support the woman’s group in advise and further training by Janet and catherine.

The woman are very happy to attend the training to learn how to make sup sup garden close to the house that serves them from buying at the market. They are also interested in other trainings based on their needs.

Woman planting seedlings in their garden

Janet Rose show woman how to build nursery

Demonstration of germination of seeds

Sr. catherine explain about mulching to woman at the their garden.

 

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