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Food Production "In order to eradicate poverty in Africa, we must encourage communities to produce what they consume, and to consume what they produce." - Professor Mugambi, Nairobi University 80% of
Excellent Development encourages the zero-grazing of livestock. Feeding and watering them from a pen allows farmers to collect the manure, which can be used to fertilise farmland. Nitrogen-fixing trees are also planted to help to fertilise the soil and retain moisture in the soil - increasing crop yields. Excellent Development field officers work with farmers to encourage the mixed cropping of staple crops such as maize and beans, which compliment each other with their different ground coverage and root networks. This effectively doubles the field space as well as increasing yields, improving water retention and easing pest control problems. Excellent don't encourage the growing of traditional cash crops like coffee, as Simon Maddrell explains - "The philosophy of Excellent Development in terms of income generation is to make sure the farmers keep control of their own destiny. People are often persuaded to grow coffee which takes a lot of time and energy and they don't even know if they're going to get an income at the end, or the price they're going to get for it and they know there's only one place they're going to sell it - that doesn't give anyone control over their own lives." By growing a wider range of crops, including fruit and vegetables, farmers can feed themselves and create a surplus - selling it when they want to, where they want to and at a price that suits them. We encourage these and other strategies to help increase people's food security. |


