Tag: ICBA

In August to October of 2023, I had a six-country assignment with the International Center for Biosaline Agriculture to document its RESADE project.

  • LABORATORY SMILES IN MAPUTO

    It’s hard to put a spin on a visit to a soil lab and make it interesting. So I won’t try. I visited the labs of IIAM, Mozambique’s agricultural research institute, to learn of their efforts to map levels of salinity in soil in the country. I saw lots of technicians in lab coats measuring […]

    Read the full story …

    LABORATORY SMILES IN MAPUTO
  • FARMER TRAINING IN MOZAMBIQUE

    It takes a lot of smarts to be a farmer. There’s so much you need to know. What to plant, when to plant, how to fertilise, how to irrigate. The farmers of Moamba in Mozambique have been passing on local knowledge about how to tend their crops for generations.  But the climate is changing faster […]

    Read the full story …

    FARMER TRAINING IN MOZAMBIQUE
  • THE GOLD MEDALIST OF KWENENG

    The rains in the Kweneng District of southern Botswana start in November. Until then farmers’ fields are pretty much barren. But when the rains come, farmers start to sow. I came to the farm of Mrs Rebaone Seabelo to see her innovation for making biochar. As we walked to her compound I asked if she […]

    Read the full story …

    THE GOLD MEDALIST OF KWENENG
  • THE MELON JUICE MAKER OF MOLEPOLOLE

    I met a remarkable woman turning cooling melons into something extraordinary. Her juice is a symbol of innovation, resilience, and local pride. Watching her grow her business with traditional crops and modern know-how left me hopeful for what small-scale farmers can achieve, even in the face of climate change.

    Read the full story …

    THE MELON JUICE MAKER OF MOLEPOLOLE
  • RISE AND SHINE WITH COWPEA FLOUR

    The members of the Rise and Shine multipurpose cooperative in a village near Buchanan, Liberia have been growing cowpeas for as long as they can remember. They eat the peas and the greens and may also use it to feed their livestock. But they have never used cowpeas as a substitute for wheat flour. Most wheat […]

    Read the full story …

    RISE AND SHINE WITH COWPEA FLOUR
  • IRON-TOLERANT RICE FOR LIBERIA

    There are two types of rice. I’m not talking of basmati and jasmine and brown rice. There are two species of rice. The one most of us eat is Asian rice. The other is African rice. They’re both rice, but quite different genetically. In West Africa they plant both, but the African is the local. […]

    Read the full story …

    IRON-TOLERANT RICE FOR LIBERIA
  • MULTIPLYING COWPEA SEEDS IN LIBERIA

    You may not think you know what cowpeas are but by another name they may sound familiar. It’s thought the slave ships that departed from West Africa for three centuries carried not only slaves but also cowpea seeds. Some say the slaves brought that which is dearest to them and hid cowpea seeds in their […]

    Read the full story …

    MULTIPLYING COWPEA SEEDS IN LIBERIA
  • PLANTING RICE IN STRAIGHT ROWS IN SIERRA LEONE

    Most farmers in Sierra Leone plant their rice by broadcasting seed randomly into a paddy. They can plant a paddy pretty quickly that way, but they aren’t rewarded with great yields. Scientists at the Rokupt Research Centre have taught members of a cooperative near Kambia how to plant in straight lines. They first grow out […]

    Read the full story …

    PLANTING RICE IN STRAIGHT ROWS IN SIERRA LEONE
  • BIOCHAR FOR TOGO

    The soils around the village of Atti-Apedokoe in Togo no longer produce yields like they used to. They’ve become degraded and are gradually becoming more saline. But the villagers generate lots of organic waste. So, the Institut Togolais de Recherche Agronomique and the International Center for Biosaline Agriculture taught the locals how to make biochar. […]

    Read the full story …

    BIOCHAR FOR TOGO
Travelers’ Map is loading…
If you see this after your page is loaded completely, leafletJS files are missing.