development and transfer of caps for small-holder farms in eastern uganda and western kenya

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University of Wyoming Makerere University, Uganda Moi University, Kenya Appropriate Technology Uganda, Ltd. Manor House Agricultural Centre SACRED Africa

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Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya. University of Wyoming Makerere University, Uganda Moi University, Kenya Appropriate Technology Uganda, Ltd. Manor House Agricultural Centre SACRED Africa. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

University of Wyoming

Makerere University, Uganda

Moi University, Kenya

Appropriate Technology Uganda, Ltd.

Manor House Agricultural Centre

SACRED Africa

Page 2: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 3: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Jay Norton, assistant professor of soil fertility, Department of Renewable Resources, University of Wyoming

Eric Arnould, distinguished professor of sustainable business practices, Department of Management and Marketing, University of Wyoming

Melea Press, assistant professor, Department of Management and Marketing, University of Wyoming

Urszula Norton, assistant professor of agroecology, Department of Plant Sciences, University of Wyoming

Danelle Peck, assistant professor, Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics, University of Wyoming

Bernard Bashaasha, associate professor, Department of Agricultural Economics and Agribusiness, Makerere University, Uganda

John R. Okalebo, professor of soil science, School of Agriculture and Biotechnology, Moi University, Kenya

Rita Ojok, director, AT Uganda Emmanuel Omondi, director, Manor House Agricultural Center (MHAC) Eusebius Mukhwana, director, SACRED Africa

Page 4: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Research Objectives Assemble advisory group of stakeholders from

selected study areas. Compile information for prototype CAPS development;

Define the traditional system and develop prototype CAPS for each area that build upon local knowledge and traditional practices, and that address agronomic and socio-economic constraints;

Evaluate agronomic, ecological, and economic sustainability of CAPS compared to traditional practices.

Page 5: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Year 1Recruiting graduate students in soil science &

econ/marketing: nearly complete at UW, in progress at Moi and Makerere;

Inception meeting of partners and listening tour: completed March 13-28, 2010;

Baseline, pre-project survey: June & July, 2010;Study area focus groups: August, 2010;Advisory group treatment design: Sept-Oct, 2010

Year 2-4: on-station and on-farm trials and post-project survey.

Page 6: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Advertised via university and NGO partners, and by circulating announcement during our “listening tour”;

Soils: Offer made and accepted to PhD student out of Kenyatta Univ. who’s been working for TSBF;

Econ: narrowed to one of two candidates, one from Uganda and one from Kenya;

Search in progress for MSc students at Moi and Makerere.

Page 7: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

UW team met with agency and NGO players with offices in Niarobi: TSBF, KARI, ACT, KenDAT, ILRI, and USAID;

Met with host-country partners to chart course;

Visited NGO headquarters of SACRED and MHAC;

Met with farmers’ groups in each of the four study areas to ask about farming systems in use and issues.

Page 8: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

100 households in each “impact” area defined as the community or communities that will have access to our field trials and training events;

Survey will include:Demographic/environmental information;Questions about knowledge and activities that we

hope to impact;Some questions about marketing and economic

issues;To be managed by NGOs and carried out by bi-

gender teams.

Page 9: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Series of meetings in each area;Use PRA techniques to learn more about:

Effective technology development, adoption, local innovation;

Limits to change;Market, labor, other constraints;Local technological networks;

Identify long-term advisory group members (key informants) and potential on-farm trial cooperators.

Page 10: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Co-design approach in each area; Develop common understandings of:

Issues discussion or training on plow pan development, erosion, nutrient depletion, weeds, labor, inputs, etc.;

Toolbox: Tillage options; Weed control options; Soil fertility options; Alternative crops & varieties.

Use common understanding issues and tools to design list of treatments; pick three most adaptable for largest number of local farmers.

Page 11: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Field trialsOn-station: on NGO or research institute land

in the four study areas;On-farm: at least three farms for each

treatment in each area;Establish plots/fields this fall;Plant in spring 2011.

Page 12: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Monitoring Soil properties and organic matter status

Combination of HC and UWyo labs;Labile, occluded, stable pools monitored

seasonally;Trace gas emissions for C and N cycling;Yields;Economic and marketing factors;Kapchorwa: erosion plots.

Page 13: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 14: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 15: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 16: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

The plowMany obvious

advantages;Hidden costs;Compaction;Erosion;SOM loss;

Even without changing residue mgmt, less intensive tillage would improve soil quality and production.

Page 17: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 18: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 19: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya
Page 20: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

DistrictsTrans-Nzoia: most land on very large

commercial farms with clusters of smallholders, some slope;

Bungoma: Densely populated, very small farms, mostly level;

Tororo: Densely populated, very small farms, lack of livestock/traction; level;

Kapchorwa: Farms a bit larger, opened to ag in 1983, very steep slopes and drastic erosion. Farmers eager for information.

Page 21: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

Common issuesCorn on corn Intensive tillageLittle use and limited/unstable access to inputs

Impressions: A lot of smart people developing and promoting

alternative approaches for a very long time; Many farmers aware of better, more sustainable

alternatives but trapped in corn on corn; But: tillage is not part of the picture in either alternative

systems or farmers’ awareness.

Focus on minimum tillage as central component of CAPS.

Iterative practices that don’t rely on inputs.

Page 22: Development and transfer of CAPS for small-holder farms in eastern Uganda and western Kenya

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Row position

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Grain Yield

Strip intercropping