Kibwezi Cluster - Beatrice:
The cluster trained on farming techniques and are going to try planting earlier to catch the rain. The area is dry, and members are struggling. As a cluster, they shared love, project training, and water with members without tanks.
Kilome Cluster - Susan:
The groups in Kilome continue to work on their projects including beekeeping and livestock breeding and sales. Groups have been learning about a new breed of chickens, and group members who are able are placing orders for the chickens. They are inviting a trainer to teach them about making chicken feed to reduce their expenses.
Susan trained the cluster on keeping good financial records so that group members can understand where their savings are going. Transparency is key to trust and the groups working well.
Kisau Cluster - Sue:
The groups in Kisau are working hard, and each group has plans to purchase 2-6 rainwater catchment tanks. During the cluster meeting, Sue trained members on writing project proposals, table banking, tree nursery establishment and management, and how groups who have graduated can continue to implement projects.
Kola Cluster - Annah:
Members are busy tilling their gardens and spreading manure in their fields in anticipation of the rainy season. One group is making charcoal to sell once the temperatures drop, and another is preparing a tree nursery. Members are struggling to pay their targets, and Annah offers them encouragement to try harder. “There is power in unity,” she tells us.
Makueni Cluster - Sue:
Groups have been preparing their kitchen gardens, and some members attended the Agricultural Trade Fair in Nairobi. Wikwatyo wa Yinthungu Women’s Group continues to build rocket stoves, which are benefiting women, the community, and helping the group contribute to their target. Group members are helping each other collect materials to build bases for the tanks they are purchasing.
The area is so hot that transportation has been a challenge, so the cluster decided to meet less frequently. Sue trained members on tree nurseries and poultry keeping, especially building chicken coops, feeding, and disease management.
Malili A Cluster - Regina:
Group members are working hard, with each group having a few income generating projects. One group is selling sweaters at a market, while others are selling liquid soap and jik to clinics and other customers. In Tei wa Malili Women’s Group, each member contributed two chickens to sell to a local church, and in Aka ma Uvoo Museo Women’s Group, each member contributed three chickens to sell to a school. The cluster trained on bookkeeping, how to medicate chickens, and how to expand their income generating projects.
Malili B Cluster - Regina:
Two groups have each bought four tanks! They worked hard doing casual labor in neighboring farms and selling ballast. Some groups are not doing as well. The group leaders will visit with the members who are not paying their targets so they might understand their problems and offer assistance and encouragement.
Mbooni Cluster - Agnes:
Agnes’s groups are transitioning their income generating activities with the shift in seasons. One group was making school bags but has switched to braiding ropes. Another group that was planting flowers has started making tie dye. Agnes writes that “Many members are helping others in the group to overcome challenges. Others are giving out their clothes to the needy and elderly.”
Tulimani Cluster - Monicah:
The area is very dry, and most groups did not meet their targets due to drought. A health officer came to the cluster meeting and opened the women’s eyes to the risks of cancer.
Yandue Cluster - Agnes:
Groups are engaged in many successful projects. One group purchased two donkeys and are using them to haul sand to sell. Another group is boiling sweet potatoes and arrowroot to make tea. They carry flasks of the tea and baskets of cups and sell the tea to community members.
Agnes plans to consult the Ministry of Health and request help for breast cancer screening. Many women have cancer and do not even know. For their cluster meeting, they met at a group member’s home who has cancer and contributed money towards her treatment.
10016 Edmonds Way, Suite C #268 Edmonds, WA 98020
EIN # 91-2153830
Path From Poverty
Powered by DonorView