We then went to Uasonyiro, and ran part of the cultural exchange that is going on with its sister school ASIA Abedsford school of Intergrated arts North poplar, one of which is a really interesting one called
Thursday, August 8, 2013
Last school visit
We then went to Uasonyiro, and ran part of the cultural exchange that is going on with its sister school ASIA Abedsford school of Intergrated arts North poplar, one of which is a really interesting one called
Wednesday, August 7, 2013
cows, grass regeneration and stool
3rd August
On the third Richard Vigne gave a couple of
the researchers a lift into Nanyuki, the near by city, to watch Sarah Vigne’s
daughters Ellie and Georgia compete in the annual horseshow there. The
horseshow was unbelievable. Four hours away from Nairobi, in the middle of
absolutely no where, was the most British, organized, show. Tents selling
pottery, and tribal beads, a tent with a restaurant with tea and cakes and
beautiful horses everywhere, it was mind blowing to have such an “English
afternoon” in the middle of Kenya! The two girls cleared house, won nearly all
the trophies, so had a very proud mum!
4th August
5th August
On the 5th, I spent the day with
PKSS, Project Sister Kenya Schools (http://projectkenyasisterschools.com)
which is a fantastic organization that works through Ol Pejeta to support
schools in surrounding communities, linking them to schools in Canada and the
US. As I am writing an article for Fauna and Flora international on the
community outreach programme here, it seemed like a good opportunity to go and
see some of the schools for myself.
So the first school we went to was Thome
boys, one that PKSS bought a cow for. Many schools are now starting to use cows
for the energy they need to run the school. The cows are kept in stables, and
their manure is collected and put into a cement hole, it then ferments
underground, and methane is produced, which is then pressurized and can be
connected to pipes to use it for gas stoves. The rest of the fermented waste
becomes slurry, and can be used as a fertilizer. The cows are also of course a
source of milk for the children. Unfortunately the cows had not yet produced
enough dung to start producing methane, so it isn’t running yet, but there are
high hopes for the future. To the left is a picture of where the slurry will eventually come out, and below is where the methane will be piped out of.
The next stop was Malek school, which holds
200 students. The subjects the study cover pretty much what every school does,
with the edition of Swahili. Leigh runs the PKSS link to her school in the
States, and has started a project called “my dreams is to…” where each student,
both in the states and at Malek get a slab of chalkboard with the words “My
dream is to…” and they add on what their dream is, Leigh takes a photo and will
collaborate it all into a slide show. Interestingly nearly all of the Kenyan
children’s dreams were related to jobs involved in medicine, law and dentistry,
while many of the Americans’ dreams were centered around being famous and being
rich.
6th August
We looked at the difference between the area the boma was in, and that just outside, by splitting it all into three transects, so the circle of grass where the boma once stood is split into three lines and different tests are done down those lines. For example, every shrub’s height within 3 metres either side of the transect is measured, and the same is done outside the area the boma stood in. Quadrats are also mapped-that is squares of land, 10m by 10m in this case, and the height of the grasses was measured, as well as all the different species within the quardrat. The results showed that there were far fewer shrubs within the boma area, and fewer species of grass, however these were more nutritious types. The picture to the right shows one of the ways to measure species diversity, the needles on the grid are dropped, and you identify the different grass species it touches.
I also had to identify and count all the different types of dung in an area, to see how the range of animals changed within the old boma site and outside. In fact they did, the only dung we found outside the site was zebra, while within it we found many different types
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