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You Can Make Compost in Two to Three Weeks

January 1, 1998

Save and edit this resource as a Word document Imagine this. You will be ready to plant your garden in three weeks, but your soil is poor and needs fertilizer. You’ve heard that compost is good fertilizer and will make your soil rich and your plants healthy. But there’s a problem. It usually takes three…

Make Compost as Your Vegetables Grow

January 1, 1998

Imagine this. The rainy season is coming and you’re ready to plant your vegetables. Adding compost would be the perfect way to make your soil fertile. But you don’t have much compost available, and you don’t have time to make it. You’ve cleared some land and the ground is covered with the branches, stems, and…

Growing Vegetables When Water is Scarce

July 1, 1997

Save and edit this resource as a Word document If your garden seems to be drying out, don’t give up hope! You can grow lots of tasty, nutritious food even if you live in a very dry climate. Here are some simple things you can do to make the best use of the water you…

The many uses of the prickly pear cactus

April 1, 1997

Here’s some information of special interest to farmers who live in places where the soil is dry. Have you noticed that the soil blows around your fields? Are your crops stunted? Have they stopped growing? You are not alone. There are many farmers like you who worry that they will have to keep moving to…

A Fertility Trench Holds Water in Dry Lands

April 1, 1997

Does the soil in your garden get dry and hard in the dry season? Is it difficult to grow vegetables because you don’t have enough water? Some farmers with these problems grow very good gardens, even in the dry season. Here’s how they do it. During the rainy season they dig a fertility trench. A…

Grow Moringa for Food and Fodder

January 1, 1997

An ideal tree to grow in the city or country is moringa (Moringa oleifera). Moringa will give you food, fodder, fuelwood and shade. Its pods make a tasty, nutritious vegetable. You can eat its tender leaves and flowers too. The leaves also make excellent livestock feed. Best of all, this useful tree grows quickly and…

Hints for the Small Farmer

July 1, 1996

How to Prepare Green Vegetables for the Dry Season By Sarah Massengo, Tanzania In many tropical climates, there is a wet season followed by a long, hot, dry season. In the wet season wild and cultivated vegetable crops grow well. People need the vitamins and minerals that come from these green vegetables to stay healthy….

Garden on Your Rooftop

April 1, 1996

Are you making the best possible use of the space above your head? I’m talking about the space on top of your house – the rooftop! It’s possible to harvest lots of fresh vegetables from a rooftop garden and deliver them directly to your kitchen table. Go up to your rooftop or out to your…

Grow Vegetable Vines in Small Spaces

April 1, 1996

Fresh vegetables can be costly to buy at the market. But you can grow them yourself at home. Even if you live in the city or the village and don’t have much space, you can still plant vegetables that grow on vines. A huge variety of these grow in the tropics: cucumbers, gourds, pumpkins, climbing…

Choosing a Fishpond Site

October 29, 1995

A fishpond is an enclosed body of water used to raise fish. It can be made of concrete or earth and it has both an inlet and an outlet to allow water to flow through. Here are some things to consider when you select a site for a fishpond. Water supply is the most important…