الأربعاء، 31 ديسمبر 2014

Behind Bars, With Limited Space And Time But With A Thriving Poultry Business

Convicted for murder and incarcerated for eight years, Cissy Namisango, 27, had never worked in a poultry farm before. However, on her first encounter with poultry farming, she has managed to demystify the widely held notion that one needs acres of land to farm. 

Driven by conviction and industry, Namisango has turned the modest prison poultry farm within the confines of Kigo Women’s prison, into a kind of a demonstration farm, looking after chickens which have flourished into huge harvests winning the praise of prison authorities and marvel of fellow inmates, dazed by her achievements.

And for being exemplary, she has been rewarded by prison authorities who have bestowed on her the onerous but enviable task of training fellow inmates and prison warders, who, driven by her example have decided to venture into the poultry project.

Namisango acknowledges that the poultry farm has given her a new perspective on life. “The poultry farm has given me a renewed hope of life. After prison, I hope to invest in poultry farming,” she remarks happily. Her passion for rearing chicken is evident the moment she enters the farm.

She refers to the hens “my hens and “my chicks,” revealing a farmer whose heart and soul is embedded in the very existence of her birds. “I miss them whenever I am taken back to the cells for lock up.”

Namisango, who has worked in the farm for some time now, says she had no skills before her arrest but her prison sentence has been a blessing in disguise. She can now immunize chicken, a skill she acquired behind bars.

She is passionate about her new found skills and talks about “her poultry farm” with a lot of vigor. She explains that the project helps to supplement the prisoners’ diet. 

After learning the hard way, she has now trained fellow inmates who had no interest in poultry farming to ensure they gain skills as they serve their sentences. Besides inmates, she trains prison staff on how best to maintain a poultry farm.

Namisango says ever since she joined the poultry farm, she has never looked back, but aspires to even do better.  Poultry keeping is the only thing on her mind and she requests fellow inmates to make good use of the rehabilitation services offered in jail.

Given her initial success with poultry, Namisango now wants to expand her project of layers. When it comes to immunizing chicks, she says prison authorities provide inmates with the required drugs for vaccination.

Namisango says among the challenges she faces with her poultry project is the limited time provided to prisoners outside the cells which makes it hard for her to monitor the hens yet chicks require regular checkups especially during night.

The former house wife regrets her acts saying she would not have engaged in dubious ways that culminated into her incarceration had she acquired the farming skills earlier. She says poultry farming has given her a renewed hope of life after serving her sentence.


Sourced from News Vision Uganda: http://www.newvision.co.ug/

الثلاثاء، 30 ديسمبر 2014

How Akinyi, A Successful Poultry Farmer In Kisumu Makes 100,000 Every 5 Weeks

It is the desire to be her own boss that saw Lillian Akinyi Okwiri become one of the most successful poultry keepers in Kisumu. Mrs Okwiri, 50, quit her job as an accountant after being in formal employment for only six months. To her friends, this was a risky gamble but she was convinced that time was ripe for her to go into self-employment.

“I always dreamt of being my own boss someday and I opted to hasten the process. What worried me most was whether I would still earn as much money as I did when I was employed,” she says.
After quitting her accounting job, she realised that she didn’t have enough money to go into poultry rearing, a market she had realised had few players. She started with selling second-hand clothes to generate enough cash to venture into poultry keeping.

“I also started making ice-cream from my house and selling it to school-going children. I got a little cash and added it to what I was earning from the clothes business,” she says.
After a few months, she had raised Sh30,000 and was ready for take off. I had no formal training in poultry keeping, but had the urge to make money and that is what has seen me thrive, she says.
“I had done little research and realised that Kenyan traders import poultry products such as eggs from neighbouring counties. I knew that there was money in this venture,” she says.
She started with 150 day-old layer chicks costing Sh100 each and converted one of her bedrooms to house the birds.
After five weeks, the broilers were ready for the market while layers took between four to five months to start laying eggs. Soon she moved the chicken from her bedroom to a structure that could accommodate 600 chicks.
“I used local materials, wire mesh and iron sheets,” she says.
Counting her profits every day, Mrs Okwiri is doing booming business and is an envy of many in Kisumu’s Nyamasaria estate and has a total of 1,000 chicks—700 broilers and 300 layers.
She has turned into a beacon of success for many women who seek advice on poultry keeping.
Years later, does she regret quitting formal employment?
“I have no regrets because I made the right move. Had I clung onto my job then, I wouldn’t have made such impressive strides,” she says.
Mrs Okwiri says she gets at least Sh100,000 every five weeks from selling broilers which costs Sh400 each.
“ I collect close to 10 crates of eggs every day with a crate selling at Sh330,” she says.
When business is at its peak, she says she receive orders to supply up to 150 birds per day. ‘‘During such periods, I am forced to wake up as early as 4 am and to hire more casual labourers,” she says.
She mainly sells broilers to hotels and learning institutions in Kisumu.
Mrs Okwiri says that to attain her success, a lot has to be put in taking care of the chicken.
“A lot has to be done like buying feeds and drugs and these must be obtained from accredited dealers to guarantee quality. In the five weeks of rearing, the broilers use around five bags of starter mash which goes at Sh2,250 a bag and 17 bags of finisher pellet, with a bag selling at Sh2,850,’’ she says.
“The layers also eat a lot of food.” She says the chicks also have to be vaccinated against New Castle disease and given multivitamins.
“Buying of feeds and drugs is a challenge because the prices go up but you have to feed the chicks to weigh more in order to fetch better prices,” she says. To those planning to go into business, she says: ‘‘Start-ups don’t pick up as fast as one may want but patience pays.”
She encourages women and youth to learn to be self-dependent.
“They should not just sit by waiting for miracles to happen; I challenge them to take their destiny into their own hands. I have a very supportive husband but that does not mean that I should not work,” she says.

Story sourced from Business Daily: Done by Angie angieoketch99@gmail.com