These are projects initiated by Samburu Research with the Samburu community in or near Wamba. These include a nursery, a school, a blacksmithing project and touristic opportunities for visitors.
As of this writing, August, 2023, Idris is collecting seeds for trees and is planting in preparation for the October rainy season. Current seedling quantities are are limited by water.
Examples of seedlings in stock for the upcoming rainy season”
200 avacado
100 mango
250 Kayapa (tree used for fencing)
70 Local mahogany
150 Lmarggwet (cottonwood)
150 black passion fruit
40 papaya
40 Marubaine (three with 40 medicinal uses)
Vegetable crops
50 pili pili peppers plus more coming along
Many Skuma (kale)
A variety of flower seedlings are also available at the nursery.
Idris Lekaria, director of the Memita Disables Tree Nursery and Creativity Center in Wamba, Kenya, announces the opening of a school for young children in a village remote from a school. The teachers are trained teachers, but without work. The students are hungry, so the school will both provide education and food. If you would like to assist financially with this project, please use the contact form. Thank you.
Idris Lekaria, Director of the Memita Disables Tree Nursery is pleased to announce that his nursery has been contracted to assist schools in the region to plant trees in accordance with the government’s commitment to afforestation. He will be supplying 50 trees each to schools in the Wamba Region.
Monday is clay day at Augustine’s School. Just below where the school is located there is a deep erosion gully that makes a layer of black clay easy to get. All the kids go to the gully to get clay to work with. Art projects are not a featured part of the standard Kenyan education. Augustine, the school’s director, is the man with the deep voice you hear in this video. He is a blacksmith and values craft. He is leading the clay working session you see in this video.
Augustine’s School is an outdoor school. The outdoors in Samburu is a wonderful place for running a school. For craft projects, like clay, there is no clean up! The kids bring the clay back from he gully. It is dry. They use small rocks to pound the clay into a powder. Then, just add water! Imagination does the rest. And, the space is endless, so whether working with ten kids or fifty, the space is flexible. Villagers often come to the school to watch what is going on.
Augustine’s School is located on the outskirts of Wamba, Kenya within the Blacksmithing Clan’s District. The school daily serves 40 students ranging in age from 3 to 8. Carol Fabert, a retired American special needs teacher is the Headmaster. Augustine is the local director. He is assisted by four teaching staff, plus a cook. The school incudes a meals program that daily provides fruits and vegetables in addition to beans and ugali to the school’s students, plus up to 60 additional children, depending on circumstances.
The curriculum is innovative. Instruction takes place in three languages, Northern Maa, English, and Swahili. Students learn to read, do basic math, and participate in age appropriate activities — lots of singing, Samburu dance, and arts and crafts projects. The integration of academics with play is unusual for Kenya, and does not exist elsewhere in Samburu East.
The school is providing children from the poorest section of Samburu culture, children of blacksmiths, charcoal sellers, and children of the bee keeping clan, with an intensive head start on their path to education, and a way out of the structural poverty of the Samburu pastoralist territory. The salaries paid to the teachers and cook, and the food provided to the between 40 and 100 children being fed at Augustine’s school, stabilizes multiple families who are going through exceedingly hard times within the context of the collapse of pastoralism locally due to the cumulative impacts of climate change intersecting with over grazing, and now with the inflation that followed Covid and the War in Ukraine.
Longiro and Joyce joyfully teaching in three languages.
If you might be interested in contributing to the support of Augustine’s School, please use the contact form to get in touch. Even small donations make a difference. This is a project that changes lives.
Students in line for food. Augustine’s School makes a big effort to include fruit and vegetable along with starches. Fruits and vegetables are not a part of the standard Samburu diet.
Books shipped from the USA arriving at Augustine’s School. Donations of books always welcome!
Idris Lekaria, horticulturalist, is the founding director of the Memita Disables Tree Nursery, in Wamba, Kenya, is the only nursery in Samburu East. As a nursery specializing in trees, its primary focus is afforestation, or, as founder Idris Lekaria puts it, “Making the land green again, and fruity.” Food scarcity is an issue so one component of the nursery’s tree growing program is to grow fruit trees and fruit bearing vines, like passion fruit. Then nursery also grown vegetables and ornamental plants, produce pots and concrete tables, and offers training programs in what for the Samburu is the new art of gardening. Idris is a well trained horticulturalist who has developed a set of best practices for horticultural projects in the arid environment of the arid equatorial North.
If you are interested in supporting this nursery, even small donations would make a difference. There are also opportunities for staying at the nursery in Wamba to help with Idris’ project through a work-stay ecotourism experience. Use the contact form if you are interested and I will get in touch with Idris.
Babu, whose given name is Donald Zakao, is a storyteller living in Wamba, Kenya. Babu means “grandfather.” Donald has been called “Babu” since he was four years old. A gifted story teller, “The Thief’s Hand,” is a good example of his craft. I recorded this story in the 1990s.