Seeds for Life will benefit community
African Bank and local NGO INMED South Africa are launching an exciting collaborative Seeds for Life pilot project this month to benefit food insecure communities in Graaff-Reinet.
According to Dr Sandra Pretorius, programme manager for INMED’s Health in Action programme, food security begins in the backyard. “Home and community gardens are a simple solution to improve access to nutritious food,” she says.
“Our team has nearly two decades of experience helping individuals, schools and communities implement adaptive agriculture projects to strengthen food security and build sustainable livelihoods in all types of environments.”
Pretorius explains that the story in this impoverished area really began with a local resident, Koos Gradwell, who lives in Kroonvale in Graaff-Reinet. “He is an enthusiastic gardener, but he faced many challenges, such as water scarcity, not being able to afford seeds, compost and other inputs.” He approached the INMED South Africa team for assistance after learning about their aquaponics projects at two local schools and INMED’s Seeds for Life project in Port Elizabeth.
Seeds for Life provides free seeds, compost, gardening guidebooks and hands-on training to help vulnerable families establish home gardens, regardless of the location or geographic conditions.
“We first visited his house towards the end of 2020 to discuss his food gardening needs and together we identified the best spot for his vegetable garden,” recalls Pretorius. “We also gave him basic vegetable gardening advice, training, compost and seeds.”
When African Bank learned of the need to expand Seeds for Life to Graaff-Reinet, its CSI and Environmental Sustainability units saw a good fit for support.
Teams from both of these units are working with INMED South Africa to help extend the Seeds for Life programme by identifying beneficiaries in low-resource communities in Graaff-Reinet, who could benefit from this kind of programme.
Pretorius says the beauty of the programme is that it is sustainable and can really change lives. The INMED South Africa team will facilitate learning during the change process by monitoring progress, giving feedback to project participants and creating a forum for ongoing learning where participants can share their experiences and challenges. “Together with African Bank, we have set out some specific criteria for anyone participating on the programme,” notes Pretorius.
“They must reside in a low-resource community in Graaff-Reinet and be nominated by other stakeholders, such as a school, church, community centres or other community members.” Candidates should be unemployed and at risk for household food insecurity; have an interest in establishing a household garden and provide a commitment to maintaining a vegetable garden; agree to attend training sessions by
INMED South Africa and other continuous learning opportunities and, finally, be willing to share resources among other group and community members.
Participants of the project in GraaffReinet will also establish a Seeds for Life Stokvel, which will promote and encourage gardening, especially edible gardening, by providing a unique opportunity for any prospective food gardener to receive seasonal seeds, seedling trays, grow medium, training and training material - with the added benefits of social support and interaction.
“Our training courses are highly beneficial to struggling community members,” says Pretorius. “Our adaptive agricultural methods use recyclables in different ways in a vegetable garden, incorporating grey water and vermiculture to enrich the soil in a natural way.”
The pilot phase of the Seeds for Life project in Graaff-Reinet will extend until November 2021.