Welcome to the Cookswell Jikos blog. The following posts and pictures are our latest updates, sales offers, recipes and prices from the home of the Original Kenya Ceramic Jiko, Charcoal Oven and Kinyanjui Barrel Kilns. We encourage you to; Invest in tree planting! Save Money! Save Energy! Eat Well!
Aerial Tree Seeding Trials - Aug 2018
Many thanks to Gai Cullen from The Permaculture Research Institute of Kenya http://www.pri-kenya.org for flying and providing the research area and many thanks as well to Natalie Topa for organizing the tree (acacia xanthopholea) and grass (enteropogon macrostachyus and cenchrus ciliaris) seedballs for this test in Athi River.
To test a few various ways of dropping the seedballs we used a KitFox recreational aircraft - (0.5hours flight time @ 70$ running cost per hour) to drop 30kgs of seedballs (appx. 15,000seeds) along a 200 meter or so stretch on the top ridge of a new dam that was recently built on the farm.
This method shows good potential for targeted restoration for areas in the drylands where intense charcoal making/bush clearing has occurred especially around hard to reach low altitude hills.
We will continue researching costs and best practices for this type of aerial seed application and we will follow up on this site in 6 months to a year depending on rains to see what has grown.
You can learn more about this budding area of research into aerial seed application in East Africa from http://treeseedlist.blogspot.co.ke/20... and also http://www.seedballskenya.com
Who came up with biochar seedballs and where does the charcoal dust that makes up the seedballs come from?
It is a very interesting story that spans back to the birth of Nairobi City.
''The history of charcoal use in Nairobi goes back over 100 years and since the founding of the ''Green City in the Sun'', charcoal and firewood have been the main energy source used to power its growth.
No one knows exactly when charcoal became a popular household fuel in Kenya. But it seems to have become a common fuel with the advent of urbanization and the arrival of the traditional metal charcoal stove introduced to the Kenyan interior about 90 years ago from India. According to information from charcoal-makers, charcoaling, especially in the coastal and central regions of Kenya, became an income-generating activity as far back as 1915 and was highly commercialized in the 1950s.
In subsequent decades, charcoal-making grew in magnitude and geographical spread, as urbanization accelerated and country roads improved. The trade spread to the Rift Valley, Western Kenya and finally to remote arid and semi-arid zones of the northern region. Until the late 1970s, the raw materials for charcoal seemed inexhaustible, being ubiquitous and available at virtually no cost. Government forest reserves, open rangelands, upland watershed zones, and lowland semi-arid areas became the main sources of the fuel.
Over the years, the key dynamic factors behind the expansion of the industry have been an accelerating urban growth, agricultural land clearing, and sector profitability, especially for dealers.
Today charcoal is still a key bio-energy resource in Kenya, providing domestic energy for 82% of urban and 34% of rural households. The charcoal industry also creates jobs for wood producers, charcoal producers, transporters and vendors.
The industry reportedly employs almost 1 million people on a part and full-time basis across the value chain. It saves millions of shillings in foreign exchange. And in spite of its significance, the charcoal sector continues to bear a negative image and remains largely informal, thus limiting its potential to attract meaningful investment.
The Energy and Forestry Policies and Acts have recently legalized sustainable charcoal production, and efforts are underway by government agencies, including the Kenya Forest Service (KFS), and the Ministry of Energy (MoE), to take forward the implementation of this legislation.
At least 750,000 kg of rough unprocessed lump wood charcoal is consumed within Nairobi daily, and of that amount 15% is dust, fines and chips - charcoal vendor's waste.This salvaged charcoal waste is the dust we use to make the seedballs.
This is where charcoal vendor's waste meets tree seeds to produce seedballs using production techniques developed by Chardust Ltd. (www.chardust.com) who are responsible for seedball production and, some 20 years ago, started what is now a thriving industry in East Africa: Manufacturing eco-friendly briquettes from salvaged charcoal vendor's waste. Chardust started cleaning up the charcoal dust waste from some of the highest-density and lowest-income urban areas of Nairobi in 1996. And now in 2017 there are some 50 briquetting facilities of various sizes and sophistication who have followed Chardust's lead and methods. Chardust Ltd. is happy to see that most of this 'waste' is no longer wasted. VWB- Vendor's Waste Briquettes- are now part of the charcoal value chain.
Elsen, the Director of Chardust Ltd had discovered that beneath every long-established charcoal sales area, scattered throughout most of Nairobi, there were literally thousands of tons of well-preserved discarded charcoal dust 'waste'- some of it dating back to the early 1900's as evidenced by old coins recovered while cleaning up the sites.
Teddy, the Sustainability Manager at Cookswell Jikos Ltd. (www.cookswell.co.ke) had been researching how to lower the cost of dryland reforestation for years.
And now, with their efforts and yours, the seed-to-ash woodfuel circle is complete with the use of salvaged urban biochar to protect and nourish seeds delivered to areas that were, in most cases, deforested years ago creating the charcoal dust that we use.''
http://www.seedballskenya.com/about/4592985893
The fenceline seeding test plot near Mile 46, Kajiado County.
Before (May 2017) and after (July 2018) photos of one of the very first test plots in Southern Kajiado on a fence line of a farm near Mile 46 Trading Center. Unfortunately the brush is currently to thick and thorny to do a proper count of how many trees have come up but we counted out 52 acacia yellow fever trees that were between 1 and 4 feet tall on only about 100meters on the Eastern fence line! The West side of the fence line was very rocky and flooded out during the last rains so we will try look for some at the bottom of the farm later as well. Clearing is underway and we cant wait to go back to count them all properly!
May 2017
July 2018
David slaying the Goliath that is Deforestation in Kenya!
These kids have the right idea! Using traditional style #slingshots they can launch 1/4kg (about 150 #seedballs) at once at deforested areas of #HomaBay County! Thanks very much to Brian for these great photos!
The first bakery in North Horr, Northern Kenya.
A million thanks to the #BunduRoversClub Kenya for the update on our charcoal baking oven that you took all the way up to the Good Shepard Catholic Mission in #NorthHorr during your #desertdriveagainsthunger last month
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