Sunday, February 20, 2011

First Honey Harvest!

In July 2010, Iltubula purchased their new beekeeping equipment with funds from their partners in North Carolina, the McDowell Honey Bees and the Marion County Rotary Club. They purchased 15 beehives, 1 beesuit, 1 smoker, 1 brush, 1 knife and 1 robe. They also used some of the funds to travel to a sustainable agriculture project in Molo, Kenya, where they purchased the equipment and received some training. After the new hives were transported to Oletukat, the group planned to receive additional training from the Ministry of Arid Lands.

We traveled to Oletukat in July to celebrate the arrival of the new equipment. Here's an Oletukat member holding a frame from the beehive.


The smoker to use during harvesting

The brush to gently remove the bees during harvesting

The knife to remove the honeycomb from the frame

A member in the beesuit with the new hives

After the community proudly showed us their new equipment, they told us they wanted to celebrate this momentous occasion by harvesting one of the three beehives they received during an earlier training. The whole community walked into the bush together to watch the event.


The group member wearing the beesuit went into the thicket where the hive was to harvest the bees....

...and he emerged with a bounty of golden honeycomb!

It was such a great celebration to watch all the community members gathered around, enjoying this golden harvest!

Here's a picture of Samson Dikirr, one of the Nasha Ministries officers who helped make this project a reality.

The community was very excited about the successful harvest. At the sustainable agriculture project where they purchased the beehives and equipment, they learned about a machine that could help them purify the honey, bottle it and sell it for money. They are looking forward to the next steps in this project, as they work to diversify their livelihoods and lift themselves out of poverty.

Thanks to Iltubula's sister beekeeping group the McDowell Honey Bees and the Marion Rotary Club and to Iltubula's in-country partner Nasha Ministries for making this project a success!

Monday, April 19, 2010

I am Jacob

I am Jacob Kutingala. I will begin working on this website today.

Thank you.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

The Beginning

This weekend Chris and I went to visit Iltubula to tell them that their apiary proposal had been sponsored by the McDowell Honeybees and the Marion County Rotary Club. It was very exciting to be able to deliver this news, and we wished the generous donors from these groups could have been there to tell the group themselves. We documented our journey here to share it with them.

This is the road to Oletukat, through a semi-arid landscape of acacia trees. Up ahead, you can see a common roadblock in the area-- a herd of cattle wandering down the road.

Upon arriving at Oletukat, we first visited the house of Ezekial Kutingala, our friend and host. We visited with his three young children, and his lovely wife Josephine made us chai.

Then we went to meet the Iltubula Bee Keeping Self-Help Group. We all gathered in one member's house, and an elder opened the meeting with prayer. Then we all introduced ourselves. Timothy, Iltubula's Chairman, and his brother Jacob talked about the history and vision of the group. They also discussed the traditional role that bees and honey play in the Maasai culture. Then it was our turn to tell the group the exciting news... their proposal to build an apiary in their community had been fully funded through the generosity of the McDowell Honey Bees and the Marion Country Rotary Club! We had brought pictures of some of the members of the two groups, which we shared with the members of Iltubula.

The community told us that four of their members had already received training from the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries Development, and they proudly showed us their training certificates. We were especially excited to see women represented and trained in the group, because women are often under-represented in community leadership.

Then they took us on a tour of their proposed apiary site. They had chosen a 1 acre area they plan to fence off, where they have agreed not to harvest any of the trees for firewood. They had already dug a water pan nearby to be used as a water source for the bees.


They also have five top bar hives already in the apiary that had been given to them by the Ministry during the trainings, and they proudly showed them to us. Three of them were inhabited by bees, so we chose to examine the other two. Because the community currently has no specialized equipment or clothing to handle bees, they only harvest honey in the early morning or evening, when the bees are less active.

They took one of the hives down from a tree and showed us how they work. They are comprised of a wooden box with thin slats of wood fitted across the top, covered by a thin metal lid. Each wooden slat has a groove on which the bees form the honeycomb. By removing each slat, you can harvest as much honey or wax as you need.

Here is a group picture of Iltubula, standing in front of one of their hives. They are excited to get a group picture in return of the generous groups who have decided to support their dream through forming a partnership through the art of beekeeping.

WELCOME!

Welcome to Iltubula. Follow their progress. Get engaged in their progress.

The Chairman

This is Timothy, the Chairman of Iltubula. He is the eldest son of Soloman Kutingala.