Friday, April 27, 2012

Angola #9

I am finishing my assignment in Huambo and will be home on May 1st. As you may recall, this assignment is a continuation of two previous assignments which began in December, continued in January, and will conclude with this trip. CNFA’s (Citizens Network for Foreign Affairs) Farmer to Farmer program has a strategic alliance with CODESPA, a Spanish NGO with an emphasis also on agriculture as well as micro finance to underserved segments of an economy. CODESPA requested a volunteer with a banking and financial analysis background so I was asked to be the first CNFA volunteer to work with them. I spent the first part of this trip in Madrid with the CODESPA headquarters staff. A very energetic group of young people with project management skills. Some have been out to the “field” as CODESPA has activities in many countries. I gave a 2-hour seminar on analyzing projects in Angola and Cooperative Financial Management 101. It was cold and rainy in Madrid and I left at 1:00am for Luanda. This is my 9th trip to Angola with 6 of those trips based in Huambo so I have a comfort with the part of town that houses my hotel, CODESPA and CNFA. I walk (20 minutes) to ShopRite which is a “supermarket” and can navigate with some confidence to other areas. Huambo has not changed dramatically in the 2+ years that I have come here; yes, there are some new government buildings but the sidewalks are still torn up and there is a basic lack of electricity, water and sewer for most of the town. Offices and hotels like SIstec have massive generators and buy water which is stored in large blue tanks. I have asked why there is not a system of above or below ground cisterns for collection of rain water but it is unknown here. CODESPA is now working on a second “storage” project – Micro-Silos for dried beans and grain. These are 1,000kg and will be bought by a family. As these are individual, there are less operating costs (guards, management, etc) and appear to be economical. Alberto and I presented the financials to 3 of the 5 Communal Banks (Cooperative-based). The most telling comment: “If a farmer makes payments for 75% of the cost during 9 months, and then decides not to pay any more, what happens? Answer: The Micro-Silo will be repossessed. Next question: “How soon will the farmer receive the money he has already paid back?” Ah my. Working with CODESPA has had another interesting aspect. Alberto is a Spaniard and is very connected into the Expatriate community in Huambo: this includes Portuguese, Cubans, French, Italians, etc. I have enjoyed meeting this diverse group who are currently working in the Huambo region. So all is well in my Angolan world. The country continues to change. Traffic is still a nightmare in Luanda (the capital) but the people are still eager to learn and adapt so the future of their children is better. I am hoping to come back for my 10th trip!

1 comment:

  1. Lynda, I'm interested in working with CNFA's Farmer to Farmer volunteer program and have filled out an application (several weeks ago). A friend with USAID in Angola, Nelson Diarte, suggested I might contact you concerning this program. ... I worked for ICCA, OEA with EMBRAPA in western Brazil in the 1980s and speak/write Portuguese reasonably well. My efforts in the past have been in agricultural entomology (research on population dynamics, integrated pest management, & biological control, etc.), sustainable agriculture, and conservation & development of sustainable community. Currently I volunteer with a local informal initiative, Siempre Sustainable Network, and establishment & development of local community gardens. ... Thanks for any feedback you might be able to provide. paul bain martin, ph.d., Retired, Biology-Natural Sciences, St. Philip's College pbainmartin@gmail.com
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    Paul Martin (BS/MS-TAMU, Ph.D.-Univ. FL) was raised with 5 younger siblings (and worked with migrant labor crews) during the drought of the 50s on a very small south Texas (hog) farm—a farm which always possessed a large garden, fruit trees, chickens and a milk cow. While in Florida during the “Energy Crisis of the 70s”, Martin researched population dynamics of natural enemies of key lepidopteran pests in a “model north Florida ecosystem” (involving vegetable crops and wild hosts, and including studies of Trichogramma and lacewings). Martin was significantly influenced by ecologists like E.J. Dyksterhuis (TAMU), Archie Carr & H.T. Odum (Univ. FL) and David Pimentel (Cornell). Moreover, a considerable amount of applied ecological knowledge was developed in late night sessions with Miguel Altieri (UC Berkeley) and during years as a pasture entomologist in Georgia and Brazil. Martin learned/manipulated to the best of his abilities as sustainable agriculture coordinator, in Jim Hightower’s TDA, and later taught biology/ecology at St. Philip’s College. His wife teaches science at Seguin High School and they are currently is involved with various organizations and efforts toward developing and promoting positively ethical applied community ecology, and work for/with their children and grandchildren on a small “family farm” near Stockdale, TX.

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