I have been in Chard for a gifting mission, I took to them the orgonite and at the same time lecture people on the importance of the orgonite also took some zappers with me which I also took my valuable time introducing to some of them. The turn up is very encouraging and I have a lot of people willing to start adopting to adapt to it in their farms.
I also taught some farmers on how to make and use the orgonite. Also gave some of the fishermen some orgonite that they may go and use while doing their fishing in the Lake and rivers. For now I would say that the people of Chard are very positive. I was there last week and probably next week I may take to them some more. From all these I can see we are opening another marketing zone.
Christine
Asante sana, Bibi (thanks, Ma’am) for this update. I think this is your third trip to Chad, which is mainly a desert country that surrounds a very large but shallow lake.
It may be that the fishermen’s previous distribution of your orgonite in Lake Chad has enabled more people to farm in the region–did you find this to be true? This is the first time you’ve given orgonite to farmers in that country, if I’m not mistaken.
Traveling to Chad from Southern Sudan probably deserves its own story, which I would love to read sometime.
Mungu akubariki (God bless you),
Don
Hi Don,
Definitely it’s true that this is my first time that we have gifted farmers especially here in Chad. For many times I have been dealing with lakes and the fishermen. In Chad I found great development, in those shallow lakes where my counterparts gifted a long time during my first trip in the previous years, now are having a greater improvement. My happiness is that that in Chad now even those areas where people never knew about fishing are now great fishermen and thus their economic standard.
The yearly rainfall calendar have highly improved due to the orgonite which we had gifted in the previous years, with the tight crop calendar concentrating in farming activities , These has help much in improving food access throughout the area s of the central Chad. For now the current pressure on grain prices has now gradually ease between now and the beginning of the harvesting season for rainfall is now sufficient to increase the food production especially in the areas of Moundou market, had already reportedly begun to fall in the second week of September with incoming shipments of green corn and fresh groundnut crops. So on that area of Moundou those whom I gave the mbolea in the previous time really used them very well and when I went back I found that that are having a good change.
Really I like them very much and I m very sure a remarkable change will finally be realized as the time goes.
Kwa hakika kasi yetu katika inchi wa Chad ita shaa matunda ya kudumu, inafaa tushidi kutia moyo bila kuchoka.( For sure the work that we are doing in Chad will produce a lasting fruits therefore we should not lose hope but to strive and forge ahead)
Christine