Linang in Masumbang: Enhancing Food Security and Promoting Sustainable Agriculture Through Household Vegetable Gardening
September 2019
Post-training group photo with the Linang: A Sustainable Farm to Table program graduates from Brgy. Masumbang, Merida, Leyte, and representatives from WWF-Philippines, the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), the East-West Seed Foundation.
The World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Philippines, through Linang: A Sustainable Farm to Table program, conducted a three-day training on household vegetable gardening in Brgy. Masumbang, Merida, Leyte from September 17 to 19, 2019. Linang, a collaboration project with the National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP), aims to address food security and sustainable livelihood challenges in partner communities through capacity development interventions in sustainable agriculture production, financial literacy, and savings mobilization, as well as the creation of viable agro-enterprises.
Since 2017, the project has been implemented in 14 rural barangays across the country, which includes Masumbang. The goal of the training is to teach households on modern vegetable cultivation through experiential learning and to instill the importance of food security at home as an aspect of financial management and savings mobilization.
Farmers from Brgy. Masumbang, Merida, Leyte doing a hands-on activity on plastic mulch. Plastic mulch is a product used to conserve water and suppress weeds in crop production and agricultural landscaping.
The entire training program was comprised of nine modules and four hands-on activities which were collectively conducted by WWF-Philippines, NGCP, and the East-West Seed Foundation. Module topics ranged from sustainable agriculture to container gardening, while hands-on activities ranged from seed sowing to installing plastic mulch and making organic fertilizers. Farmers were also empowered to awaken the plant pathologists in them through modules that focused on assessing plant health and determining diseases and unfriendly insects that may damage their crops. After going through all of the modules and hands-on activities across the three days, a graduation ceremony was held for the trainees, where each of them were given certificates of completions, shirts from NGCP, and household vegetable garden starter kits with seeds from the East-West Seed Foundation.
Initially, farming communities like the one present in Brgy. Masumbang have practiced monocropping, which has led to smaller incomes due to several external factors, including rapidly changing climate. Moreover, farmers in these communities face challenges such as lack of better production skills, lack of capital and resource generation channels, and big gaps on marketing linkages for their agricultural products. Moncini Hinay, WWF-Philippines’ Project Manager for The Sustainable Farm to Table program, believes that improving household access to vegetables in these communities through technology transfer is one of the most immediate ways the project can help in addressing these challenges. “Under The Sustainable Farm to Table program, we are promoting local food security and implementing sustainable agriculture-based livelihood for the partner farmer clusters in communities like Brgy. Masumbang. We use an agro-enterprise development approach in order to develop an entrepreneurial mindset in our farmer clusters through capacity development interventions in financial literacy, savings mobilization, organizational and enterprise development”,’ says Hinay. “Our goal is to establish sustainable agro-enterprises, or farmer associations, in these clusters that will contribute to the diversification of crop produce and improvements when it comes to productivity and incomes.”
Muneer Hinay, WWF-Philippines’ Project Manager for The Sustainable Farm to Table program, addresses the trainees before the training graduation ceremony started.
The Sustainable Farm to Table Programme, which has been implemented since 2017, is currently in its Phase 3. The phase has three main objectives: 1) to sustain the seven agro-enterprise clusters created to enable them to be functional agriculture-based associations within the host communities; 2) to scale-up the agro-enterprise approach to six host communities in Mindanao; and 3) to expand capacity development on household vegetable gardening and financial literacy and savings mobilization to six new host communities all over the Philippines. An initiative called The Farmer’s MBA Program has also been developed in order to further capacitate the members of each agro-enterprise clusters through the completion of different training modules focusing on organizational development and enterprise development.
Farmers from Brgy. Masumbang, Merida, Leyte, together with representatives from WWF-Philippines, NGCP, and the East-West Seed Foundation, were all smiles during the graduation ceremony. They received certificates of program completion, shirts from NGCP, as well as household vegetable gardening starter kits from the East-West Seed Foundation.
Projects such as The Sustainable Farm to Table program, which falls under the Sustainable Food Systems arm of WWF-Philippines, were developed primarily to address major issues facing the sustainability of our local food systems. The objective of these projects is to ensure that our food systems are being run with biodiversity and environmental conservation in mind while also ensuring that the country remains healthy and food secure in the present and in the future. Furthermore, they directly impact the state of agriculture in the country by empowering the ones who feed us, expanding their knowledge and introducing them to new methods and technologies which will improve not only the quality of what they produce but also uplift the livelihoods of every farmer involved.
For more information, please contact:
Mr. Muneer Hinay
Project Manager, Sustainable Farm to Table
mhinay@wwf.org.ph