Being food self-sufficient would be no mean feat for Daylight. The school already has 140 students, and will grow as dormitories allow more students from further afield to attend. Moreover, Daylight is situated in a region that often struggles with food security. But the new land just might make this ambitious goal plausible.
First of all, much of the land is currently cultivated maize (or corn, if you prefer). Much of this will remain and provide a staple starch for the school. And as you may have read in a previous post on this blog, Daylight now has a cow which will provide milk. Michael also has plans to have a vegetable garden at the school.
But while I was at the new land, I had the opportunity to plant a variety of trees, including several fruit trees. This was especially rewarding as Kenyan Nobel laureate Wangaari Maathi had passed away that week, so planting trees in Kenya seemed a fitting tribute to the women who did so much to advance the cause of the natural environment in Africa.
But more to the point, producing fruit at the school will help to insure that students are not only getting enough calories, but also vitamins and nutrients.
Of course, these trees won't produce fruit for several years, but the goal of becoming sustainable and food self-sufficient is a long-term and ongoing process. And just like those trees, Daylight is a young and growing organism that will be bearing fruit long after the efforts we all put in today.