Katy Rhode, 74, of Groenheuwel in Paarl East is thrilled to be feeding her friends and family freshly picked vegetables, thanks to the Impilo household vegetable garden establishment and grey water harvesting project of the Western Cape Department of Agriculture, in cooperation with the Great Commission Network (GCN) non-profit company.
The aim of the project is to create 100 household food gardens in the Cape Winelands and Cape Metropole districts.
To reward Ms Rhode for her commitment and participation in the project, she’s receiving a bicycle as part of a Qhubeka programme to benefit 70 Cape Winelands vegetable garden project participants.
The bikes will allow Ms Rhode and others like her to plant and water their gardens and make sure they get their produce to market as quickly as possible, using their own transport.
The Qhubeka distribution of 70 bicycles to Cape Winelands beneficiaries is funded by Nederburg Wines, home to Qhubeka’s bicycle assembly facility in the Western Cape, where a number of previously unemployed women from the local community are trained to build bikes for countrywide distribution.
Qhubeka is a charity that changes lives with bicycles. Qhubeka’s programme participants earn bicycles in various ways, for example through learn-to-earn and work-to-earn projects.
The aim in this instance is to support the Western Cape Department of Agriculture and GCN initiative, which promotes healthy eating and improved food security amongst marginalised communities.
The recipients of the 70 Qhubeka bicycles are from Paarl East, Stellenbosch (Cloetesville) and Franschhoek (Groendal), with the first 20 (from Paarl East) receiving their bikes at a ceremony at Nederburg, on Thursday October 25.
Says Ms Rhode: “We picked the first veggies a few weeks ago, and my family and friends are loving it. I even had enough from the first crop to give to our seniors club. A lot of those people lack the right nourishment, so I’m glad that I am able to help them. Even my son, who lives in Darling, is so excited by this project he has started his own vegetable patch at home. This thing is catching on, I tell you. Now, having the bike, it’s easier to collect the seeds, to transport the grey water I use and then get my produce to the market. And I’m getting so fit.”
Frederick Muller, 70, spends every day tending his vegetables. He says: “I began with spinach and lettuce, as part of the starter kit I got from the department. Now I’ve got corn and green beans and more, and I’m making a bit of money from what I sell. This project is going so well, I’m talking to my municipality about using the open plot next to me to plant more.”
All the project participants receive a starter kit from the Western Cape Department of Agriculture through the Cape Agency for Sustainable Integrated Development in Rural Areas (Casidra).
It includes a hoe, rake, watering can, grey water harvesting and irrigation system, organic compost, fertiliser, some vegetable seedlings and seeds.
GCN secretary, Carl Schmidt, says they have trained the project participants in the theory and practical aspects of household vegetable farming and grey water harvesting. “They also have been given business skills training by GCN treasurer, Benita Alard, to help them turn their gardens into self-sustaining ventures. To keep the momentum going, our coordinators meet the gardeners and visit their gardens once a month. We, in conjunction with other partners, have also run a vegetable cooking demonstration and a recipe competition in the various areas, to encourage healthy eating.”
Mr Schmidt says the programme includes not only the elderly but also farmers across the age spectrum, even those in their 20s.
Nederburg’s Thandeka Matsoha says of her brand’s involvement: “This is not a hand-out but a hand-up to members of the local community. It’s a great way to impart information and skills that extend from nutrition and micro-enterprise management to eco-sustainable farming and could even lead to contributions to tourism one day.”
“Nederburg has been involved for the last 18 months in building and distributing bikes used in a range of programmes, including a number of Paarl East community watch organisations, the Dwars River Escape Route near Stellenbosch, Ride 2 Empower in Khayelitsha that offers guided bicycle tours of the township, as well as Ekasi Recycling’s Gugulethu Goes Green initiative that focuses on waste management and recycling. It’s an honour for Nederburg to help Qhubeka move communities forward.”
Visit www.nederburg.co.za/bicycles or www.qhubeka.org