Monday, March 28, 2011

Free Internet enabled online registration of KNEC Candidates.

The Kenya National Examination Council (KNEC) has introduced online registration of K.C.P.E candidates. Many schools had not seen the system produced by KNEC, since being the first time to register online. N’garua Maarifa Centre visited the site and downloaded the registration form.

 KNEC had stated that schools had to have access to a computer and the internet, those who don’t should visit any cyber cafe which are connected to the internet and ask for assistance. For that reason one of our former students and head teacher in one of the schools around this area called the Maarifa center seeking assistance. Through him other schools got information and came to the center to be assisted with registration, which was not easy because it was a piloting project for the KNEC.

 In February a workshop was organized by the Kenya Telecenter Network (KENTEL), the two chances given to ALIN were allocated to two representatives from N’garua, Samuel Wambugu and Bett Kipsang who attended the workshop. The knowledge generated at the workshop has helped us to identify ways of helping rural communities through our Maarifa center. Registration of candidates involves data entry to the system which is provided by KNEC. So far, 24 candidates 17 being boys and 7 being girls have been registered at the Maarifa center.

Other school used the software downloaded from the Maarifa center and the following records of pupils have been registered.

   No:    
Name of School
Number of candidates
Gender
Boy   Girls
1.      
Kagaa Primary school Pri.sch
40
18
22
2.      
Lonyek Pri.sch
92
50
42
3.      
Wangwashi Pri.sch
15
7
8
4.      
Kabati Pri.sch
11
6
5
5.      
Laikipia Ranching Pri.sch
10
7
3
6.      
Lariak Pri. sch
14
10
4
7.      
Ndurumo Pri.sch
26
14
12
           Total
208
112
96

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Viewing ‘‘Blogs’’ as new information powerhouses.

The term blog or weblog has become popular only recently According to Wikipedia (2004), a Weblog is “a Web application that contains periodic, reverse chronologically ordered posts on a common Web page”.
 The term Weblog was coined by Jorn Barger in December 1997 and the first Weblog was built by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN. This was also the first Website (http://info.cern.ch/. Peter Scott defines a blog as “a page containing brief, chronologically arranged item of information. A blog can take the form of a diary, journal, what’s new page or links to other websites”.
Blogs are sites that can be used to capture particular views, ideas, or opinions overtime. It is a web application, which contains periodic posts on a common web page. Each blog tells a story, be it about a person, an organization, an event, or any other subject such as the environment, healthcare, disasters, language, literature, etc.
Blogger: - The person who maintains a blog is called a blogger and the act of creating and maintaining a blog is called blogging.
Blogs run from individual diaries to aims of political campaigns, media programmes and corporations, and from one occasional author too large communities of writers. Many weblogs enable visitors to leave comments which can lead to a community of readers centered arround the blog; others are non interactive. The totality of blogs or blog-related activities is called the blogosphere. When a large amount of activity, information, and opinion erupt around a particular subject or controversy in the blogosphere, it may be referred to as a blogstorm or blogswamp.
Early Weblogs were link-driven sites with a mix of links, commentary and personal thoughts and essays and could only be created by people who already knew how to make a website. Today, however, through the introduction of how-to-manuals, blog IDs and several user friendly web tools, even the least savvy people can create a Weblog”. A fine and useful example of such tools is the Rich Text Editor (RTE) as offered by Printexx, which claims that ‘No HTML to Learn’ and ‘No Software to Download and Install’, but with the RTE, how one's entry appears on his screen is how it will be published on the web.
 There are an estimated 1.2 million blogs in English and 1.9 million in all languages combined. They promise to have profound influence on political campaigns and mobilizations for various causes. Ivan noble, a science and technology writer for the BBC was diagnosed with a malignant brain tumour in August 2002. Since then he shared his experiences on a blog that helped many others who were also suffering from the same disease. Noble’s blog was so popular that each entry in his blog attracted 7,000 to 12,000 visitors.
With thousands of serious bloggers who regularly comment on the latest developments in their respective spheres of expertise or interest, blogs have become a major information channel.

How I started Rabbits Rearing; Karanja.


To start rearing rabbits, is as easy as getting a female (doe) and a buck (male), once they start kindling they multiply rapidly. But that could not happen easily to Karanja, first; Rabbits in the community were a preserve of young boys, who kept them as pets for pleasure. ‘‘I started backyard rabbits keeping four yeas ago, without prior knowledge nor interest in the matter. Neither was my attention focused on the small animals’’ said Karanja, a rabbits farmer from Sipili in Laikipia county.

Karanja’s younger son bought one female rabbit and borrowed a male one from a friend; his father took care of them when the boy goes to school. Since then, rabbits started to multiply and there was a ready source of meat for the family. Little by little and Karanja was learning a new trick of solving a problem in the family! Though initially it never occurred to him that one day he will venture into rabbits keeping as an enterprise.

‘‘Whenever I don’t have money and the family wanted to eat meat, we can just pick one mature rabbit and slaughter’’ he quipped. The meat is big enough for the whole family to eat as compared to a kilo from the butcher, which is expensive.

Rabbits keeping don’t require specialized knowledge.

Karanja have many reasons for rearing Rabbits; it is a ready source of meat, which is as tasty as chickens, and he no longer has to bear expense of buying meat from the butcher his family. To start rabbits keeping the initial capital outlay is low, the hutch can be easily constructed using available material like sunflower stalk, bamboo reeds or scrap wood, the roofing can be grass thatched if the owner wants to avoid the cost of iron sheets.

Rabbit’ farming requires little efforts; it can be done by little children and women unlike large animals. Rabbit’s manure can be used in the garden; therefore adding value by enriching garden leaves to be used in organic farming. Incase of diseases loses are not heavy and can be recovered easily unlike if a cow dies. 

Source of income: - Mr. Karanja have found out that Rabbits acts as a source of ‘‘small monies’’; it acts as a saving bank where little cash can easily be found by selling a few of them. Feeding rabbits can be cheap, just need to collect the weeds while weeding, little food concentrates and grains are bought to make them grow faster.

Some difficulties in rabbits farming; The venture is however not without hiccups, Rabbits diseases medicines are not as common, unlike for chicken, farmers may have little to do incase the animals are infected, though in rare occasions. People are reluctant to start something new because there is no ready market, unlike poultry. Keeping many rabbits will certainly require a good allocation of time maybe two to three hours a day. The notion that rearing rabbits is a preserve for young boys is a hindrance driving rabbits away from the option-list of many would be keepers.

General husbandry and handling
Rabbits require proper care. One should keep a close eye on them before going to sleep and during the day. One should be able to learn whether the animal will be sick, whether the doe would make a nest and kindle. They need the best quality food, clean water and clean hutches.

 Animals that are needed for further breeding should be given identification and a close watch on their performance. You should not kill the fast growers but use them for further upgrading. Separate the males and females that you want to keep at early time, before they become sexually active at approximately (Females 4 months, males 2 months later). To prevent fighting, it is good not to put litters together in one hutch. After mating, you should give the young doe’s separate hutches and then the whole cycle starts again.

Which are the breeds kept?
There are some factors to consider when selecting animals breeding stock
Health Signs: - Smooth skin, standing ears, clear eyes, quiet breathing, no mange (scabies) forming crusts around the nose, eyes, at the edges of the ears or inside the ears as a dirty mass. Should have regular legs inspected by letting them jump on the ground.
The abdomen should feel soft but smooth; a spongy feeling indicates some intestinal troubles. Watch for sneezing rabbits. Dirty front legs and dirty nose may indicate a coughing disease called pasteurellose, because animals ‘wash’ their nose with their front legs.

Reproduction age
The male: - The proper age for the first mating depends on the breed and individual development. For small breeds it is 4-5 months, for large breeds 9-12 months. One male can handle up to 10 or more Does, but this depends on mating intensity, heat, stress, age of the male, nutrition and so on.

The female: - Like the males the proper age for the first mating depends on the breed and individual development. Mate females (does) when they reach 75-80% of mature body weight (4-5 months of age for the lighter breeds, 7-9 months for heavy breeds). Does mature faster than bucks.

Kindling and mother care:- When the doe is almost ready for kindling (about 4 weeks after mating) you can put a nest box in the maternity cage for kindling to take place here. All she needs is rest and feed. A scared doe may eat her young. Cannibalism may occur for other reasons too, such as no drinking water, lack of minerals and sometimes for no apparent reason. However, unrest is likely to be the main cause. Killing the doe eliminates cannibalism.

Consideration when building a rabbit’s hutch.
The following factors should be taken into account:
A favorable microclimate, Protection from predators, Doors, hinges and feeding troughs
Sizes of hutches, Hygiene and building materials, Maternity hutch and the nest box.
  
Practical remarks in feeding rabbits
I.     Do not change feed suddenly
II.     Do not get desperate if animals don’t like seemingly good feed at first glance. Try it for a few days; if necessary starve them a little. The rabbit is notorious for its likes and dislikes which are difficult to predict.
III.     Greens should not be too wet, because it will upset the stomach and cause trouble, diarrhea and death.
IV.     Do not feed more than they will eat; remove old feeds.
V.     A good feeding method is to give concentrate (rice bran, corn, roots) during the day and feed greens overnight. It avoids attracting rats during nighttime.
VI.     Rabbit’s practices coprophagy or pseudo-rumination: consumption of feaces and thus the rabbit recirculates a part of the feed through the body. During the night the rabbit produces a soft faecal pellet, not like the well-known small dry ‘marbles’, but more like a longer shaped wet sausage. The rabbit eats these again but will not touch the dryer pellets. Coprophagy occurs also with other animals to a lesser or a greater extent (e.g. monkeys)

Sick animals: - The main causes of mortality in rabbits are probably intestinal problems and respiratory organs complications. Problems of skin parasites are bothersome but hardly ever fatal and are easily cured.

Prevention of diseases: - Try to avoid buying at the marketplace where many unknown germs come together. Try to buy from respected breeders, or farmers with clean housing and healthy looking animals. Inspect them and after bringing them home keep them separated from your animals (quarantine) for at least 2 weeks.

Make routine checks on the health of your animals on the following points:
a.     Check nose, eyelids, ear edges for mange (little crust), inside the ear for ear mite.
b.     Check the manure is it dry or somewhat pasty.
c.     Check for the smell in the hutch, diarrhoea/enteritis often causes a dirty smell. When the doe is lactating she is under stress and more liable to suffer an attack from intestinal germs (always present) such as coccidiosis. The nest box needs cleaning.
d.     Clean the hutches every day and keep them dry. Disinfect?
e.     Keep animals away from their manure; slatted floors and no (deep) litter are to be preferred
f.      Separate animals you suspect are ill so they do not infect healthy animals
g.     Do not let visitors get close, have a bath disinfectant at the doorstep and add your own variations on this road to 100% infection prevention.
h.     Clean to freshen the air. Strong manure smell is not good.

Untapped potential of small stocks.

Livestock are an important part of livelihood systems for many poor rural populations in developing countries. ‘‘Small stocks’’ decreases the vulnerability to poverty, especially since it’s more accessible to greater numbers of poor households.

 Francis Kinyanjui a small-scale farmer in Ngarua Division, have demonstrated resilience in small stocks farming. He keeps a stock of over two hundred rabbits, which have multiplied since he started rabbits rearing for his livelihood, four years ago. In spite of the challenges associated with his choice of occupation, he is not giving up.

  Francis a regular user of Ngarua Maarifa Center, located in N’garua division of Laikipia County, is looking for the means of marketing his animals. He has secured a hotel outlet in Nyahururu where he supplies his stock; any opportunity to get more clients will be of great help to the hard working farmer.

  He has a word of encouragement to other farmers; to venturing into rabbits rearing because, as he puts, ‘‘is easy to start and manage’’, rabbits can easily multiply and provide a source of ready income when needed. For example, an activity requiring small amounts of money can be completed from the sale of a rabbit than in the case of large stocks i.e. cattle. Selling a cow in that case could lead to having money, which are not planned for.

  To build his capacity on how to improve the management of his stock, Francis attended a training workshop organized by, Mt Kenya workers forum for vision 2030, Association. They were taught on the importance of rabbit’s meat over other meat products and how to mobilize rural farmers to start keeping the animals.

  Challenges: - Francis has to contend with a few challenges like, lack of a ready market, high mortality rate for young animals and lack of adequate quantities from other farmers.
Bigger quantities can attract better buyers and provides the necessary bulk making it economical to transport to bigger towns.