Second Quarter Update 2024

The rains have come and we’ve been busy this quarter! 

The whole country faced severe flooding in April and May, we were not immune as several catchments on the farm are fed by drainage from surrounding roads. Our main dam was full for the first time, but did not overflow. 

Our dam, full of water but fortunately not over flowing

We were also really pleased to see no runoff from any of our own fields, unlike over grazed areas on neighbouring farms, proving our concept for crop rotation resulting in healthier soils able to maximise water retention. 

Our field are sodden, but there wasn’t any run off or erosion due to the soil management regime, where lots of last year’s biomass is left on the field.

At the same time, we have been laying pipes for distributing water to cattle troughs and other points around the farm, this will reduce the cost in distributing water. 

A new pipeline to distribute borehole water across the farm.

Crops

April always means planting, planting, planting! And we’ve been busy! This season as part of our usual rotation and in anticipation of good rains, we have planted seed maize, beans, sorghum and grass. We were flat out managing field preparation, planting and subsequent scouting and pest management. 

A crop of fresh Boma Rhodes grass.

The crops are all doing well, with the maize seed crop ready for detasseling in June. We continue to monitor wildlife threats, especially reed buck and guinea fowl which love to eat shoots, and wild pigs which will eat freshly planted seeds and small cobs. 

Our maize seed crop, post detasseling with males on the left and females on the right.

The beans harvested in Q1 have met our consistently high quality, with KEPHIS returning 99% and 98% for Kat B1 and KK8 germination tests respectively.

Livestock

We’ve had an exciting development this quarter, bringing in a new herd of dairy cattle from the Hairy Dairy. These beautiful Jersey cattle will join our existing dairy cows as we develop this aspect of our livestock program. 

Hairy Dairy cows, on their way to the farm!

In another first for us, we’re going to start breeding from one of our own AI bred bulls, this young Charolais cross should fill out and provide great genetics for our beef herd.

Our first AI-bred bull being used in our general beed breeding herd.

Additionally, we’ve been managing Foot and Mouth alerts in the area, with a vaccination program for all cows.

Life on the Farm

Loloto left us again, giving us time to fix fences and collect trees he has knocked over, we hope he’ll be safe until he returns. 

In 2023, we shared information on our efforts to clear Lantana, an invasive shrub that smothers pasture, we recently commissioned a wood chipper, which will enable us to further deal with this threat while producing mulch returning biomass to the soil.

Cows happily grazing in pasture that is growing in a field cleared of Lantana

Lamu

While we were planting on the farm, we were also planting at the coast! This year we planted 500 mangroves along the beach at Mnazi Mmoja, in line with broader efforts in Lamu county to conserve mangrove cover to reduce beach erosion and create more habitat for marine life. 

Mangroves planted in front of Mnazi Mmoja.

We’ve also been planting fruit trees for several years now, and these are starting to bear (delicious!) fruit! 

Delicious mangoes from our first crop this year.