Feeding the Future, One Acre at a Time

In the dry zones of TingaTinga and Mawasiliano, West Kilimanjaro, where trees once stood tall and shade was abundant, the landscape had slowly thinned. Overuse of woodlands and relentless grazing left the soil bare and brittle. In Mawasiliano, the ground cracked and withered under the hooves of livestock, and what little forage grew was mostly unpalatable weeds.

Yet beneath the dust, life still waited.

The transformation began in 2023, when the Native PEP team partnered with local communities to restore hope and habitat. One acre of land in Mawasiliano was fenced and carefully sown with native grasses and legumes. By late 2024, the results were tangible: 35 hay bales of 20 kg each were harvested; each one a bundle of hope and a promise of sustainability.

But the true bounty wasn’t just in biomass. Fenced land began to heal. Weeds like Hypoestes species gave way to nutritious forage, and the soil seemed to breathe again. With hay prices doubling during the dry season, the community had not just feed—it had a climate buffer and a business opportunity.

And while new growth was taking root in the pasture, another quiet revolution was unfolding in the forests.

Instead of planting trees, the Native PEP team encouraged the communities to help the old ones return. In late 2024, local residents, elders, and forest experts embraced Assisted Natural Regeneration (ANR); a low-cost, high-impact approach grounded in trust in nature’s own resilience.

In Mawasiliano, light fencing and community watchfulness have begun to give struggling saplings a chance. While a full canopy is yet to return, early signs of regrowth are emerging; proof that even modest protection can shift the tide. In TingaTinga, a heavily degraded woodland bordering a wildlife area was earmarked for restoration. Rather than planting new trees, the community opted to protect natural regrowth, taking responsibility for its future.
 
Community assemblies were held. Awareness campaigns sparked local dialogue. And a clear commitment was made: this forest is worth fighting for.
The strength of Assisted Natural Regeneration lies in its patience and practicality. It doesn’t force change; it creates the space for nature to respond. With low-cost inputs and shared community ownership, it offers quiet but powerful returns: biodiversity, resilience, and a renewed relationship with the land.
 
Today, these areas may not yet boast full forests, but they represent something just as vital: a turning point. A reminder that with care, persistence, and trust in natural systems, restoration can begin; even before the trees are tall.
 

Prepared by: Simon Njoroge

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