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Equal footing: working together to face climate change in Uganda
Small holder farmer, Mrs Ssekide, joined the Balyejjusa farmer field school and convinced of the benefits persuaded her husband to join too. She tells her story of how successful working as a team has proven to be. In Uganda, almost 80% of households rely upon agriculture for their livelihood, and following her example could prove highly beneficial for the nation’s well being.
Duration
6m37s
Edit Version
Clean
Video Type
B Roll Video
Date
12/13/2016 2:34 AM
File size
404.98 MB
Unique ID
UF2T3P
All editorial uses permitted
Production details and shotlist
UNFAO Source
FAO Video
Shotlist
LOCATIONS: Village near Ngoma Town (Nakaseke District), Kitenga Sub-County (Mubende District), Uganda
SHOT: October 2016
SOUND: Natural, English, Luganda
TRT: 6’37”
SHOTLIST:
Village near Ngoma Town, Nakaseke District:
1. Pan up from chicks walking by on dry ground to L/S of a farmer field school meeting taking place at a hut in the distance
2. C/U of a sign for the Global Climate Change Alliance (GCCA) Uganda
3. W/S of a farmer talking to a trainer
4. M/C/U of a farmer (from behind) speaking to a trainer
5. C/U of a female farmer listening
6. C/U of a male farmer listening
7. W/S of a female farmer pointing at an action plan with a stick
8. C/U of the female farmer talking to the group
9. Pan up M/C/U of the plan they have devised together
Mrs Ssekide’s Farm, Kitenga Sub-County, Mubende District
10. M/C/U of Mrs Ssekide walking with a bowl of on her head
11. W/S of Mrs Ssekide walking past her husband who is connecting up the water harvesting tank to a pump
12. M/C/U of Mr Ssekide cycling on a foot pump
13. C/U of Mrs Ssekde watering
14. M/C/U pan on the greens being watered
15. W/S of Mrs and Mr Ssekide watering the kitchen garden
16. W/S of Mrs and Mr Ssekide picking greens from the garden
17. C/U of Mrs Ssekide
18. C/U of a bowl with the leaves
19. W/S of Mrs Ssekide walking away from the greens
20. C/U of a bowl of ripe tomatoes
21. M/C/U pan of Mrs Ssekide picking tomatoes to a full bowl
22. M/C/U pan of Mrs Ssekide walking past towards her farmhouse carrying her produce
23. M/C/U of Mrs Ssekide’s daughter and mother
24. M/C/U tilt up of Mrs Ssekide counting money
25. C/U of Mrs Ssekide’s hands handling a shilling note
26. W/S of Mr Ssekdie walking in the farm past a goat and her kids
27. M/C/U of the kids feeding from their mother
28. M/C/U of Mr Ssekide starting a machine for shredding fodder
29. W/S of Mr and Mrs Ssekide working together shredding fodder
30. C/U of the shredded fodder
31. C/U pan from Mrs Ssekdie to her husband and the fodder being fed into the machine
32. W/S of the couple working
33. W/S of the goats locked up in a wooden structure
34. C/U of a goat eating leaves
35. W/S of poultry in a shack
36. W/S of Mr Ssekide and a young man carrying feed to the pigs in a pigsty
37. M/C/U of Mr Ssekide with the feed
38. C/U of the pig eating
39. M/C/U of Mr Ssekide lifting the feed into the pigsty
40. M/C/U pan up from a tray of eggs to Mrs Ssekide walking over to her biogas cooking stove
41. C/U of Mrs Ssekide lighting the biogas stove
42. C/U of Mrs Ssekide’s face as she cooks
43. C/U of an omelette being cooked
44. M/C/U of Mrs Ssekide putting the omelette on a plate
45. M/C/U of Mr Ssekide stirring manure with a spade in a biogas digester
46. W/S of Mr Ssekide emptying the manure
47. M/C/U pan on Mrs ssekide walking up to her daughter and mother with the omelette and sting down
48. C/U of Mrs Ssekide
49. M/C/U of the three sitting eating
50. C/U of Mrs Ssekide’s daughter eating
51. C/U pan from plate to Mrs Ssekide’s mother eating the omelette
52. W/S of the three sitting on the step eating with their dog looking on
53.W/S of Mr Ssekide digging his compost with Mrs Ssekide gathering dried grass behind
54. M/C/U of Mrs Ssekide picking up dried vegetation
55. W/S of Mrs Ssekide adding it to the compost heap
56. C/U of the compost being worked
57. W/S of the couple as they harvest a bunch of bananas
58. C/U of Mrs Ssekide picking up the bunch of bananas
59. W/S of Mrs Ssekide carrying the bunch of bananas on her head in her field
60. M/C/U of Mrs Ssekide carrying the bunch of bananas on her head
61. W/S pan of Mrs Ssekide carrying the bunch of bananas as she walks towards her farmhouse past the biogas ingestor
62. SOT 1: Mrs Ssekide, Farmer (Luganda)
When I joined the Balyejjusa farmer field school, during the training I realised that I had to work together with my husband to farm correctly. Farming needs the family to work together as a team. Because if you don’t co-operate then the farming will not be successful. That’s why I convinced my husband to join the farmer field school in order for us to work as a team.
63. SOT 2: Mr Ssekide, Farmer (Luganda)
At first I wasn’t a group member. My wife was a group member and she shared what she learnt with me. Which I have been using. We were trained and encouraged to work hard to handle climate change challenges and to meet our basic needs. The time comes when we can’t grow crops during the dry season but now we grow tomatoes and earn money. Traders buy from us and the locals too.
64. SOT 3: Mr Ssekide, Farmer (Luganda)
My wife is responsible for the poultry, the goats and the garden. When she gets money she puts it in her account. She has her own bank account. I also have a bank account. We have two children at the University. If I contribute half, she also contributes half towards the school fees. And with the rest of the money she caters to her own and her parents’ family needs.
65. SOT 4: Mrs Ssekide, Farmer (Luganda)
The piggery is one of the main things that has really contributed to improving our lives. I started in a simple way by raising the local breeds. But now I have managed to buy land. At first I was just a tenant but now I own the land. Who am I, a mere farmer, to own land with a land title!
66. SOT 5: Mrs Ssekide, Farmer (Luganda)
With the biogas enterprise my husband recognised that I was working really hard. And so he said we should start a biogas enterprise. That way I could make tea and cook food quickly and easily after work. So now when I come back from the fields, I can make tea and cook dinner quickly. Even someone from Kampala might be without charcoal but here I can use biogas energy.
Many farmers don’t benefit from farming because they don’t think of farming as a business. People often think farmers are failures in their lives. That we didn’t go to school. That’s how people consider farmers to be. But the message I send to my fellow farmers is that they should have a passion for farming. They should make it a business that provides income for the home so you can educate your children. A farmer can educate their children just as someone who is working for the Government can. Because I have educated my children through farming.
ENDS
Script
In Uganda, the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation and the European Union are working together to encourage farmers to adapt to climate change. At the heart of this initiative is the farmer field school, where farmers come together to receive training, share experiences and to learn from each other. Mrs Ssekide is one of the farmers who joined the Balyejjusa farmer field school and convinced of the benefits, persuaded her husband to join too.
Now, as well as providing nutritional food for the family, Mrs Ssekide can sell her surplus produce locally, which means that she no longer has to ask her husband for money and their relationship is now on a more equal footing. As well as taking responsibility for the kitchen garden, goats and poultry, Mrs Ssekide has invested part of her savings in a piggery and eventually she was also able to buy land. All these improvements have also brought about changes which lessen the workload and improve family life.
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