Planting the SEED and creating a community of resilient and self-reliant farmers in Claveria

Monday, October 2, 2023 - 13:51


Barangay Minalwang, Claveria, Misamis Oriental---The old proverb “Give a man a fish, and you feed him for a day, teach a man how to fish and you feed him for a lifetime” could not be truer during our recent climb in Claveria, Misamis Oriental for a 2-day extension and farm immersion led by GreenMinds Incorporated and with volunteer farmer partners of the Agricultural Training Institute-Regional Training Center 10 (ATI-RTC 10) for the Sustainable Ecological and Economic Development (SEED) IV program.  

3.	Aside from stingless beekeeping and vegetable production, herb farming is one of the income sources of the Higaonon tribe in Sitio Kalhaan, Barangay Minalwang, Claveria, Misamis Oriental.
Aside from stingless beekeeping and vegetable production, herb farming is one of the income sources of the Higaonon tribe in Sitio Kalhaan, Barangay Minalwang, Claveria, Misamis Oriental.

The Indigenous Peoples (IP) farming community of Barangay Minalwang is the latest beneficiary of the   SEED program conceptualized by GreenMinds last 2011 in response to a request for proposal from Tearfund-New Zealand. As to implementation, the program was divided into phases with a 3–4-year duration, namely SEED I-SEED for the IP communities in the Philippines and Vanuatu, SEED II towards a green economy and for the marginalized sectors, and SEED III which intends to diversify, collaborate, sustain and SEED IV for rebuilding resilient communities.

Minalwang women farmers
The women farmer members of the Kalhaan Kabahiyanan Association show their communal garden and freshly picked chayote.

Going to Minalwang is the first hurdle since it will take a 5-hour drive to get there. It makes travel all the more difficult due to its remote location, intermittent rains, rough and slippery roads, and zero telecommunication signal.

Also, Barangay Minalwang used to be a sprawling ground for rebels where basic social services were nonexistent, and government interventions were hard to come by because of insurgency.   

As a gesture of support and to invoke the Bayanihan spirit, the volunteer group pooled their resources and shared their time, skills, and talent for community development.

A series of activities transpired including the installation of water pipes for the construction of a concrete water storage tub, buyback of herbs and stingless bee colonies (in bee boxes), soil painting session with the elementary learners of Barangay Minalwang, supplemental feeding, and other community development work. Elementary teachers Jovannie Sawitan and Clarisse Grace Makalisang of Minalwang Elementary School expressed their gratitude for the volunteer’s time and commitment. The two teachers juggle schedules and teaching duties as they are the only teachers for grades 1-6. The next extension activity is the completion of the teacher’s cottage intended for their welfare since they have to travel to the next barangay to rest or for a much-needed break.  

Installation of water pipes
Installation of water pipes to help ease the burden of transporting water from the river source into their community gardens.    

Meanwhile, Anpas Farm’s April Malatamban, Fatima Engallado of Engallado Nature Farm, Melanie Garrucho of Garrucho’s Garden, Yeltsin Kaiser Mercader of Ilaya Farm, Candiisan Diversified Farm, Emmanuel Bangcong with wife Karylle Bangcong, and the team of Umanika Eco-Cultural Farm joined hands together to extend help and community development work as volunteer farmer partners, aside from being a Learning Site for Agriculture (LSA) owners and farm cooperators of the ATI-10 led by Center Director Maria Lydia A. Echavez. Six months prior, Fernie T. Tapay of Molann Diversified Farm installed the community’s first hydraulic ram pump.

The September 18 and 19 visit was also a buyback schedule by GreenMinds where the IP farming community of Minalwang not only profited from their herbs, vegetables, ornamental plants, and stingless bee colonies, but were also empowered and gained an indispensable sense of purpose, hope, and confidence.

Indeed, sustainable farming, as well as food entrepreneurship is making an impact in their lives after being caught at the threshold of insurgency way back in 2021.

Community Garden
Various herbs for cooking and for tea drinking planted by the farmer members of the Kalhaan Kabahiyanan Association.  

Elisha Paza Pitanoe, Country Manager of Ola Fou Solomons, a development organization for the youth in the Solomon Islands, and Agricultural Field Officer James Tanavalu who joined us for their exposure to the various farm sites and farming activities in Northern Mindanao, with lots of farming technologies, production, processing, and marketing through farm immersion that they can glean on, teach to their constituents, and apply in their community when they get back home.

“The trip here in the Philippines is purposedly to come and see what GreenMinds has been doing with the different communities and learning sites since GreenMinds is a partner of Ola Fou, a program with Tearfund New Zealand and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT) of the New Zealand Government.

“Ola Fou” is a Samoan language which means new life or new beginnings. As an organization, Ola Fou-Solomons is geared towards youth development and community development. Our focus is on youth development because we have a very young nation, and the challenge is with the youth such as youth unemployment, social ills, and all these things. Most of the time these young people are at the crossroads of their lives and not knowing the right decisions to make. We think that if young people are given the right opportunity, if these young people are being cared for the right way, then they can become better citizens of their own families, in their communities, and even the nation at large. That is the mission of our youth development program.   

Paza and James
James and Paza (extreme left and extreme right) each receive handwoven mini-bag given by Kalhaan Kabahiyanan Association President Maria Tenila L. Pina-andel and husband Datu Jeofilo Pina-andel. 

Also, we are seeing agriculture as an industry that has potential to engage young people meaningfully. In the context of Solomon Islands, every young people belongs to a family, and every family is part of a tribe, and every tribe owns a land. At the moment, the land is not fully utilized to its maximum, and that is why we want to engage young people in agriculture, so that they can till the land, becomes self-sufficient, self-reliant, and can be able to take care of their own needs as well as the needs of their family and even their communities. That is why our connection with GreenMinds is very important. Seeing the world with GreenMinds, we will replicate the farming technologies we have seen here in our communities.” Paza said.

True to its core belief which is to sustainably continue doing good to the people and the environment while doing ethical agribusiness, GreenMinds Incorporated as a 23-year-old social enterprise organization continues to bring rural and indigenous communities together by showcasing their farming skills and craft and by giving them an active role in countryside development and mainstream society.

“When I came here, I learned a lot especially the farming system, and from the farmers here who are producing herbs which I can introduce in our country, since there is a demand there especially in the food business. When I go back, I will also encourage my community to go into herb farming. I learned a lot from the farmers who are very passionate about producing food. I plan to plant more basil, chives, coriander, and dill. I will also introduce more herbs such as stevia, tarragon, and thyme to our farming community when I return. In our short stay here and from visiting other farm sites, I learned about organic farming, crop diversification, farm planning and designing, soil and water conservation, proper pruning of trees, and contour farming. When we visited the farming community in Kiabo, Malitbog in Bukidnon, I also learned from their banana and taro chips processing. There are lots of bananas, cassava, and taro in Solomon Islands and we also plan to establish more processing centers there perhaps to produce cassava flour or taro flour”, said James Tanavalu, Solomon Islands Agricultural Field Officer.

Kiabo farmers
Solomon Islands trainees Paza and James with the farming community of Kiabo, Malitbog, Bukidnon, who were also ATI’s Climate Resilient Agriculture (CRA) Project farmer-beneficiaries. Joining them here for a candid photo are Umanika Eco-Cultural Farm’s Rose Mary Lomarda and Lonalyn Amper Sulatan.  

GreenMinds Incorporated President and co-founder Reynaldo Gil “Datu Makadingding” Lomarda is joined by his wife Rose Mary Lomarda along with chef Archie Roy Christian Lomarda, Lonalyn Amper Sulatan, Ryan Besar, and Roro Besar in building and sustaining resilient farms and communities that will serve as catalysts and models of sustainable agricultural development.

With each climb and visit, GreenMinds Incorporated through its SEED IV program intends to establish more farms and communities that can survive and thrive in times of man-made and natural calamities, as well as play an active role in rural and agricultural development.

“Daghang salamat GreenMinds Incorporated ug sa mga nag-volunteer nga mga farm owners sa inyong oras, presensya, ug sa pagtabang. Sa inyong pag-anhi dere sa among barangay, among ginapakita pina-agi sa among mga harvest ug mga luna nga natikad nga wala nasayang ang inyong pagtabang”, shared Kalhaan Kabahiyanan Association President Maria Tenila L. Pina-andel, on behalf of the IP community farmers of Barangay Minalwang.

group photo
Community development work with GreenMinds Incorporated and volunteer farmers with trainees Paza and James from the Solomon Islands. 

Aside from the Department of Agriculture’s ATI-10, other partners that have joined the good cause include the Department of Trade and Industry-10, the Department of Tourism-10, and the Rotary Club of Cagayan de Oro. Partnerships and interventions may come in different forms such as cost-sharing, logistics assistance, meal and accommodation, provision of equipment, and allotment of slots in training. All these as a labor of love and the effort to create a culture of paying it forward.

Courtesy visit
Solomon Islands trainees Paza and James with Datu Makadingding and wife Rose Mary paying a courtesy visit to the ATI-Regional Training Center X office headed by Center Director Maria Lydia A. Echavez. Also in the photo are section chiefs Efren C. Macario (extreme left) and Javier P. Andalan (third from left).  

“The SEEDS we plant today will hopefully bring forth life and sustenance to our farming communities. After extending social services, we intend to establish an enterprise relationship with them. We are creating a culture of “Paying it Forward” rather than an “Ayuda Culture”. Through this, our communities have higher self-esteem, cultural dignity, and a strong sense of ownership for the outcomes. After all, we go beyond relief. Release from social, environmental, and economic difficulties is our ultimate goal”, Datu Makadingding concluded.

Stingless beekeeping buyback activity
Another batch of harvested stingless bee boxes sold. Stingless bee pollens and honey are some of the main ingredients use by GreenMinds Incorporated’s award-winning Pilipinut Trail Mix snack.

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