A loan helped to start horticulture farming.


Dolphina's story

“When poor smallholder women farmers come together, they are powerful,” says Dolphina, a 38-year-old farmer who has 6 children and lives in the village of Gitwamba in the Kitale area of Kenya. As a small girl she watched women in her village form groups so as to access loan facilities. The memory of this collective effort led her to join Kibora tall tree self-help group. For the past year, Dolphina has been actively involved in mixed farming. Because she is from a remote village women do the heavy work in the field. This has not been a setback because Dolphina has been making great profits in farming. Kitale is one of the places with conditions that favor horticulture farming: good climate, soils, transport system, and market.

Dolphina has always wanted to diversify and start horticultural farming, but the biggest challenge she has been facing is lack of funds. She is therefore requesting a loan to start horticultural farming. Through the Kibora tall tree self-help group, whose members co-guarantee each other to secure a loan, Dolphina joined Juhudi Kilimo, a micro-finance organization that supports young and enterprising farmers. With your loan Dolphina intends to buy good quality vegetable seeds, flowers and potatoes. Proximity to an airstrip will allow her to transport the produce faster to an international market, hence enabling her to make more money. This loan will improve Dolphina's living conditions and secure the future of her children. The difficult circumstances that Dolphina has been through and her drive to overcome them, make her deserving of the help she requests.



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