FOOD GARDENING IN MAKERS VALLEY – GROWING COMMUNITY
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Food Gardening in Makers Valley

A growing community

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In the same way as our partnership with local Spaza Shops aims to contribute to the local economy, and thus community sustainability, the Growing Community initiative seeks to enhance Food Security into the future. Makers Valley resident and urban farmer Siyabonga Ndlangamandla is the creator of the new venture.

Siya is a proud Zulu man with food farming in his blood.  Raised in rural Kwa-Zulu Natal by his grandparents, Siya learned about cattle and farming from a very early age and studied Biological Science at the University of Zululand.  Awarded a sports bursary, Siya moved to Johannesburg to further his studies at the University of Johannesburg (UJ). Finding that the course at UJ was not to his liking he made a move into IT.  When he came to live and work in Makers Valley Siya was still working in IT and initially established an internet café.  However as the gardens within Victoria Yards were established and he interacted with the gardeners, it was not long before Siya returned to his original passion - this time in an urban agriculture environment.  

 

While establishing an ‘Edible Streets’ project, planting vegetables on the pavements around Victoria Yards, a project in which he encouraged neighbourhood children to participate, Siya also joined a six-month training programme on urban food farming offered by Dr Michael Magondo of the Urban Agriculture Initiative.  In addition to farming methods, including hydroponics, the course also covered the entrepreneurial side of farming. Siya began to realise that his interest in urban farming could be a way for the urban farmers within Makers Valley not only to provide for their own needs, but to turn their dreams into cash crops which would enable them to make a living.

 

With the onset of the COVID-19 lockdown, Siya joined with other Makers Valley partners to develop ways in which fresh vegetables grown within the Valley could be added to food parcels.  He also joined the fieldwork team, making house-to-house visits to ascertain which households were in need of food support.  During these visits, Siya asked residents whether they would be interested in growing food gardens in their yards or on the pavements, and the idea for the Growing Community project was born. 

 

The question of whether residents are interested in growing their own food has now become a standard question in door-to-door surveys. Siya visits those who answer ‘yes’ to determine where a food garden can be located. As funds allow, interested residents are supplied with a ‘garden starter pack’ which includes seeds, seedlings and compost. Siya and his team provide on-going guidance, and link these local farmers in a network of mutual support and learning.

 

Future plans include the establishment of a tool library and seed bank at Victoria Yards for these farmers. An additional element is an emerging partnership with Love our City Kleen (LOCK) a start-up solid waste recycling initiative also operating out of Makers Valley.  Siya intends to make organic compost from the food waste collected by LOCK, and says he envisages Makers Valley becoming a ‘corridor of food’ for the inner city.

 

If you would like to support Siya’s initiative and contribute to long-term food security in Makers Valley, a R120 donation will enable African Marmalade organic farm to provide a garden starter pack to an aspiring farmer:

 

African Marmalade

Standard Bank Cheque Account 220 081 913

Randburg Branch (018005)

Reference: Makers Valley