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Ready, Set, Go! — Graduates of the GARD Center’s Hydroponics Programme are Poised to Reduce Food Insecurity

Given the island’s history of inconsistency in rainfall and drought, the graduates of the Sandals Foundation-sponsored hydroponics programmeat the Gilbert Agricultural Rural Development (GARD) Center are prepared to embark on climate-smart farming to help strengthen the nation’s food security. By trading soil for nutrient-rich water, these graduates will be able to produce crops at any time of the year, and achieve higher yields with fewer resources.

“With the NFT (nutrient film technique) hydroponics unit, eighty to ninety percent less water can be used to produce a lot more crops in a lot less space,” said Julia Roberts, a graduate.

This is amazing, especially for us in Antigua where we are affected by drought, she added.

Over a three-month period, over a dozen students covered content in backyard gardening, nutrient solutions, plant problems, plant growth and culture in a hands-on learning course. The graduates experience with the impressive potential of the hydroponics unit to mass produce crops has now empowered them to eagerly join the ranks of food producers in the island.

“I experimented with growing lettuce, cabbage, chive, and cucumbers—herbs and vegetables useful in everyday cooking. It was incredible to see how quickly they grew and with far less effort than if I had ploughed the ground and planted seedlings,” expressed another graduate.

He continued, “I can’t wait to start growing more and selling to local markets and shops based on demand and supply, as well as challenging myself to grow tomatoes and peppers, which are additional food items that we consume on a daily basis.

June Jackson, Executive Director of the Gilbert Agriculture Rural Development Center (GARD Center), also echoed the programme’s promising outcomes.

“Throughout the training,” Jackson explained, “the young men and women were also taught how to construct a hydroponic unit and explored how hydroponic vegetable production can be turned into a business.

Jackson added that these lessons, along with field trips to functional backyard gardens, have equipped the graduates with a holistic training, positioning them to bring innovative climate-smart farming practices to the pursuit of food security in Antigua.

Farming and agriculture support forms one of six key areas of intervention being implemented by the Sandals Foundation as it implements 40 sustainable community projects that have the power to transform Caribbean communities and improve lives.

Additional projects to support food security in the region include strengthening the capacities of farmers in the community of Hermitage in Jamaica to grow more and maximize their earning potential, and the construction of a chicken coop and greenhouse at LN Coakley High School in The Bahamas.

The Foundation is also empowering the Grenada Network of Rural Women Producers (GRENROP) through farm business trainings, and introducing community compost training in the Turks and Caicos Islandsto improve soil fertility, enhance school and backyard gardening thus reducing imports.

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