Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Report back on monitoring the Walvis Bay Child and Family Centre (2015-03-170

See pictures at the bottom

Introduction
Towards the end of the January 2015, the veggie tunnel project in Walvis Bay received a sponsorship from the Manica Group for the amount of N$24 000.00 to implement an irrigation system. This project was carried out by Francois van Niekerk.
The irrigation system is an ‘EZ-FLOW better science’ model and uses a Hunter Pro 17A controller, which gives you 10L of water per minute, based on municipal pressure.

Challenges

Over watering

The system provided more water than it is required, even in weather where it does not allow for watering. This was confirmed by the access amounts of algae in the tunnels. The plant’ growth was seriously hampered by this over-watering.
As a result, Emmanuel suggested to the Centre, to stop watering for 2 to 3 days, until the moist has settled down and the algae disappeared. They should go back to the manual watering, after that.
The measured amount of water that went into each tunnel was 460L per 7 minute, which is way above the recommended need per tunnel.

Fertilizer

The hydroponic fertilizer is mixed in a small tank. The challenge is that we cannot tell which tunnel is getting what amount of water and fertilizer. Hydroponic fertilizer is usually pre-mixed in a tank, after which the water was pumped to the plants in a controlled way. In this case the water was flowing through the mixing tank with no way to tell how much fertilizer is applied
Due to this inconsistency and over-watering, some of the plants became yellow and other light green.

Sprayer used

The sprayers that were used gives 10L of water per minute and have a radius of 5.5m, while the tunnel is 3.8m by 12m. These sprayers overs-prayed the tunnels.

Recommendations

Irrigation

After some tests by Emmanuel Muyumba and Francois, it was discovered that the irrigation system provided more water than was required. This led to some calculations for the better use of the system. They decided that the automatic irrigation system should run for 3 minutes only, to give the right amount of water needed for the tunnels.
This will be done on an evaluation basis, to see how the vegetables perform. The ratio for fertilizer application will also be changed. The centre will keep a record of how much fertilizer is being used and for how long is the system running. This will lead to an efficient way of using the irrigation system.

Planting

Emmanuel addressed the challenge of delays in harvesting and proper planting practise. The lettuce was supposed to be harvested weeks ago, but has still not matured due to incorrect hydroponic mixing. The gardeners were also advised to mix the fertiliser regularly. Some of the planting bags were planted too densely, which led to the slow growth of spinach. Then there was a low planting density in the bags for carrots.
Results achieved from the first planting:
-          The harvest of Spinach was done weekly
-          Onions were harvested small, as baby onions for the kitchen
-          The Beetroots did not come out so good, due to insufficient fertiliser
-          Beans had a total harvest of 41 Kg and was sold or used for consumption
-          Peas had a harvest of 17Kg
-          Cauliflower did not perform well due to disease and pest
-          The Broccoli did not perform well due to disease and pest
With all the challenges that the centre has experienced, they were still able to bring in a considerable income for the Centre.

Conclusions

After all the tests were done on the new irrigation system for the veggie tunnels, the team came to the conclusion to ‘reduce the amount of water used for irrigating’. They also had discussions with the engineer who installed the irrigation system, to make the necessary changes to compensate for the problems found. The system will work with these changes for a trial period of 1 month, after which it will be re-evaluated for the use in veggie tunnel production.

As part of his program Emmanuel gave training on:
-          Planting
-          Harvesting
-          Crop Rotation
The students also received a training manual which they could refer to, during their challenges. This training manual was compiled by Emmanuel and used during training in veggie tunnel production.
They also received a moist meter to help solve the overwatering issues.

Emmanuel Muyumba
Trainer of Trainers in Organic Horticulture
DiHokoHoko - Divundu
+264813899866
 PO Box 4774
 Windhoek
 Namibia