Back to news
1 Dec 2016 | Blog

Transforming lives, empowering women: The allo value chain in Darchula

Lipy Adhikari

3 mins Read

70% Complete

“You won’t have to walk. I’ll drop you off at the doorstep of a homestay in Dallekh,” the driver said to me when we reached Khalanga in Darchula. This came as quite a surprise. Up until then, all research teams I had been part of had hiked for 45 minutes to five hours to reach Dallekh. And here I was being told I wouldn’t have to walk a step to reach our destination. It was a positive sign. A sign of progress, a sign of development.

I was part of a three-member team from the Kailash Sacred Landscape Conservation and Development Initiative (KSLCDI) that went to Khar on 10 November 2016. Our aim was to record changes that have taken place in the community since the implementation of programmes initiated by KSLCDI. Khar VDC in Dallekh is a pilot site in far western Nepal where a lot of work has been done with the local community to develop their allo value chain.

Familiar faces greeted us with welcoming smiles upon our arrival in Dallekh. “How long will you be staying for… what will you do this time… do you need our help?” they asked us. Their enthusiasm strengthened my determination to make the most out of this visit.

Researchers working on Component 1 of KSLCDI first went to Khar VDC in Darchula in 2014 to study possibilities for the promotion and diversification of the livelihoods of local people. At the time, everybody’s focus was on yarsagumba. For many, it was the sole livelihood option available. For three months, during harvesting season, the entire village would seem deserted. Almost everyone would leave, knowing they were risking their lives, to find that prized insect-herb. People from Khar still travel to higher altitudes to collect yarsagumba as a season’s harvest can yield enough for families to live on for a year. The Kailash project’s work on value chain development has, however, given locals a less dangerous, more reliable alternative, which the villagers, particularly the women, have willingly embraced.

“Women in our village are now able to think beyond their kitchens and livestock sheds”, says Govinda Singh Thagunna, member of the Bhumiraj Allo Samuha in Godhani, Khar VDC. With help from the private sector, KSLCDI was able to open people’s eyes to the potential of the allo business. Allo has always grown in the forests of Darchula and local people have traditionally known how to extract and use its fibre. The Kailash team built on that traditional knowledge, adding value to allo products through training and capacity building programmes.

I have personally observed the changes that have occurred in Khar over the past two years. As a result of the capacity building programmes initiated by KSLCDI, people here, particularly young and old women are now able to speak their minds. Teenage girls who were sometimes considered a burden are now respected as they earn for their families. “I used to knit with allo thread. The things I knitted did not look very nice, though. After ten days of training, I have learned how to knit beautiful mufflers in various designs. I am confident that I can sell these in the market at a good price,” says Beluli Dhami of Godhani. Likewise, Nanda Maniyal talks about becoming independent and earning enough for herself from weaving allo. Both Dhami and Maniyal are members of the Bhumiraj Allo Samuha in Godhani.

For many women, allo presents a whole new way of life. It has diminished hardship and offered ownership and independence. Jogini Maniyal weaves allo for a living now, and is an active member of the Community Facility Centre in Godhani. “I don’t want to remember the hardship I faced before I started working with allo,” she says. “Allo has not only simplified my life, it has increased my determination to work.” Other villagers say they are more accountable now than they were two years ago. They say that the trainings they received through KSLCDI improved their communication skills and helped ease their lifestyles. They are happy working in a group these days, learning from and helping each other.

Through properly targeted interventions related to sustainable harvesting, proper collection methods, thread making, knitting, weaving, product design and marketing, KSLCDI has been able to transform the lives of villagers and bring positive change. A shift has taken place here, a visible transition.

Stay current

Stay up to date on what’s happening around the HKH with our most recent publications and find out how you can help by subscribing to our mailing list.

Sign Up

Related Content

Continue exploring this topic

16 Apr 2019 Blog
Women: the hidden face of effective emissions mitigation?

Women as researchers as well as the vital subject Household-level combustion accounts for a significant percentage of air pollution ...

8 Mar 2017 Blog
A Journey of Courage and Determination: Menaka’s Story

Menaka’s quiet demeanour disguises her wit and her great sense of humour. Her journey from a remote village in Mugu ...

19 Dec 2016 Cryosphere
Into the Hidden Valley: On a Quest for High Mountain Data

I assume most glaciologists would have interesting stories to share about their work: the experience of studying glaciers, their research ...

20 May 2016 Blog
Mainstreaming Biodiversity: Sustaining People and their Livelihoods

George Washington once rightly said, “The most healthful, the most useful and the noblest employment of man is none other ...

8 Mar 2019 Gender in Koshi
Balance for better: Community enterprise for strengthening women entrepreneurship in Nepal

Business has largely been dominated by men across the world, and Nepal is no exception. Women usually need to be ...

2 Aug 2019 Cryosphere
Keeping track of our melting glaciers

I have been part of expeditions to the Khumbu Glacier in the Everest region since 2016. It is quite a ...

19 Dec 2016 Cryosphere
UAV, a learning on a new technology on glacier monitoring

The day when my supervisor asked me to join the  practical, field-based training on the use of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles ...

13 Mar 2018 Gender in Koshi
Juggling ‘two fronts’ – the women of today

Women are increasingly getting an education in underdeveloped/developing countries, despite this by no means being the norm (for example, according ...