This site uses cookies, as explained in our terms of use. If you consent, please close this message and continue to use this site.
1 min Read
As part of community capacity-building interventions by the Landscape Initiative for Far-eastern Himalayas (HI-LIFE), a five-day hands-on training was conducted at the Community Information Resources Centre (CIRC) at Wasangdam Village in Putao Township, Kachin State, Myanmar, on 2–6 April 2019. HI-LIFE is a regional conservation and development initiative jointly implemented by the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) and its partners in China, India, and Myanmar in the Far-eastern Himalayan Landscape.
The training involved 50 participants (including 21 women) from nine villages within the HI-LIFE Myanmar pilot area on the outskirts of Hponkanrazi Wildlife Sanctuary. The training, organized in collaboration with the Forest Department, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environmental Conservation (MoNREC), aimed to strengthen the recently established CIRC, particularly its demonstration site component. Ten low-cost, climate-smart technologies relevant to daily farming practices in the area were installed and showcased during the training, engaging participants in a learning-by-doing exercise.
The technologies included solar drier, bee hive bio briquette, bio composting, eco fencing, bio-intensive farming, vertical or 3D vegetable farming, basket composting and farming, polypit and hotbed, parabolic solar cooker, and greenhouse for off-season vegetable farming and high-value species domestication. Given the abundant access to biomass from nearby forests, the training intended to promote the concept of recycling waste biomass for farming, including the promotion of organic farming. In addition, to support the concept of building climate-smart villages, three basket waste management techniques (degradable, non-degradable, and disposable) were demonstrated. The technical assistance for these was provided by the ICIMOD Knowledge Park at Godavari, Nepal.
Participants making the bee hive bio briquette (Photo: Bandana Shakya)
Post-training feedback from the participants indicated the training’s high relevance and usefulness, especially with respect to the low-cost nature of the technologies and use of locally available resources and waste biomass from farms and forests. The participants expressed their interest in using poly houses for tomato cultivation and domestication of high-value medicinal plants. However, they shared that the solar cooker and drier, although energy efficient, could only be utilized during certain seasons of the year. Besides the hands-on training, ICIMOD also attempted to strengthen the CIRC Community Management Committee members’ capacity to run the CIRC as a self-sustaining institution in the future. Interpretation skills, visitor record keeping, annual activity planning and budgeting, resource mobilization, and leadership qualities were discussed with the members.
Share
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.
RELATED CONTENTS
On 4 February 2022, as part our Climate Action4Clean Air (CA4CA) programme, our partners
On 8 April 2016, four students in their final year of MS Research in Glaciology shared their thesis progress with ...
The International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) conducted a hands-on beekeeping training for Apis cerana bee entrepreneurs from Bhutan ...
The National Center for Hydrology and Meteorology (NCHM) in Bhutan will soon have a Cryosphere Information Hub that will share ...
Dr Jyoti Prakash Tamang (ICIMOD Mountain Chair 2019–2021, Sikkim University, India) hosted Dr Christopher Scott (ICIMOD Mountain Chair 2020–2022, Penn ...
Nepali Prime Minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal inaugurated the Sixth Nepal International Trade Fair in Bhrikutimandap, Kathmandu, Nepal, on 16 March ...
On 14 July 2015, community members from the village of Dapcha in Nepal’s Kavre District gathered in a circle near ...
Allo (Girardinia diversifolia), or Himalayan nettle, is traditionally used in Nepal to make cloth. Its bark contains fibres that are ...