BirdLife: The Magazine Oct - Dec 2019 | Page 31

IRREPLACEABLE E C H U YA F O R E S T, U G A N D A INVESTING IN PEOPLE Being given access to credit has transformed the lives of rural Ugandans - empowering them to invest in their futures by Dianah Nalwanga F home and three kept for next season. As well as local livelihoods, NatureUganda also helped to safeguard people’s land, offering training and support in in soil and water conservation. Communities constructed trenches across their gardens to prevent soil erosion, stabilizing the banks with plants which both bind the soil, and provide fodder for animals. “With the availability of fodder in my garden, I was inspired to start a zero-grazing project,” says Nyiradekeye. “I used part of the money from the sale of potatoes to pay back the loan, and purchased a cow and calf with the remaining funds. Currently, I use the trees and grass in my garden to feed the animals, and the cow dung as organic fertilizer”. Empowered by enterprises like these, local people now have the resilience to face the future without drawing on the forest’s finite resources. Seseriya and her cows Photo Nature Uganda I B A F A C T F I L E or many years, rural communities living around Echuya Forest Reserve in southwestern Uganda were stuck in a cycle of poverty. In hard times they were often forced to encroach upon the protected forest to survive. We found that access to credit was one of the main constraints preventing people from pursuing enterprises that would lift them out of poverty. In response to this predicament, NatureUganda helped to set up a series of small Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs), injecting some seed money to kick-start community enterprises. In 2012, Mrs Seseriya Nyiradekeye was encouraged to join the VSLA in her village. She used her investment to buy three sacks of potato seeds, which she planted. She subsequently harvested 26 sacks, of which 21 were sold, two used at ECHUYA FO REST LOCATION: Southwestern Uganda TYPE: Montane forest, high-altitude swamp SIZE: 3,600 hectares KEY SPECIES: Grauer’s Swamp-warbler, Handsome Francolin, Ruwenzori Batis WHAT MAKES IT A HOME At the centre of a narrow valley surrounded by steep forested hillsides lies a permanent high-altitude swamp, which drains into the Murindi River. This mosaic of habitats supports diverse species including the rare Delany’s Swamp Mouse. ANY THREATS? The expansion of dairy farming around the fringes of the swamp has threatened the reserve in the past. Today, local poverty is the most pressing concern, as the rural poor often resort to harvesting forest resources. WHAT IS BEING DONE? Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs) have been set up to finance sustainable businesses such as potato growing and zero-grazing cattle farming. FOCAL PARTNER OCT-DEC 2019 • BIRDLIFE Regal Sunbird Cinnyris regius in moult Photo Sharp Photography 31