Adapting to Drought in Tanzania

Photos by Dave Anderson


We visited a Maasai community in northern Tanzania in the rainy season, in April of last spring, when trees were lush with leaves that Heifer camels nibbled on happily throughout the day. Yet at the sandaled feet of the young men who led the animals to graze was a deep sand left in the wake of a terrible, persistent drought that continues to change the lives and parts of the culture of this community forever.

It’s hard to imagine enough grass ever grew here to sustain the large cattle herds the Maasai traditionally raised in this area for centuries. From the mid-1990s to about 2007, the land shriveled and baked in the hot sun, with no relief. Grasses and water sources dried up, as did the Maasai primary income from cattle. They began selling their gaunt animals for as little as $5 each. Those not sold perished.
It is part of the Maasai culture that meat is only eaten on rare occasions: When a baby is born to give the mother strength, to honor a special guest, to help heal the very ill or for ceremonial reasons. They got protein from the milk or from a milk/blood mixture. So many animals were left where they fell to return to the earth.
As the drought stretched on, almost every cow in herds of hundreds died. “When their cows died they went back to square one, to poverty,” said Peter Mwakabwale, then Heifer Tanzania’s country director. A small amount of grains from government assistance is all they had to eat for much of the year.

Their women’s group sought help from Heifer, and the community received 31 Dromedary camels in 2008, which were much more adaptable to the new climate reality in Eastern Africa. They provide not only a sweet, nutritious milk, even in times of drought, but also help with transportation of water and firewood.


It wasn’t necessarily an easy transition, and there are still some hitches. The women, responsible for milking and caring for the animals, are frightened by the large, sometimes unpredictable creatures, prone to fits of bucking, kicking or spitting when they’re stressed out. Other nearby communities accustomed to cow milk are reluctant at first to try or buy camel milk.

However, the camels also brought many welcome changes to the Maasai culture. Because of the size of the animals, the men help out more and accompany women to gather firewood and water. They produce milk even during the dry season, getting enough water and nutrition from trees and bushes well out of the reach of traditional cattle.
To me as a visitor to the culture and the country, the picture is a beautiful one. I never saw the area before the drought, but today the community is thriving with life and celebration. Athletic young men and women in bright blues, reds and purples mingle among the camels, with views of distant mountains set against a clear, blue sky. The children make happy slurping noises and giggle as they tip back their milk mugs for every last drop. As an editor for Heifer’s World Ark magazine, I’m amazed more with every visit by the careful planning and attention to culture, climate and sustainability our organization invests in each project.
Read more about Heifer’s camel projects in Tanzania and stay tuned for an insider’s look in a coming World Ark at how Heifer participants and country staff help choose appropriate animals for each community served. Click here to order a camel or share of a camel to continue to help participants in Eastern Africa adapt to the extended drought.

Drying Out

When I visited Senegal in May of 2010, everyone was waiting on the rain. Men sat on their heels drinking hot tea, waiting. Women tended the animals and children and kept one eye on the sky, waiting. The ground was parched after 10 months of bone-dry weather, and food stores were low or already gone. Some farmers dared to put their seeds in the ground in anticipation of the rain. Others chose to wait, knowing that if the rain came later than expected, the seeds would wither.

It was impossible for me to imagine anything growing in the blazing sand, but everyone reassured me that in a month or two, peanuts, millet and vegetables would sprout. This photo from NASA shows the stark contrast between the dry season and the wet season in Senegal. Having been there only in the dry season, the green landscape on the right seems unreal.

In countries of the Sahel, the dirt stays thirsty for the better part of the year. Rains come all at once, and farmers scurry to coax what they can from the soil before everything turns brown again. Sometimes, enough rain falls to bring in a decent crop. Most the time, though, it doesn’t. And with only the most rudimentary irrigation systems in place, growing food year-round isn’t an option.

Heifer’s projects in Senegal incorporate improved seeds that produce abundant yields even in dry conditions. The sheep Heifer project participants are raising are especially suited to the heat.

Drought has a grip on not only the Sahel, but on parts of Eastern Africa as well. Learn what you can do to help.

Where Heifer Fits Into The Drought

We say it all the time: Heifer is a development organization. I posted yesterday about how you can help the immediate situation in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya. The organizations listed are aid organizations. This is an important distinction.

Yes, we have a responsibility to help those in most immediate need, like the refugees arriving on Kenya’s doorstep with starving children. Heifer’s work, however, is to try to catch families and individuals upstream, so to speak, from these catastrophes. To help communities become strong enough that, when disaster strikes (be it environmental or man-made), they are resilient. We do this by helping them build water cisterns for collecting rain when it does fall, providing them with especially hardy livestock species, teaching them how to grow drought-resistent varieties of forage to feed their animals, and helping them plant trees and improve the soil naturally.
Read Pushing Back the Desert and learn how Heifer is working in drought-prone Senegal to help families and communities become stronger against the changes of nature.

9 Million People in East Africa Need Humanitarian Assistance Now

Severe drought, high food prices, war. The combination of these factors has led to a gravely desperate situation in Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya. They’re claiming this is the worst drought in 60 years.

Earlier today, I posted that a child dies every five seconds from hunger related causes and a total of 9 million children will die this year of preventable causes. It’s easy for these stats to go over our heads, to be too abstract. Drought in Africa makes it all too real.
Watch UNICEF’s Regional Emergency Advisor for Eastern and Southern Africa Robert McCarthy discuss the food crisis.
In a statement regarding the drought facing the Horn of Africa and the deluge of Somalian refugees pouring into Kenyan refugee camps, World Food Programme Executive Director Josette Sheeran stated, ” The number of malnourished children receiving supplementary or therapeutic feeding in the camps has already tripled in 2011–a clear sign of the seriousness of the problem and the need for swift international action across the whole region.”
There are a number of things you can do right now to help these people, as far off as they seem.
Don’t have money to spare? Donate your time and attention. Follow these organizations on Twitter and Facebook. Share their links with your friends and family. These small actions have ripple effects that will make a difference.

Heifer Haiti affected by Hurricane


Heifer Haiti Projects affected by Hurricane Tomas in the Southern Region


Damages in the houses and property


In addition two people died, one in Les Anglais and one in Roche-a-Bateau.

294 persons displaced from Les Anglais and 248 from Saint Jean du Sud.


General information of Hurricane Tomas impact in the Southern Coast

Hurricane which hit Haiti on Friday November 4, left at least 20 people killed, 36 hurt and around 6,000 homeless families, according to the Haitian civil defense. The most affected region is the department of Grand Anse, in the southwest. Nevertheless, it also caused several damages in the South department, especially in the coastal zone, were the families live mostly of agriculture and commerce. They cultivate “milla”, maize and peanut. In some areas, such as Chardonnières up to Les Anglais the inhabitants also grow the banana plants.

The Hurricane affected the crops and plantations and has left the population very worried about the next harvest.

The Heifer Haiti has visited the field and have validated that about 95% of the vegetable gardens are destroyed, affected by a phenomena called “plant burn” caused by soil salinization.

Figure 1: gardens affected by “plant burn”

Figure 2: Plantation destroyed by the hurricane


Figure 3: Banana Plantation destroyed

Most of the banana plantations were destroyed by the effect of the winds from the hurricane.

Figure 4: A house destroyed by hurricane Tomas

In some zones, many houses were destroyed and others damaged by the impact of the hurricane. The sea entered into the peoples’ houses, especially to those families living on the border of the sea. Fortunately some days before the government evacuated the families who were in higher risk.

Some animal shelters were destroyed by the hurricane.


Figure 5: Road damaged between Port a Piment and Les Anglais

Figure 6: The vehicles are forced to wait on both sides of the highway, since it’s not possible to cross a river

Figure 7: The foreigners who came to provide aid cannot arrive to their destination.

In Roche-a – bateau where we have a Heifer Project with the partner organization APMCR 231407-02, located in a region where most of the people live from fishery, the following resources were lost: 150 persons disappeared, 2 boats destroyed, 4 excavated wood lost, 2 fish nets lost, traps, 20 acres of peas lost, 80 kilometers of “milla” crops lost, 50 hectare of pistachio, 60 acres of potato crops, 50 hectare of malanga, 106 coconut trees destroyed, 500 trees and 100 chickens killed.



Storm Threatens Haiti

Photo by Bryan Clifton, Heifer International

The Haitian government is advising hundreds of thousands of residents of Port-au-Prince’s tent cities to evacuate as Tropical Storm Tomas threatens Haiti after killing at least 14 in St. Lucia.
Aid groups and the government are already struggling to control a cholera outbreak in Haiti that has killed at least 330 and sickened more than 4,700.
More than 1 million still remain homeless in the earthquake-shattered Port-au-Prince 10 months after the disaster.
Tomas is expected to strengthen over the next two days to a hurricane. Tent dwellers are being urged to voluntarily evacuate the tent cities to the homes of family and friends for their safety.
Read more on the storm at msnbc.com. To learn more about Heifer’s projects in Haiti, read the latest update in the Holiday 2010 issue of World Ark.