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Woven Launches Bahay Kubo Project For Partner Artisans’ Food Sustainability

Kristian

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In response to the ongoing community quarantine due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Woven partnered with the SEARCH Foundation to provide Bahay Kubo Farming Kits to at least 100 artisans and their families.

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Each kit is good for a small 300-square meter backyard garden.  With an expected yield of 400 kilograms of crops within three to four months, the garden can support a family of five for roughly three months.

Woven and the SEARCH Foundation conceptualized the Bahay Kubo

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Farming Kits after hearing the concerns of the artisan communities in Samar and Basilan. The problem is, most farming in Basey is geared towards cash crops such as rice and coconut. A portion of their annual rice harvest is kept for their family’s consumption, while the rest is sold for cash, which is then used for the purchase of necessities such as meat, vegetables, and other household goods. Very few farmers practice the bahay kubo style of farming – named after the song – where all of their food requirements are grown in the farm.

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Weaving is usually done at home. This allowed our artisans to stay home during the quarantine while continuing to earn an income from our orders. 

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Basey farmers usually plant cash crops like rice. Once they sell their harvest, they use the cash to pay for other necessities like meat, vegetables and household goods
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Many of our weavers have husbands who are farmers, or are farmers themselves.

Woven Co-founder Trish Lim explains, “Unlike urban communities where supermarkets and other goods are nearby, those in the provinces typically rely on inter-city or inter-island travel to source food and supplies.”

In Basilan, Yakan community partners reported an increase in the cost of everyday goods. One of their leaders shares, “Namomroblema na nga kami, baka paubos na rin mga gastusin namin habang patagal nang patagal ang quarantine.” [We are worried because our money is running out while the quarantine keeps taking longer and longer.]

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As its name suggests, each Bahay Kubo Farming Kit is designed to improve food security for these families by helping them create backyard gardens. Each kit is worth Php 1,100 and contains seeds for varieties of root crops and vegetables, a faming manual, and some working capital for fertilizer.  It is a way for farmers to survive and even thrive regardless of their income level or the state of the national economy. And with the economic downturn caused by the much needed quarantine, our rural communities need to practice farming for self-sustenance more than ever.

Gabun Placemat
 Gabun means cloud in the Yakan dialect. This placemat features a traditional Yakan pattern called Dambuwah Kabanbuddi 
Sumping
Sumping means flower, and this placemat features the Yakan pattern called the Peneh Sumping. When you look closely, you can see the geometric shapes that create the flower pattern on the fabric. 

According to SEARCH Foundation Executive Director and Woven Co-founder John Francia, this Bahay Kubo style farming is integrated and diversified farming.  That means that the kits would allow the communities to grow crops, such as cucumber, kalabasa, sweet potato, cassava, eggplant, tomato, string beans, bitter gourd and pechay. The variety of crops will provide high nutritional value and can serve most of their food requirements.  Any additional meat or produce could then be used to supplement what they can grow in their gardens.

When the communities make their first harvest in three to four months, Woven and SEARCH Foundation hope that they will gain peace of mind in knowing that they will be able to put food on the table for their loved ones. Although it’s a small project, both organizations hope it will be a big step on their journey towards long-term food security.

Woven Crafts is a compassionate crafts company that designs hand-in-hand with Filipino artisans for the modern lifestyle.

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SEARCH Foundation specializes in planning, implementing, and documenting community-based enterprise initiatives.

Everyone calls me Ian. This website is about my everyday life experiences. Back in 2011, I use to write on my first blog. (www.stuckinthephilippines.blogspot.com) I started this website as a place where I can express my creative inside. I love visiting new places, listening to music and anything fun.