For many people, the 3 months lockdown due to the coronavirus
pandemic was a challenge.
It was hard to survive on meager savings and adjust to the sudden
change in the pattern of living where one was required to only stay at home.
But for Acola Annette, the lockdown was a blessing in disguise. She got the
rare opportunity to venture into her passion.
Annette 24, a 2nd-year student at Karamoja’s Nakapiripirit
Vocational institute in Uganda had a dream of setting up an animal husbandry
farm.
Following the closure of schools as a preventive measure to the
spread of the COVID -19, she went home with an idea to sell the one cow that
her mother has bequeathed her.
The UGX
520,000 income from selling her cow, was re-invested to acquire a herd of 5
piglets each at UGX 70,000.” I knew this
was the right thing for me to do because this area has many bars and people
love eating pork” she reminisces with a smile.
Annette’s pig farm has grown to include 13 pigs and she is now also
buying local chicken to diversify her farm products. She also grows sorghum,
sim-sim, and cassava to help feed the family. “I got the time to try out all the farm projects I had dreamed of because
the end of lockdown coincided with the rainy season here in Karamoja,” she
says.
Annette says that the opening of restaurants has helped the business
to grow. She sells 2-3 chicken a week and she is able to earn at least UGX 45,000.
Her biggest challenge was feeding animals since they mainly feed on
left-overs from restaurants and the pork orders were not anticipated since bars
were closed.
Annette dreams of becoming a veterinary Doctor at the end of
her career.
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