Wazua
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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/16/2007 Posts: 2,114
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wazuaguest wrote:
Your conditions are ok with me.Hopefully there will be a bumper harvest.
What crop is this?
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/6/2008 Posts: 3,585
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Chaka wrote:wazuaguest wrote:
Your conditions are ok with me.Hopefully there will be a bumper harvest.
What crop is this? My flagship is hibiscus sabdariffa (coast mribena, choya e.t.c), and Kimeru yams which i am still developing propagation, i have some traditional indigenous maize and lablab/beans duracol aka njahi seeds which i am still developing, some farmers managed to keep some of these crops e.t.c , basically traditional African foods seeds and trade. Hibiscus is very high value (prices over 10k per kilo for organic certified ziko mayuu), good scientific rigor, it's lightweight, easy to grow/plant, matures quickly (3 to 4 months) and can be transported by air profitably, the US (and some EU countries and Japan) currently import from Germany, who import from Sudan, because US has some restrictions that do not allow them to get direct from Sudan. Kenya's production is still too low to fill this gap if any direct flights come, though this might result in a sustainable growth for investors in this sector......in the long term! My main focus however is developing the local (lower income market), i can guarantee a price of 300/- per kilo ( i make between 1k and 2k per kilo), but you might get better, plus it is easy to sell,particularly the cool juice. Ras Kienyeji Man
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Rank: Elder Joined: 2/16/2007 Posts: 2,114
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@Much Know, For the hibiscus,will you expect fresh flowers or dry ones i,e is the pricing wet or dry price?Also how will you handle the FDA,which I understand is very tough..?
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/6/2008 Posts: 3,585
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Chaka wrote:@Much Know, For the hibiscus,will you expect fresh flowers or dry ones i,e is the pricing wet or dry price?Also how will you handle the FDA,which I understand is very tough..? I buy the dried, from near i can buy the fresh and dry/prepare them. I really do not encourage the 'EXPORT' mentality particularly when food is scarce in Kenya, it is simply a Moi error misnomer about business & that's why many honchos in his garment were after exporting flowers and stealing tea/coffee money as we starve, it's simply unethical at times silly and unsustainable (turns into cartel) killing farmer. Sell to your neighbor please, or let the Americans come to buy at your place. When exporting hibiscus tea from Kenya to USA you will have no problem and no interaction with FDA, there is an approved list that covers many things, search for it at US customs, or the US Dept. Agriculture portal. That's how kiashes ship food from here. The honors of filling necessary forms is with the buyer and not you, and is simple and straight forward, there is a possibility there is a Kenyan bureaucracy/form to export huge quantities (cargo/shipping). I know a few people who export 20kgs/5Kgs e.t.c, you can even use postal services as long as you fill their simple form, or use a site like Amazon.com who have already filled necessary forms. There are places to trade as a more serious seller but you buy membership for kitu 50K per annum. FDA are strict on labeling (e.g 'organic') and unapproved stuff. Ras Kienyeji Man
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 4/4/2007 Posts: 1,162
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
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@muchknow, kindly send your email to dropmyload at gmail dot com. Would like a detailed chat to take things forward. Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
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Rank: Veteran Joined: 5/5/2011 Posts: 1,059
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KulaRaha wrote:Anyone have any ideas or contacts for this?
I have some land, and am willing to farm on contract...ie the buyer of the produce supplies me with seed, fertilizer etc and my input is the land and labour.
Any variation of this is welcome.
Any thoughts or experiences? My folks do contract farming FOR BAT, and EABL for barley and tobacco leaves, very profitable venture the only other I know is spices and herbs and some medicinal plants contracts some farmers were offered in Laikipia To Each His Own
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Rank: Elder Joined: 7/26/2007 Posts: 6,514
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kayhara wrote:KulaRaha wrote:Anyone have any ideas or contacts for this?
I have some land, and am willing to farm on contract...ie the buyer of the produce supplies me with seed, fertilizer etc and my input is the land and labour.
Any variation of this is welcome.
Any thoughts or experiences? My folks do contract farming FOR BAT, and EABL for barley and tobacco leaves, very profitable venture the only other I know is spices and herbs and some medicinal plants contracts some farmers were offered in Laikipia I can do spices and herbs. Any leads? Business opportunities are like buses,there's always another one coming
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Rank: Elder Joined: 12/6/2008 Posts: 3,585
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@wazuaguest, @Kularaha check you emails. Thanks for the interest, sure we can make something substantial of the opportunity with your individual/collective smart inputs. Ras Kienyeji Man
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Rank: Hello Joined: 12/8/2015 Posts: 1
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Much Know wrote:@wazuaguest, @Kularaha check you emails. Thanks for the interest, sure we can make something substantial of the opportunity with your individual/collective smart inputs. @Much know, would also be interested in the contract farming, pliz give me the details too. Thanks in advance.
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