After the Flood 

 

[This editorial by Lom Orng's John Macgregor appeared in The Phnom Penh Post in March 2012]

 

chicken coops

Three months on, the floodwaters have gone. The story now unfolding in the Cambodian countryside is less melodramatic, and has two sides. On the one hand there are those whose lives were all but erased by the floods - such as the young mother I met this afternoon in Battambang’s Moung Russei district, whose house has gone, and who sleeps on the dirt under a sheet of plastic with two kids - one tubercular, the other with lung disease. (In some Moung Russei villages 50% of houses were washed away.)

 

On the other hand, the After the Flood project is busy distributing chickens and ducks, and vegetable and rice seeds, to flood survivors. Thousands of chicken coops have been built by villagers (they build the coop, we provide the chicks), and some ambitious farmers are already harvesting a crop of vegetables.

 

After the Flood was an idea that grew organically throughout the flood season and its aftermath - as it dawned on us that the destitution left by the floods could be worse than the floods themselves. In November, our Hong Kong donor organisation - which has a good eye for synergy - suggested that the same four NGOs involved in the emergency relief form themselves into a ‘consortium’ - for a two-year livelihood, infrastructure and sanitation project in Battambang, Pursat and Bantheay Meanchey. A month ago, the project began.

 

floating herb garden

The idea of After the Flood is to introduce into these areas more diverse sources of sustenance and livelihood, in the hope that some elements survive the next natural disaster - which could be a flood, cyclone or drought.

 

The four NGOs involved - Ockenden, DCO, PKO and Lom Orng (formerly CWARS) - are training 60,000 villagers in sanitation and hygiene, to reduce the epidemics next time round. And with the memory of thousands of people and animals crammed onto tiny strips of land fresh in our minds, we’ve brought in mechanical diggers to make large, elevated community ‘safe grounds’, which we’ll plant out with groundcover, banana and mango, to stabilise soils, and provide food and shade. The holes left from digging out this dirt we are turning into community dams.

 

In October, three drowning kids were saved when villagers threw them empty 19-litre water bottles from our delivery the previous week. This time we’d prefer not to depend so much on serendipity -s o lots of bamboo is also being planted on the ‘safe grounds’ and around the dams, along with trees that can be hollowed into canoes - to provide floating objects for the next flood.

 

Vegetable garden

we get another flood in 2012? The answer depends significantly on ENSO - the El Nino-La Nina weather cycle. Presently we’re finishing out the La Nina weather event which brought 2011’s floods. If ‘neutral’ conditions resume in the latter part of 2012, there should be less rain than last year; and if an El Nino forms, much less - indeed there’d be a high risk of drought.

A lot of our thinking in these elements is informed by the design-dense, integrated farming system known as Permaculture, and has received generous intellectual inputs from international Permaculture experts such as Rico Zook. We are also starting a Permaculture demonstration farm in Battambang, on land already part-developed by Ockenden.

 

Employing the same ‘prevention is better than cure’ principle, we’ve additionally set up a warning system - using alerts from international meteorology, health and agronomy organisations - to give villages advance notice of floods, droughts, storms, epidemics and agricultural pests. After a flood year, and with an H5N1 mutation now conceivable with the potential to kill half a national population - such a system seems overdue.

 

The warning system (basically a one-stop-shop of everything an aid worker should be worried about) will also soon go onto our websites, so other NGOs can take advantage of it.

 

So far as natural disasters go, the question now is: will

 

 

Permaculture farm Camera shy children

(Click on thumbnails)

The $1.4m After the Flood project (2012-13) is funded by the Kadoorie Charitable Foundation, and is bringing chickens, vegetables, rice, Permaculture, community dams, flood-proof 'safegrounds' and sanitation training to 60,000 rural people in three northwestern provinces. The project is co-managed by the NGOs Lom Orng, Ockenden, DCO and PKO.

Rice
Rice
The Community Forestry Committee Band
The Community Forestry Committee Band
Pond filling up
Pond filling up
Human-powered train
Human-powered train
Bumper crop
Bumper crop
Broken down house
Broken down house
Forest devastation
Forest devastation
Kadoorie visitors
Kadoorie visitors
 
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