Maureen Atsali

pollinator
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since Feb 06, 2015
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Western Kenya
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Recent posts by Maureen Atsali

Aside from construction, we are always working on the garden beds and the perennial berms. We have 20 annual no dig beds planted in rotation, so hypothetically one bed is replanted each week for a continuous harvest.

I’m also working on removing the native Justicia from the berms, and planting sweet potato vine for ground cover, along with planting pigeon pea, desmodium and tree collards. We are taking stock of which of our fruit trees survived the dry season. I know one avocado tree was lopped off by a worker this week - who thought it was a bush in an inconvenient spot!
I’m disabled so when I do the work myself I can only do a few feet at a time.
2 weeks ago
We also have two local young men working with my partner to build a 4- stall KNF piggery. The first stall was completed just in time for the arrival of three piglets that we had reserved from neighbors. (2 males, 1 unrelated female.) Although the indigenous micro organisms are not ready, we went ahead and put them in the first stall with Joyii, our 6 month old kienyeji sow.
2 weeks ago
We have two masons and 3-4 young men from the village applying cement plaster to the outside of our mud house. The mud house was constructed in 2024, the inside was cemented in 2025, now we are doing the outside. The layer of cement turns this into a “semipermanent” house that should last 50-100 years. It prevents the rain and heavy winds from eroding away the mud walls, and protects the wood frames from termites.
2 weeks ago
My internet connection isn’t that great, so please bear with me as I upload 1 photo at a time. It’s been a chaotic week here, with construction ongoing, a total of 8 workers trampling everywhere, new arrivals, and things breaking all as we try to prepare for the onset of the rainy season.

Let me start with a photo of our newest baby. Oreo, our herd matron, dropped a beautiful little buckling on Monday. These are Small East African goats who normally only deliver singles.
2 weeks ago
Hi Friends,
It’s been a long time since I actively posted here. I’m Maureen, American who has lived in Kenya since 2011. In 2021 I bought a small plot for my daughters, and with great imagination named it “Patricia and Alice’s Permaculture Center.”
It’s been a long slow process, building infrastructure slowly and step by step as money allowed. We started living in the unfinished house last year. This week we have the masons coming to plaster the outside of our mud-constructed house.
I thought it might be fun to start documenting the progress of things again.
2 weeks ago

Paula Hudak wrote:So I raise Muscovy for meat... they are not in mallard family and a tree bird. Their meat is more red meat then typical " duck meat"

I tested intolerant/ allergic to duck.... and rabbit...

Does muscovy meat fall under the category of " duck meat" or no, since it's not Oillie and more red meatish? It's a tree bird...

Or would the meat still fall under duck?

I need to decide if I'm out of the muscovy business.

Also I don't like chicken white meat. So what other small game can O raise for meat?



Obviously not a doctor, but to share my own experience.  My gut was/is a hot mess.  My naturopath has declared me an autoimmune sh*tstorm, and I have several diagnoses. I did the comprehensive allergy testing, and I react to almost everything except meat and a few fruits. (Duck was okay for me, but Turkey was in the red). What she told me was that if I gave my body a chance to heal, my immune system would likely calm down and be less hyper-reactive, and I probably wouldn’t have such violent reactions to everything.

My plan has been to go to a strict carnivore diet, but I haven’t succeeded yet 😖. So I can’t say for sure if healing the gut will help… but that’s my hope.

I also raise Muscovies and I love them.  So easy and so delicious.
2 years ago
Thanks for sharing Robert!
5 years ago
If you know a hen is laying, and you confine her you can observe her becoming really agitated when she wants to lay.  Pacing the fence, looking for an escape.  Let her out at that point she will generally make a beeline straight to her nest...and you can follow at a distance to find the spot.
6 years ago
Hi Everyone,
I'm in Vermont, which seems more like "the great white north" than Eastern USA.  I hope I'm in the right forum.  I spent the last 8 years in Africa. This will be my first year back in Vermont.  I'm feeling kind of bleak as I face the long, dark winter.  What do you do during the winter?

Maureen
6 years ago