Strengthening Resilience of Rural Women through Dry Season Farming in Ghana

UNDP Ghana
4 min readMar 14, 2019
Agabeni Abaa, a beneficiary of our dry season garden initiative in her farm

“We are very very happy”, says Rose Azumah, a dry season gardener at Walembelle in the Upper West Region of Ghana.

Like many people in rural communities in Ghana, Rose’s main economic activity is farming. Over 80% of residents in her region and in Northern Ghana as a whole, depend on rain-fed agriculture for their food, income and livelihoods. With climate change, the incidence of droughts continues to increase, having devastating impacts on the people, especially women.

Rose in her dry season vegetable farm

Women in rural communities in most developing countries like Ghana are often vulnerable to climate change because they depend a lot on local natural resources for their livelihoods. They secure water, food and fuel for cooking. Despite this, most women do not own and control resources especially land.

“Most of us do not farm during the dry season and life becomes difficult as we don’t earn any income”, stated Agabeni Abaa in Yindongo, Upper East Region of Ghana.

Agabeni (left), “now, with the dry season garden, we grow and consume beans leaves and also sell some”

To respond to this, a dry season garden initiative is currently being implemented by the Government of Ghana, in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), as part of a 4-year project, to build community resilience to climate change impacts. The project, being supported by Adaptation Fund, is building the resilience of women and men in over 50 communities. Agabeni and Rose are among the over 2500 women benefiting directly.

In Yindongo, we have a 24-acre dry season garden and we are about 100 women benefiting from the initiative. Every 3 days is market day here, so we sell the vegetables and also consume some”, Agabeni indicated.

Section of the 24-acre dry season garden, with onion in Yindongo, Upper East Region of Ghana.

The dry season gardening is not only benefiting women but men as well. Both women and men are being supported with land preparation, seedlings, irrigation facilities, pesticides and with technical support to produce different exotic and local vegetables (onion, cabbage, lettuce, green pepper, pepper, tomatoes, spring onion, beans etc.).

Fuseini Amoah, a beneficiary of our dry season garden in his watermelon farm

We have 10 men and 20 women being supported in our village Goli and this is helping us. I have already made good income from my first harvest, more than Ghc1000 ($200) from the sale from 3 beds green pepper and 4 beds lettuce and cabbage. I also have onions, cucumber and pumpkin leaves which are almost ready for the market”, Godfred Datuah, Vegetable Farmer at Goli, Upper West Region of Ghana.

Godfred in his vegetable farm

Beside the dry season gardening, the adaptation fund project is also supporting the communities with boreholes, rehabilitation of dams for irrigation and other water uses; and providing other alternative livelihood interventions such as agro-processing, beekeeping, fish farming, and tree seedling nurseries, all in Northern Ghana.

Madam Comfort, beneficiary of our tree nursery initiative
Minister of Environment (MESTI), Prof. Kwabena Frimpong-Boateng (left) and Assistant Resident Representative of UNDP Ghana, Mr. Louis Kuukpen (behind Minister) inspecting one of the project’s boreholes at Kakease in Savannah Region of Ghana.

As the world embarks on years of ambition to tackle climate change, it is important to integrate gender issues in climate change mitigation and adaptation efforts. This will help minimize women and children’s risks to climate change impacts.

Women farmers expressing their appreciation for the dry season farming initiative with a local dance
Solar irrigation for vegetable farmers

Text & Photos by Praise Nutakor and Stephen Kansuk, UNDP Ghana

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