By Debra aka Brique Zeiner | Chairwoman
Learning Through Growing – A Community Effort
At Live and Learn in Kenya, learning grows far beyond the classroom. Gardening and food production are an essential part of everyday life at our Education Center, bringing children, parents, and staff together as one strong community. What begins as a seed in the soil becomes nourishment, knowledge, confidence, and pride.
Children learn directly in the garden how plants grow—from planting seeds and preparing soil to watering, composting, and harvesting. They discover natural ways to care for crops, using companion planting and herbs such as lavender to protect vegetables without chemicals. Along the way, they learn about nutrition and how each vegetable supports a healthy body. For children who have grown up surrounded by scarcity, watching a tiny seed turn into food they can eat is a powerful and often magical experience. It teaches patience, responsibility, teamwork, and the deep satisfaction of earning a meal through their own effort.
This learning continues seamlessly into the kitchen. Once harvested, vegetables from the school garden and our rented farmland are cleaned, sorted, and brought to the school kitchen, where they become part of the daily meals. Dishes such as githeri, kale with ugali, and vegetable stews are richer and more nutritious when school-grown produce is added. Children proudly recognize their own work in their meals, often pointing out what they planted themselves. In these moments, a simple but life-changing message takes root: I grew this. I am capable. I can help feed myself and others.
Parents are deeply involved in every stage of this process and are an active part of the Live and Learn in Kenya community. Together with staff and older students, parents work on our rented farmland—planting maize and beans, caring for the crops, harvesting, and drying the produce for storage. During harvest time, maize is husked and dried, beans are sorted, and the harvest is carefully preserved for future meals. Parents also take turns cooking at the Education Center, transforming the food they helped grow into nourishing meals for hundreds of children. These shared tasks strengthen bonds, restore dignity, and reinforce the idea that everyone contributes.
Many families have also received micro-credit loans to start small kitchen gardens at home. These gardens provide vegetables for their families and sometimes extra produce to sell at local markets. Through regular workshops, parents learn sustainable farming techniques, composting, rainwater collection, food safety, meal planning, and simple preservation methods such as sun-drying vegetables. Some parents now volunteer regularly in the fields or during community farming days, passing skills from one generation to the next.
One of the most joyful moments of the year is the maize harvest. Harvest days are filled with laughter, singing, and gratitude as children and parents work side by side. The maize is used in multiple ways—milled into flour for ugali, cooked in stews, or roasted during community gatherings—while nothing goes to waste. Husks and stalks are composted or reused. Children beam with pride as they watch their parents carry baskets of maize, beans, and vegetables, knowing their families are part of something meaningful and sustainable.
Cooking classes further deepen this connection. In the kitchen and classroom, children learn basic cooking skills, safe food handling, and traditional Kenyan recipes with a healthy focus. Some older students are already dreaming of becoming chefs or nutritionists. The lesson they carry with them is clear: healthy food begins with knowledge, care, and cooperation.
At its heart, this program is about sustainability and empowerment. Compost, animal manure, water-saving techniques, natural pest control, and full community involvement ensure that what we are growing will last. This is not charity—it is shared responsibility, rooted in knowledge and cultivated together.
Today, over 80% of LLK families grow some of their own food, school-grown vegetables are used regularly in meals, food costs have been reduced, and malnutrition has decreased noticeably. Attendance and engagement rise during the growing season, and girls in particular show strong interest in gardening and cooking as valuable life skills.
None of this would be possible without the generous support of donors who have provided seeds, tools, fencing, water systems, and the salary of a dedicated garden caretaker. With continued support, we hope to expand further—adding greenhouses, purchasing our own farmland, and creating a Farm-to-Table youth club.
Whether you are sponsoring a child, supporting our projects, or following our journey from afar, you are part of this harvest. You are helping children eat healthier, learn deeply, work proudly, and dream bigger.
Asante Sana – Thank You.
Because of you, our gardens grow—and so do our children.
By Debra aka Brique Zeiner | Chairwoman
By Debra aka Brique Zeiner | Chairwoman
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