How wonderful.
http://indianexpress.com/article/cities/pune/city-anchor-visually-impaired-girls-learn-to-grow-vegetables-through-touch/

For 18-year-old Sangeeta Gaikwad,one of the visually impaired girls at
Poona School and Home for Blind,mornings are about visiting her
kitchen garden and checking on the plants in the kitchen garden —
brinjal,chillies,bottle-gourd,methi ,onion,tomato,etc,harvesting
vegetables and so on. Between 8 am and 10 am,Sangeeta is in the garden
— touching the leaves and vegetables,feeling their height and
size,checking the dryness of leaves and monitoring the growth of these
plants. She is among 40 blind girls at the school in Kothrud,who are
being trained in kitchen gardening — claimed to be a first-of-its-kind
project for the visually impaired in the country.

“We are usually taught vocational trades like
stitching,sewing,knitting and making candles. However,as most of us
hail from rural backgrounds,gardening and working in the soil makes us
happy and is close to our heart,” said Sangeeta,who hails from
Baramati. Her family is chiefly into cultivation of sugarcane.

The school trains girls in various vocations till they are 18 and
helps them in starting an activity of their choice when they are ready
to leave the school. “Girls who wish to develop their own kitchen
gardens as an income generating activity can be given funds for
soil,saplings,gardening equipment,etc,from the school,” said Archana
Sarnobat,administrative officer of the school.

Having gone full-fledged in September last year,the kitchen garden
yielded six to seven kg of vegetables every day for four months. The
vegetables were then used in the school’s kitchen. Teams of 15 to 20
members from Cummins India Ltd visit the school daily and help the
girls in cultivating the vegetables. “We have learnt to identify the
plants by touch,understand whether vegetables are ready to be plucked
by their size and texture,monitor the growth of plants by their height
and so on,” said Alka Jadhav,another girl whose father is a farmer in
Sangli and owns a pomegranate orchard.

Around 40 girls above 16 years of age are being trained in kitchen
gardening. The programme also involves training in handling small
farming equipment like sickle and spade and spraying
insecticides,which is done under the supervision of volunteers from
Cummins.

It all began when four German volunteers — Angela,Sara,Daria and
Schini — stayed at the home for a year in 2009 as part of the
mandatory community service exchange programme. They had made a small
kitchen garden with the help of visually impaired girls staying there.
“It was beautiful and we realised that the girls were showing a keen
interest in developing it. That is when we thought of expanding the
activity and adding kitchen gardening to our list of vocations,” said
Sarnobat.

The authorities shared the idea with Cummins Foundation,which has been
supporting the school since 1974. Accordingly,Cummins gave Rs 1 lakh
to the school for this purpose. “The biggest challenge was to improve
the quality of soil so that a variety of vegetables could be grown.
Once we overcome that,we procured saplings and cultivated brinjals,a
variety of beans,chillies,coriander,tomato,onion,bitter gourd,etc,”
said Ravichandran Subramaniam,head of corporate responsibility at
Cummins Group of Companies in India.

Nine months after successfully running this activity,the school bagged
an award of $15,000 (Rs 7,47,750) for their kitchen garden and paper
bags activity at the hands of Jean Blackwell,executive vice president
(corporate responsibility) and CEO of Cummins Foundation,on Wednesday.
“We shall utilise this amount to gradually make the school
self-sustainable in cultivating vegetables and allied plants like
lime,ginger,mint and curry leaves needed in everyday cooking,” said
Sulabha Pujari,the school’s head mistress


-- 
Avinash Shahi
M.Phil Research Scholar
Centre for The Study of Law and Governance
Jawaharlal Nehru University
New Delhi India

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