A team from BioVision Foundation visited Kiangwachi on 5th April 2008. It is now the rainy season and the farmers were busy, but they quickly and graciously organized a meeting.
The BioVision team commented that the location of Kiangwachi is good, being right on the road, with lots of farmers passing. The room chosen to house the computers had only a weak signal on the Celtel network. However, since then, Vesel project member Souleymane Camara has managed to get the Internet connection working properly.
BioVision brought a new version of their database, and explained its benefits. There seems to be much demand for organic crops and methods. When they realised the quantity and quality of the information, more people began coming to the meeting. They could see a clear chain of information going from searching to printing. An older man was particularly interested in the computer, looking inside. He enthusiastically grabbed and used the laptop. He (as most people) particularly liked printouts to take away.
Its database now complete, BioVision is pursuing is an awareness campaign. Radio may be useful in this regard, and in fact The Organic Farmer newsletter, which is linked to Biovision, is setting up a form of radio content delivery.
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Monique Hunziker, Project Leader of infonet-Biovision with farmers at Kiangwachi |
Farmers like the idea of keywords, but do not search, since they don't really understand the concept of the Internet and where information is going. They are more comfortable with SMS. In their use of the BioVision database, the farmers are guided mostly by images, and for this reason BioVision has implemented a rollover function so that information pops up when a user moves the cursor over a photo.