David

Nakuru, Kenya

100% repaid

Entrepreneur

Name

David

Member since

July 2010

On-time repayments

47 installments  •  60%

About Me

I am David Kamau Wanjama, born in 1950 at Marioshoni Village in Elbergo under shamba system. Son of Wanjama Kamau and Bilih Njambi as the fourth child. I completed my primary schol education in 1964. I am married and have nine children and the last born is in form one at Mugaa Secondary School. In addition, I have custody of my orphaned nephew and niece who are in class three and four respectively. I work at Mugaa Secondary School. I am also a mixed farmer, growing maize, beans and potatoes. Also rear dairy goats, beef cattle.

My Business

My main business is keeping of the dairy goats, which are expensive to rear. I buy them food daily from the shop,dairy salt and also medicine to keep them free fom round worms.20mm bottle of the medicine used to spray the goats costs about Ksh500 and the goats need to be sprayed after every three months. One bag of food cost about Ksh1500 and i buy about 5 bags in a year,which amounts to Ksh7,500 in a year. Apart from this i also buy traditional food such as Kikuyu potato leaves.
The goats produces young ones twice a year. During that time i milk them and sell the milk to my neighbours and when it produces a male kid i sell it at about Ksh5,000 or more.

Loan Proposal

I plan to use the funds given to raise 4 dairy goats .Each dairy goat cost KSH 3000.A small structure to house the animals will be constucted .I will dig holes and place 10 poles inside the holes .I will place soil on the holes and use the crow bar to make the poles firm. Each of the poles cost SHS 50,A capenter will be hired for two days @500 KSH to build the structure.4 mabatis [iron sheets] will be used for roofing. Each mabati goes for KSH 520 Afew nails 1/2kg will be used to roof the house for the goats

The sructure measures 4m by 3m. The structure has a door at one end measuring 3ft by 6ft the door cost KSH 1000 .The door will be used to remove the dung from the sructure .The dung can be used later for the generation of biogas when funds are available.

Within the sructure alot of space will be needed for free movement of animals so that they do not become fatiged. A trough will be placed at one end for putting food for the animals .The trough will be used as well for placing macklick salt that strengthens the bones of the goats and makes them strong.Near the trough I will build a small container for putting water .The goats need regular water supply for maximum milk production.

I have set aside KSH 2000 for buying hay for the animals especially during the dry spell. The remaining money will be used for buying drugs to remove intestinal worms and liverfluxes that mainly affect animals in this area. The money will be used also to sray the animals and keep them free from ticks and mites.

I ex pect the goats to produce 16 litresof milk daily .the milk will be sold @ KHS 30 per litre .In a month I expect to earn an income of SHS 14,400 which I will use to educate my children and repay the loan.

Feedback

3

None

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Loan Info

Project Type

Classic Loan

Disbursed amount

$260.00

Date disbursed

Sep 9, 2010

Repayment status

On Time

Projected term

12 months

Lenders

Julia Kurnia

Sterling, Virginia, United States

C

CWS

Huntington beach, ca, United States

Ask David a question about this project, share news and photos of your own, or send a simple note of thanks or inspiration.

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  • Astrid    Mar 20, 2020

    Hi David,
    Thanks for your recent repayments. All the best!
    Astrid

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  • Astrid    Jan 2, 2015

    Hi David,
    I wish you, your family and your business all the best for 2015.
    Can we expect further repayment from you any time soon? Thanks!
    Astrid

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  • mewesten    Oct 8, 2013

    Hello David,
    I hope your business is coming along well. Best of luck to you and yours.
    Write a note of you have time.
    Sincerely,
    Marvin

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  • David    Jul 18, 2013

    Hi lenders. Thank you for your unmatched support. God bless you.
    David.

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    • mewesten    Jul 18, 2013

      Nice to hear from you, David.
      I hope the loan will help you meet your goals of buying and selling commodities, and make additional profit for your farm. It can be risky, so be careful. I wish you good luck.
      Sincerely,
      Marvin

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  • AchintyaRai    Feb 3, 2012

    Hi,

    My name is Achintya Rai and I am the new Kenya Client Relationship Manager for Zidisha.

    I visited David Kamau on the 31st of Jan. Baba Joshua (as he is popularly known) is obviously one of the most popular Zidisha clients. If one were to believe his stories, he is quite ancient. But he doesn’t look a day older than 40. I asked around and the general opinion is that he is 70. I was thinking what I wouldn’t give to be as fit as him when I’m 70. Then I met his mother, who is 99. She was not only quite active (I once saw her doing the 7 km uphill trek from Mitimingi to Mugaa, from my perch behind a bike taxi) but had perfect hearing and sight.

    Baba Joshua explained the science of cow-rearing to me- at what age they should be bought, at what they should be sold, how many generations further can they be interbred etc. He also explained to me how he invested his Zidisha loan and later bought a cow. His job at the Mugaa Secondary School not only gives him a stable salary, but also gives him special privileges like access to the school grounds for grazing his cows. He doesn’t have to take his cows to long distances for grazing unlike other farmers and that saves him a lot of time to look after his other animals.

    With his next loan he wants to buy maze from farmers in the crop season and store it to sell it later when the prices go up and traders from the town come looking for more produce.

    His present income appears quite sufficient to pay back his loans. He has indigenous as well as German goats (which, I feel, aren’t quite as pretty as the local ones, but he was so proud of them I had to click a few pictures), chickens and now 3 cows. Like very many other Zidisha clients I have met, Baba Joshua also feels a sense of ownership for the company and also a sense of pride to be associated with Zidisha. And quite thankful to Zidisha too.

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  • teddy    Aug 25, 2011

    Baba Joshua is a vibrant and entertaining person. He is quite proud of himself to have his loan repayments done on time and says that he organizes himself not to be late. He bought 4 dairy goats which he reared and one of them gave birth. He later sold them (save for the kid) and bought a cow. The cow recently gave birth and he now owns a calf. He intends to start selling cow milk sometime in January which is now being sold for Kshs. 28 / litre. In a nutshell, as far as his business and his loan repayments are concerned, David is a comfortable man.
    A casual laborer at Mugaa Secondary School, Baba Joshua has 3 boys in that very high school and 2 girls in primary school. He admits that he does not post comments to his page simply because of his inability to work with computers adequately and their scarcity in Mugaa.
    Teddy Onserio
    Zidisha Intern

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  • teddy    Aug 25, 2011

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  • Lauren Rosenbaum    Dec 24, 2010

    www.overstream.net/view.php...

    Teachers at Mugaa Secondary School, where David works, explain the challenges that staff face in providing students with a quality education.

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  • Lauren Rosenbaum    Aug 11, 2010

    During the three weeks I stayed in Mugaa, David Kamau became a good friend. Most people at the school call David Baba Joshua or Wajoshua because in Kenya parents are known by the name of their first born child. Wajoshua has nine children, a number only slightly above average for a Kenyan family. As the oldest living son, he is responsible for taking on the family’s burdens, including caring for his parents as they grow old and raising his orphaned niece and nephew. He used to travel to his father’s house by foot, but as the old man’s health deteriorated he moved out of his house, carrying the roofing sheets and sticks that it had been made of to the relocate next to his parents.

    In this area people live for a very long time, perhaps because they walk for miles and miles on hilly terrain daily and eat plenty of vegetables that they grow in their shambas. Wajoshua is 70 but he still seems as strong as a man in his 30s. His father died recently at the age of 118.

    Wajoshua works extremely hard to make sure that the school is running smoothly, which often requires heavy manual labor. The other day he was personally fixing one of the many atrocious roads that leads to the school, throwing heavy rocks out of the path and carrying bags of sand and gravel to replace them. I am continually amazed by how much energy he has to do these things.

    I have been invited to Wajoshua’s house a number of times.The first time he showed me his goats and explained to me all of the measures he takes to care for them. He told me that the goats are better quality than typical African goats because they are able to produce milk and thus generate income without being used for meat. In order to obtain such animals, Wajoshua organized with a group of farmers to collectively breed the goats, rotating males and females among theirselves in order to avoid inbreeding. Wajoshua started with just one baby female, but he now has a full-grown male and another baby male, as well. In order to keep them healthy, he must pay for their food, salts, and medicine. He also feeds them fresh vegetables, like the kales he grows in his garden. Because the baby goat gets cold at night, Wajoshua brings him inside the house to sleep.

    Wajoshua is a very social person and doesn’t think much of walking 7 Km to see a friend. He also likes to invite people over to watch his television, which he powers with a solar battery-a common contraption in remote areas that do not have access to electricity. When I come to his house he always makes me mahindi choma ( roasted maize), which is sort of like popcorn for Kenyan families. His kids watch the television with us, an exercise Wajoshua says helps them improve their English. After I leave they begin studying, using lamps powered by the solar battery. As the family values education, many of the children are at the top of their classes.

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