| Report on Peace Corps Initiated Solar Oven Project in Lesotho, Southern Africa by Mary Simonson
Nancy Bailey and myself were U.S. Peace Corps Volunteers in Lesotho,
Southern Africa from May 2001 -- July 2003. Lesotho is a high-altitude
country where winters can be bitterly cold and deforestation and soil
erosion are major environmental problems. It is, happily, also a country
with many sunny days and a growing awareness of fuel shortage problems. Most
rural families cannot afford the Propane stoves and heaters used in the
towns and thus use cow dung patties as fuel for cooking and warmth. Trees
are scarce in all parts of the country, particularly in the mountains.
Burnable fuel is scoured from shrubs, dried out Aloe plants, dung of grazing
animals and even the rootstalks of corn and other harvested crops. In a
country already suffering from severe soil erosion, soil nutrient depletion
and deforestation, the future impacts of these continued practices are
obvious and frightening.
Nancy and I were located in villages approximately 5km. apart in the
northern district of Butha-Buthe. During our service, we each received
information on solar cooking / cooker construction from our friends in the
US. We received building instructions for several different types of solar
cookers obtained from the Solar Cooking International website
(www.solarcooking.org), as well as a CooKit solar cooker and various cooking
instructions from a friend at Sierra Solar in Grass Valley, CA
(www.sierrasolar.com). Nancy and I began to experiment with these at our
homes -- using the CooKit and also a cardboard box cooker built using the
SCI instructions. We experimented with cooking different types of food,
optimizing the cookers' efficiency and cooking under different weather and
sunlight conditions. The cookers in our yards were a source of curiosity for
many neighbors and passers-by, particularly at Nancy's site - a Cultural
Heritage Center that was a popular tourist and school field trip
destination. As more people saw the cookers and word of mouth spread,
interest in obtaining their own cookers grew.
Nancy began by training her colleague, Ntate Mohau, on the general
principles of solar cooking and on how to build several different types of
cooker. She then translated several pieces of useful information -- cooking
times and tips as well as instructions for building the box cooker -- into
the local language, Sesotho. She located materials, often having to bring
items such as appropriate sized cardboard boxes and Glad Oven Roasting Bags
from nearby South Africa with the help of her supervisor, Danish Volunteers
and others with a vehicle. She discovered that by using paper mache' glue
(flour paste) instead of store-bought glue, the box cookers could be made at
a significantly lower price. Nancy then had her interested friends and
neighbors sign up for a Build-Your-Own Solar Oven Workshop. The participants
were to pay ½ of the materials cost (10 Rand = approximately $1.40) and
bring their own aluminum pot to paint black. Nancy (with Nt. Mohau acting as
translator) taught 20 people in 2 daylong workshops how to build their own
solar box cooker. The remaining cost of the workshop (50%) was covered by
several small grants from ALOE (Advocates for Lesotho's Own Environment) a
Peace Corps spin-off environmental education group.
Meanwhile, I was having trouble getting enough cardboard boxes and
experiencing general dexterity frustrations with building and optimizing my
box cooker. I resorted, instead, to making a variation on the CooKit design
in which a flat piece of cardboard of adequate size was covered with
aluminum foil and then fastened into a concave shape for cooking using
attached clothespins on adjustable strings (see photos of in-process and
finished product). I began having great success with this and found that,
using Nancy's flour-glue idea, this design was cheaper and quicker to build
than the box cooker. As such, this was the design I picked for my workshops.
To avoid contention in the community, to cover the cost of paying a nominal
teaching fee to Nt. Mohau (who was now proficient at teaching the class
independently) as well as to provide each participant with a spare
heat-resistant cooking bag, we continued to charge R10 per person to attend
the workshop. Nancy also began teaching construction of this design at her
workshops as well.
General workshop structure was 10 -- 12 participants, 1 teacher and 2
assistants (to help with the building). To build the box cooker designs in a
workshop took 5 -- 10 hours but the modified CooKit design could be built in
as little as 30 minutes for a single oven, 2 -- 3 hours for the entire
workshop. We started each workshop by explaining the basic principles of
solar cooking (reflection, absorption, etc), sharing cooking tips (i.e.
wind, clouds, type of food, pan, etc.) and showing several different types
of solar cookers (box, CooKit, photos of parabolic cookers, etc.). As
mentioned above, each participant paid ½ of the workshop cost and brought
their own pan to paint black. In return, they left with their own modified
CooKit solar cooker, a handout of cooking tips and optimization ideas, two
heat resistant oven bags and their own pot, painted black. We provided
Sesotho or English instructions for construction of the box cooker to
interested parties and served tea and bread for refreshments. Buying certain
supplies in bulk, such as black paint and flour (for the glue), we were able
to make the box cookers for approximately 20 Rand each (approximately $2.80)
and the modified CooKit design for approximately 12 Rand each (approximately
$1.70). Once Nt. Mohau started teaching the classes himself, we paid him a
R50 teaching fee for each workshop.
Over the course of our last six months as Peace Corps Volunteers, Nancy and
I trained approximately 110 people on how to build their own solar cooker.
The project continues through the commitment of several Basotho solar
enthusiasts and current Peace Corps Volunteers. Nt. Mohau, Nancy's original
helper, continues to hold Build-Your-Own Solar Oven Workshops in the
surrounding communities and to display and demonstrate several types of
solar cookers at the Liphofung Cultural Heritage site where he works as
guide. He recently assisted a member of South Africa's Rotary Club in
holding a Build-Your-Own Solar Oven Workshop at a school for developmentally
disabled children in Butha-Buthe. Now, the school has 3 solar cookers with
which to cook the children's lunches and each of the teachers have a solar
cooker that they use at home. Another workshop participant, Nt. Mpiti, was
intrigued by the design possibilities and went on to construct several
different prototypes of solar cooker, including a very efficient Parabolic
Cooker made from cardboard and foil. He has shown his designs at the local
Agric Show in Butha-Buthe and hopes to sell them on a special-order basis.
Local shops in the area now carry large Glad Oven Roasting Bags and have
agreed to sell the bags individually to make them more affordable. A current
Peace Corps Volunteer has taught her women's handicraft group how to solar
cook and now the women use the ovens to cook their noon meal at work and at
their homes as well. As a result, they have more time to devote to their
weaving center and bringing income home to their families.
The amazing thing about this Solar Oven Project is the unprecedented level
of community interest and investment. Previous workshops that myself, other
Peace Corps Volunteers and other Development and Aid organizations were
historically poorly attended and it was general knowledge that people would
not come if a) there wasn't food -- i.e. a full lunch served or b) if they
were required to contribute any money. The fact that people paid to attend
these workshops where they built their own oven and only tea was served is a
testament to their level of interest in this project. Many people now use
the ovens for cooking on a regular basis and continue to become more
proficient in it's use. However, the thing that people love the most about
their solar cooker is using it to warm up water for bathing. In a cold
climate such as Lesotho, that is a luxury that most could previously never
indulge. For myself, of all the work I did as a Peace Corps Volunteer, the
Solar Oven Project was the most rewarding because of peoples' interest and
the long-term viability of the project.
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