The Rock catchment system is revolutionizing water access in Makueni county in Kenya

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The Rock catchment system is revolutionizing water access in Makueni county in Kenya
The Rock catchment system is revolutionizing water access in Makueni county in Kenya

Africa-Press – Kenya. In Makueni county, in dry southeastern Kenya, water is very scarce. There’s little piped water and few reliable alternatives.

So in 2012, villagers resolved to address that problem by adopting the rock catchment system, a method of harvesting rainwater from stone outcrops, which are giant naturally occurring rocks standing hundreds of feet above the ground.

Villagers built a concrete wall around the rock to trap rainwater, with the financial and technical support of a NGO called Africa Sand Dam Foundation.

They placed big stones to filter the water and a pipe to take the water down to storage tanks.

The water collected from the rock catchment flows into the tanks through the pipe, and then to a water collection point nearby where residents fetch it from taps.

Jefferson Mutie, communication officer at Africa Sand Dam Foundation, explains how it works.

Joyce Mule used to walk for about two hours to find water from her hilly and rocky village of Syumbe in Makueni county.

Mule comes to the rock catchment to fetch water here about five times a day and takes around half an hour to get it home.

she says.

Today Mule is happy because the new source of water is close, consistently available and the water is clean.

As a result, her trees are producing more fruits and her cows are giving more milk.

she says.

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