Sankica Agro- Based Mixed Farm.

Sankica Agro- Based Mixed Farm. We offer consultancy services in :-

AGRICULTURAL ADVISORY SERVICES. And commercial farming.

07/08/2020

Must hold a diploma in animal or crop husbandry.

*AGRITOUR & ROAD TRIP TO KENYA*12 days to goAre you are farmer, intending to start farming or you have always wanted to ...
22/06/2019

*AGRITOUR & ROAD TRIP TO KENYA*
12 days to go
Are you are farmer, intending to start farming or you have always wanted to visit Kenya?
Here is a great opportunity for you to learn, explore and have fun
We shall also visit Kenya *National Agricultural Show* and learn all the latest technologies in farming.
*Date:* 3rd - 7th July
*Fee:* 799,000/=Ushs
Caters for: All expenses for the 4days
Book your place now
0753734697 0782905808
Or visit our offices
© *Organized by:*
Mlima Safaris & Agritours
Lima with Bettina
Spark Agro-initiatives.

GO GREEN, RAIN FAVOURING US FARMERS.
14/05/2019

GO GREEN, RAIN FAVOURING US FARMERS.

“To most people, this is just dirt. To a farmer, it is potential.”
24/01/2019

“To most people, this is just dirt. To a farmer, it is potential.”

Discover yo secrets to prosperity by doing farming as a business.
13/02/2018

Discover yo secrets to prosperity by doing farming as a business.

08/04/2017

Soon Launching SANKICA BEE FARMING & TRAINING CENTRE as an 8th Agricultural Project Under SANKICA AGRO-BASED MIXED FARM.

10/05/2016

“One of these days” may be too late.

When I start some of my projects, I’m sure a few people think I’m really “way out there” as far as what seems possible in this world. “Too ambitious!” “Impossible!” “You must be joking!?” Although I don’t know if many would say this to me, I expect they think it sometimes.

What about you? Do you sometimes have a great idea but, even before other people tell you, “No way! Not you!” you say those words to yourself? Do you make the big mistake of stopping yourself in your own tracks even before you do your research? Even before you start putting real foundations under your business visions?

__Stop that kind of thinking right now! Wherever you are in life, you can’t change where you began, but you can definitely change where you end up.

When I wrote the story about the Buffalo Hunter I was so interested to read your comments. Thank you. Many of you are very very wise indeed! Now, I have some questions for you:

What do you do when you wake up in the middle of the night, or you’re walking down the road, and you suddenly have this “light bulb” moment, this great idea? Do you write it down? Do you look up on the Internet to see if someone else is already doing it?

__What you do AFTER you have a great idea, is what becomes your legacy in life.

Do you get to work on it ASAP, or do you doubt yourself and get busy with something else? Maybe you just roll over and go back to sleep, saying to yourself, “Yep, I’ll give that idea some thought… one of these days.”

I guarantee you that a “One of these days” attitude will get you nearly nowhere in life. I promise that if you don’t take concrete actions to do something about it, that idea of yours will get forgotten or lost, or…

“One of these days” you might wake up and hear about someone else who’s just done the greatest thing -- maybe even made millions or changed the world in a way others thought impossible -- with almost the exact same idea that you had, except…

We’ve talked a lot about business thinking and planning, but let me tell you, you can have a top MBA from Harvard or Stanford or anywhere else in the world… You’ll still go nowhere if your approach in life is to get down to work on it, “one of these days.”

Now some of you with ideas already have money. Some of you don’t. Many of you lament about funding, but that’s really NOT the key thing:

__You must first believe in yourself. (This whole topic is a subject for another day! There’s much to be said about faith, and faith at work.)

Believe in yourself and get to work on your dreams. You won’t know if you don’t try.

If you have a great idea, “one of these days” should be... now. You’ve heard it before, and I hope you’ll hear it again and again: “Yes, you can!” The question is, when?

End

It’s not how much money you make, but how much money you keep, how hard it works for you, and how many generations you k...
24/04/2016

It’s not how much money you make, but how much money you keep, how hard it works for you, and how many generations you keep it for. Tom Sankara Nzanywa
Senior partner & Founder
@ SANKICA AGRI-BASED MIXED FARM.

06/04/2016

WHAT MATTERS IS THE CONTENT, BUT NOT
THE CONTAINER.
A group of alumni, highly established in their
careers, got together to visit their old
university professor.
Conversation soon turned into complaints
about stress in work and life.
Offering his guests coffee, the professor went
to the kitchen and returned with a large pot of
coffee and an assortment of cups – porcelain,
plastic, glass, crystal, some plain looking,
some expensive, some exquisite – telling them
to help themselves to the coffee.
When all the students had a cup of coffee in
hand, the professor said:
“If you noticed, all the nice looking expensive
cups were taken up, leaving behind the plain
and cheap ones. While it is normal for you to
want only the best for yourselves, that is the
source of your problems and stress.
Be assured that the cup itself adds no quality
to the coffee. In most cases it is just more
expensive and in some cases even hides what
we drink.
What all of you really wanted was coffee, not
the cup, but you consciously went for the best
cups… And then you began eyeing each
other’s cups.
Now consider this: Life is the coffee;
the jobs, money and position in society are
the cups.
They are just tools to hold and contain Life,
and the type of cup we have does not define,
nor change the quality of Life we live.
Sometimes, by concentrating only on the cup,
we fail to enjoy the coffee God has provided
us.”
God brews the coffee, not the cups………. Enjoy
your coffee!
MORAL
“The happiest people don’t have the best of
everything.
They just make the best of everything.”
Live simply. Love generously.
Care deeply. Speak kindly.
Leave the rest to GOD.

12/02/2016

“If your plan is for one year, plant rice. If your plan is for 10 years, plant trees. If your plan is for 100 years, educate children.” This adage from the Chinese philosopher, Confucius, guides Eden Kamugisha.
The Makerere University graduate is an all-round farmer in Kisagazi Village near Masaka Town. He holds a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science
Twenty years ago, at the age of 32, he quit his job in Prisons Service to become a poultry farmer.
He was the OC Prisons in Masaka. “I was given barely Shs670,000 as my package, which was not enough to start a well-paying business. But my real capital was determination and those who gave me inspiration and guidance,” he says.

Kamugisha was able to get initial 3.7 acres of land, where he established a 30,000-bird poultry farm. It is where he does several income-generating activities. These include growing mangoes, passion fruit and coffee and bee-keeping. There is also production of seedlings for Robusta coffee, cloned eucalyptus, grafted orange, passion fruit, and mango.
About 10 years ago, a friend introduced him to tree farming. “He drove me and my wife, Faustus, to his 30-acre eucalyptus tree plantation and we inspected it. At first, I did not conceptualise the financial potential until a few years later when he told me that he had sold all the trees for over Shs800m, which he had used to build six flats in Kampala for rent.”

Since then, Kamugisha became strongly attracted to trees. He narrates: “When he told me about his big achievement, I had 250 acres in addition to what I already had, so tree growing could be my best investment.
I opted for South African cloned eucalyptus trees since they grow fast. There were 15 acres with pine trees but the eucalyptus proved stronger, faster growing, and very marketable.
I also decided to provide seedlings to other farmers and to expand the acreage.”

Cloned eucalyptus may be ready for harvesting for sale as poles at six to eight years depending on the variety of the tree and the soil where it is planted. If the tree is for timber, the farmer may have to wait for up to 12 years.
Kamugisha explains: “But I want you to imagine the potential benefits. The trees for electricity poles cost at least Shs100,000 each. In an acre, a farmer may grow as many as 450 trees. In just six or eight years, he or she could earn over Shs35m.

If he or she is ready to wait a few more years for the trees to be about a foot or so in diameter, he or she may earn a minimum of Shs500,000 per tree or about Shs250m on selling all the trees.
For farmers with 10 or more acres, planting eucalyptus or any other such tree could be an opportunity to earn billions of shillings in the not-so-distant future.”

So far, Kamugisha has planted 35 acres of cloned eucalyptus trees and is determined to cover the rest of his land with it.
“Growing trees is no longer optional by the way,” he adds.
“Look at the effects of climate change and the rate of deforestation. Be you a trader or a crop or livestock farmer, you need rain in one way or another.”

Rain has a correlation with trees. Uganda is fast losing its forest cover, yet it has a huge demand for house construction and for furniture. Wood is the raw material for making paper and other products.
Agriculture in the Masaka sub-region may never be the same as it was before the destruction of the massive natural forest in Ssese Islands/Kalangala District. There used to be more rain than now.
For a farmer who gets thousands of eggs from the poultry farm every day and who also generates income from the other activities, tree growing is perhaps be the best way to invest the earnings.

“The eucalyptus trees are planted in lines and with a spacing of 10 by 10 feet. Just a handful of organic manure may be needed per hole at the time of planting.
Then, the farmer may do some weeding and clearing of the nearby bush to avoid incidents of bush fires destroying the young trees.
After about a year or two, there will be hardly any weeds. The farmer will just watch the trees grow and wait for the time of harvest.”
Kamugisha and his wife Faustus are fully involved in all the family business activities. They often work together with their 20 or so employees.

The workers are taught to do grafting of seedlings and cloning of eucalyptus trees.
“Most of them are young and even if they have to leave us, they go away with some skills to help them earn a living on their own,” Faustus points out.
Each cloned eucalyptus seedling prepared at their farm is Shs500 while each grafted mango, orange and passion fruit seedling is Shs300.
The farmers keep bees not just for the sake of harvesting honey but also to enhance pollination on the farm where the family also grows maize, beans other food crops.

[email protected]

08/02/2016

Farming
A STANDARD POULTRY FARM
By| Guest Writer
Poultry Farming in Ugnda is probably one of the most lucrative farming business you can do, especially when it is setup and managed properly. The farmers we currently have are not producing enough poultry and will not be enough even in the next ten years! This aspect of livestock farming presents one of the finest opportunity for entrepreneurs to make good money within the shortest period of time possible. This is made possible due to the quick maturity of chickens.
With over 38 Million consumers in the country who buy poultry products on daily basis, the market is always here waiting to be tapped. The demand for eggs is so high that people go about everyday looking for where to buy eggs for supply.
So, how exactly can anyone who wish to start poultry farming in Uganda to be able to go about it and come out very profitable? This article will cover a lot of ground, and it is written based on personal experience and continually updated to make sure the information here is as accurate as possible at all time.
This very post will take more critical look at the business and how entrepreneurs who are interested in this business could start easily without wasting much time and resources.
Anyone can engage in poultry business, it doesn’t matter your educational or financial background, you can start at any level and grow as big as you want with time. The most important thing is that you are interested in starting somewhere.
This articles will focus on how to start small and grow big which I think will interest anyone with limited financial capacity who wants to start small without involving much risks.
One of the factors that makes poultry business ideal business is because chickens grows very fast. Unlike goats that takes 2 to 3 years to mature, a chicken can be ready for the market within 28 weeks from birth. That is why it is considered ideal business for loan takers who may actually invest the loan and within 30 to 40 weeks, they may start paying back through the money realized from sells.
Profit potential in poultry business.
1. Chicken do reproduce fast and in large number s – Average healthy Layer lays egg almost everyday or at least 4 times in a week. Some Breeds can lay as much as 325 eggs in a year and take 21 days to hatch. This means that technically a Layer is capable of producing another chicken twice in three days.
So, if you have 500 healthy layers of good breeds (such as California white) they are capable of reproducing a whooping 12,000 chicks within 40 days!
2. Chicken grows very fast – Within 21 days, the egg is hatched and within 28 weeks, they are ready for the market. That means a farmer may start making his money in just 34 weeks after successfully setting up his farm and whatever returns he make could be doubled in a year based on this calculation.
3. Chicken sells at a very good price – A fully grown healthy chicken sells between 20,000 to 25000 Uganda shillings. Therefore, if you produce 12,000 chickens in your farm, you will be making 240,000,000 million by the time they are completely sold.
4. Egg market in Large too – Apart from the chicken, the egg is another money of it’s own. A tray of eggs sells for 8500 – 10,000 shillings. Each crate contains 30 eggs. Therefore, if you have 500 layers that produces 1,000 eggs a day and you decide to sell all, you will be making 8,499,999
monthly.
As you can see, the profit in poultry farming in Uganda is mouth watering and the turn over time is fantastic as well, but the big question now is how to start.
What Your Poultry Business Plan Should Look Like
Draw out your effective business plan. Poultry business plan is like a road map leading you to where you are going in you business. It will help you know where you are at any point in time. Hence your business plan should include:
1. Type of Bird you want to concentrate on – Here you choose Chickens ( Layers and Broilers). We choose chicken because that’s what this article focuses on. There are other types of birds that are good for livestock business too, such as Goose,
Duck,Turkey , etc.
2. Write down your area of interest – You can’t just be in all aspect of poultry farming. You have to choose your area of interest where you would like to concentrate your business. This will ensure high level of focus and professionalism. If you can do two area, no problem. Below are some of the major Niches in Poultry Farming in Uganda or elsewhere.
Layers Breeding which is egg production by Layers
Broilers breeding which referrers to the chicken meat production by Broilers
Hatchery which has to do with breeding chicken for the purpose of Hatching new chicks
Poultry feed which is producing feeds for other poultry farmers
You may choose to Breed Layers and Broilers at a time or one of them. Hatchery is better done independently just like feed production. So, you choose your area of focus
3. Sort out Location – This has a direct effect to your startup cost. A location in a very remote rural area will cost far less than the one close to the urban area. Remote rural area with good road is the ideal location as you will be free from regulatory agencies and drive down the cost of labor too.
As a new person to Livestock business, you don’t want to invest all your capital into buying lands in urban area which may turn out not being used because Government policy is against setting up poultry farm near residential/urban areas for health implication.
4. Investment Capital – With location in mind, you now have clearer idea of the capital required of you. Write down your detailed capital and investment requirements for your poultry farming venture and set out to source for it.
Like every other farming projects, the bigger you plan to start, the more investment required. You need to decide on the level of capital investment you are willing to commit into this business before starting.
(a) Small scale Chicken Rearing (of about 50 birds) kept in cages at the backyard of your resident will take about 1,500,000 – 5,000,000 million to start.
(b) A medium scale poultry farming that requires land and housing and other materials in 1 – 2 plots of Land takes about 10 to 25 Million to start.
(c) Large scale or Intensive poultry farming that requires high level of sophistication and more careful planning and professionalism, using advance Livestock farming techniques takes from UGX 50 Million .
Setting Up Your Poultry Farming
With your business plan is in place, the next is to proceed to setting up your farm without delay! At this point, it is my believe that you already have the money in your hands. So here are the things you need to acquire and put in place.
1. Buy land – Like we said earlier, look for land in a remote location but make sure it’s not too far from the city. A place like Kakiri , Wakiso ,
Mukono in Matugga – these places are perfect if you are in Kampala.
You can get Acre of land there at a fairly cheap price, cost of lands in most cases is determined by the sellers. But we may suggest price during commenting. So drop your comments below and let’s get the discussion going.
2. Build your Structure – House is very important for chicken rearing and effective keeping and management. Poultry housing are classified according to the scale and the management system. The most common types of poultry housing used for poultry farming in Uganda are:
• Deep litter-
• Half litter and half slats –
• Battery –
• Semi-fold –
Buy day old chick – Look for good Hatchery where you can get healthy day old chicks to start with. It costs from 1,500 – 2,000 for broilers to 2,500 to 3,000 for broilers.
One of the poultry farms in Uganda
Other Items you need for poultry farming– Feeders, Drinkers, Perches. Nests, Crates, Lighting system, Waste disposal system, Incubator, Heaters or brooders, Egg tray, Cages and coops.
Be blessed.

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Rwentojo
Mbarara

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