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I am so happy and grateful to being part of the regenerative practitioner series (TRRP 2025), the new eye of potentials and capability to integrate these insights into our projects
We regenerate our thinking and ourselves by consciously trying on different perspectives.
My beautiful country THE GAMBIA is a watershed farmland name after the river Gambia, and is about 1,120 km long, flowing from the Fouta Djallon highlands in Guinea through Senegal and The Gambia into the Atlantic Ocean. Of this, roughly 97 km inland from the coast is tidal and brackish, meaning the remaining ~1,020 km upstream is predominantly freshwater.
Freshwater Stretch: Beyond this zone, the river is ~1,020 km of freshwater, supporting agriculture, fishing, and ecosystems. Tributaries & Creeks (Bolongs): Includes Bintang Bolong, Sofianiama, and Sandougou, which feed freshwater into the main river
The River Gambia holds enormous potential for regenerative agriculture, especially along its freshwater stretches, where projects are already underway to restore degraded land, empower women farmers, and build climate-resilient food systems. Recent initiatives near Chamen Village and across the Central and Upper River Regions show how agroforestry, no-till farming, and water-smart practices can transform rural economies
Agriculture in The Gambia has historically revolved around groundnuts (peanuts), cottons as the main cash crop since colonial times, while rice remains the staple food. Alongside these, traditional herbal medicine has thrived, with markets like Brikama selling dozens of wild plant species used for healing and cultural practices e.g Digestive issues using Neem, tamarind, and baobab, Malaria & fevers using Lemon grass, moringa, and local shrubs, Skin conditions using Shea butter, aloe vera, moringa and castor oil, General tonics using Moringa leaves and seeds, widely promoted for nutrition and immunity
Older generations hold most of the herbal knowledge. There is growing concern about loss of traditional knowledge unless youth are trained in domestication and conservation
Regenerative Potential / new eye
"By nurturing children through regenerative agriculture along the River Gambia, we grow not only food but futures—restoring ecosystems, strengthening communities, and empowering the next generation to thrive in harmony with nature."
Degenerative, The Government/ politicians
The River Gambia is facing serious environmental degeneration, mainly due to rising salinity, climate change, and human activities such as deforestation and agricultural expansion. These pressures threaten freshwater availability, biodiversity, and the livelihoods of communities as nesting wholes that depend on the river. The unaware use of synthetic fertilizers has been one of the hidden drivers of soil and river degradation in The Gambia. Politicians and development programs often introduced chemical inputs as a “modernization” strategy, but the long-term consequences are proving harmful to nature and the evolution of planet earth
Introducing GMO seeds into The Gambia’s farming systems poses major risks to regenerative agriculture: they reduce biodiversity, foster chemical dependency, and undermine traditional seed sovereignty. While GMO crops promise short-term yield gains, they conflict with the long-term soil health, ecological balance, and community empowerment that regenerative systems depend on. GMO seeds may look like a shortcut to higher yields, but they erode the very foundations of regenerative agriculture—soil health, biodiversity, and farmer independence. For The Gambia, protecting traditional seeds and promoting regenerative systems is the safer path to resilience.
The poor nutritional and feeding system as a whole, Synthetic foods and herbs harm both nature and humans by polluting ecosystems, eroding soil fertility, and contributing to chronic diseases. In The Gambia, protecting the River Gambia and promoting traditional herbal farming are essential steps toward regenerative health and agriculture.
That’s where EarthFarm’s philosophy shines. The slogan “YOUR FOOD IS YOUR MEDICINE” is more than just words; it’s a powerful counter to the synthetic, chemical-heavy systems that have harmed both people and the River Gambia. EarthFarm’s slogan “YOUR FOOD IS YOUR MEDICINE” is both a health message and an ecological mission. It reminds us that by growing food regeneratively, we heal ourselves and the land.
Every crop grown regeneratively carries nutrients that strengthen immunity, prevent disease, and restore vitality. Regenerative farming heals soils, rivers, and ecosystems, reversing the damage caused by synthetic fertilizers and GMO seeds. It reconnects Gambians to traditional herbal knowledge, where plants like moringa, neem, and baobab were always seen as both food and medicine.
The name emit itself!
EarthFarm is a regenerative initiative born from the Art Farm Collective, founded in 2014 (official registered 2018 and 2019) to uplift women/children through art and agriculture. We believe that food, culture, and ecology are inseparable — and that regeneration begins with relationships.
Our work blends art, education, agriculture, food, nutrition, natural medicine, ecosystem repair, and cultural repair, creating conditions for both people and the land to thrive.
Our Mission
EarthFarm exists to reconnect Gambian communities with the land and each other. We believe in the power of simple regenerative actions — planting trees, saving seeds, creating herbal gardens — that invest in the health of individuals, families, and ecosystems.
Our mission is to build a node of regeneration in Gunjur, a living classroom where children, women farmers, and neighbors learn together. By restoring soils, reviving herbal medicine, and protecting the River Gambia, we aim to prove that:
“Your food is your medicine.”
Background & Problem Statement
The Gambia faces interconnected challenges:
Communities in Gunjur and Berrending, especially women’s gardens, struggle to maintain fertility and livelihoods. Without regenerative alternatives, the cycle of ecological and social decline continues.
Solution
EarthFarm’s pilot project in Gunjur will demonstrate syntropic agroforestry and regenerative farming as solutions to soil degradation, food insecurity, and cultural loss.
This is not about creating an island of abundance, but about acupuncture points in the earth — small but powerful interventions that ripple outward, regenerating ecosystems and relationships.
Opportunity
The Gunjur site is easily accessible, making it a hub for:
How We Regenerate
We engage in holistic approaches to regeneration, including:
Budget & Goals
Tracking Impact
We will measure impact through:
Qualitative data — stories of how families experience improved nutrition, cultural pride, and ecological resilience — will also be collected.
Our Team
Together, we combine local wisdom, creative education, and regenerative practice to build a model that can be replicated across The Gambia.
Closing Statement
EarthFarm is more than a farm. It is a vision for regeneration — of soil, food, medicine, culture, and community. Starting in Gunjur, we are building a living classroom and demonstration site that proves regeneration begins with relationships.
"EarthFarm is not about creating an island of abundance. It is about acupuncture points in the earth — small but powerful interventions that restore ecological cycles, heal soils, reconnect communities, and remind us that your food is your medicine.
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