Money crop.
Why Soya Beans Farming is the best venture ?
Because this is where the money is hiding in plain sight.
For the past few years, soya has become gold in both the food and animal feed industries.
In the food industry.
-Used to make soya milk, tofu, cooking oil, and protein flour.
-It is the base ingredient in most vegetarian and vegan diets.
-In SDA households, you will always find soya tea, soya sausages, and soya milk. Some say they can’t go a day without it.
In the animal feed industry.
-Soya is used to make poultry and dairy feed because of its high protein content.
-It helps chickens grow faster, improves egg production, and increases milk yield in cows.
-It is the magic ingredient commercial feed processors have been hiding from farmers.
Here’s the business twist.
Many Kenyan farmers are now importing soya from Zambia because local production can’t meet demand. Meanwhile, Uganda is flooding Kenya with cheap eggs and milk. Why? Their animal feed is cheaper because they grow plenty of soya.
That means one thing.
If you grow soya in Kenya, you’re not farming crops, you’re farming money.
It needs less capital, has ready buyers, and fits perfectly into rotation plans.
So next time someone asks why soya, tell them this;
While others are drinking soya tea, we’ll be supplying the beans.
#LetsGrowTogether
From Kenya to South Africa,
Nigeria to Namibia,
Senegal to Morocco,
Saudi Arabia to Turkey,
Egypt to Tunisia,
Sudan to Comoros and Burkina Faso,
One Ummah. One month of mercy. Ramadhan
Ramadan Mubarak to Muslims everywhere.
Ya Allah, grant us strength to fast, sincerity in worship, and acceptance of our deeds this Ramadan.
Ameen 🤲
Some are waiting for Ramadhan with joy.
Some with pain.
Some with worries no one knows about.
May this season bring healing, strength, and peace to all who need it. May Allah make this month a turning point for all of us. 🤲🌙
A farmer asked me if Boer and Red Kalahari goats are sold at $1,500 to $2,000,how much meat can they produce and how much one kg of meat costs.
My good farmers, in simple terms for you to understand, this is seed. You buy this plant, you multiply, then you eat and selll the harvest . What comes from them. If your cross breed with Galla goats, the kid that takes 15 months to 2 years to mature they will take 8 months to 12 months to mature.
These goats are purely breeding goats.
If you steal one, your case will be mentioned in ICC.
Hard personal finance truths:
1. Most people have an income problem, not an investing problem.
2. You cannot personal finance your way out of poverty.
3. Cutting on your expenses won't make you wealthy. Increasing your income will. There's a limit to how low you can cut, no limit to how much you can earn.
4. It's very hard to save money when you have a low income. More often it's not a lack of discipline but a case of trying too hard with too little.
How to invest KES 1M in Kenya?
1M in an Infrastructure bond yielding 13% will give you 130K per annum.
1M in a dividend king like BAT at the NSE will give you 104K per annum after taxes. (Current div yield of 11%)
1M in a MMF with an annual yield of 10% will give you a return of 87K after taxes.
1M in a special fund with a return of 17% will net you a return of 170K after taxes
1M in SACCO savings with a rebate of 10% will give you 95K after taxes.
1M in the average rental property in Kenya (8% return from rental income, with 90% plus occupancy) will give you 75K after taxes.
1M in your bank savings account will earn you a very big ZERO after a whole year
Where are you investing your money?
On February 10, 1985, President Daniel Arap Moi visited the University of Nairobi (UoN) to attend a ceremony for National Youth Service (NYS) graduates. At the time, Student Organisation of Nairobi University (SONU) Chairman was one Mwandawiro Mghanga.
After completing the training, the President, who was also the Chancellor of all universities, would attend the ceremony to watch the students graduate and inspect a guard of honour made up of them.
Officers from the General Service Unit (GSU), Kenya Army, Navy, and Air Force were also present in a separate parade, waiting for President Moi to inspect their parade.
Meanwhile, the Student Organisation of Nairobi University (SONU) Chairman, Mwandawiro Mghanga, was gathering university students on the football pitch. This gathering was a protest against the Moi government, showing that the NYS training had not swayed the students’ determination.
To symbolise their resistance, students organised a guard of honour with the first NYS graduates, who wore their uniforms.
As SONU chairman, Mghanga was set to inspect this guard, a move that challenged the government’s authority by imitating official state ceremonies. Just five days earlier, on February 5, 1985, Mghanga and three other students had been expelled from the university, while five others lost their scholarships with no explanation.
The students supported their leaders by boycotting classes for a week and demanding Mghanga’s reinstatement. The guard of honour was a key part of this protest, showing that students would not be intimidated.
Mwandawiro Mghanga stepped forward to inspect the guard of honour before President Moi’s arrival, but the inspection was short-lived as GSU and Special Branch police arrested him for “sedition against the lawfully elected government.”
During the arrest, a stampede broke out, resulting in the death of one student, Joseph Wandera, and injuries to over 50 others.
After his arrest, Mghanga went to Buru Buru police station, where he faced physical abuse, starvation, and psychological mistreatment. He and five other students were charged with holding an illegal meeting.
Bernard Chunga prosecuted them, with guidance from Attorney General Matthew Guy Muli, and Mghanga was sentenced to one year in Kamiti Maximum Prison.
After serving his sentence, Mwandawiro was arrested again on April 3, 1986, in Werugha for allegedly being involved with the Mwakenya Movement.
During this time, he was taken to Nyayo House, where he was tortured, including beatings, being forced to do naked press-ups, and being held in waterlogged cells. Mghanga was charged with sedition again and sentenced to five years in prison. He initially stayed in Kamiti Maximum Security Prison before being moved to Kibos Maximum Security Prison after nine months.
After his release, Mwandawiro fled to Sweden as a political refugee. He then enrolled as a postgraduate student at Stockholm University for his master’s degree, followed by a master’s in agricultural sciences at the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences.
After the end of the KANU regime, he returned to Kenya, ran for the Wundanyi parliamentary seat and served as a Member of Parliament from 2002 to 2007.
In January 2016, the High Court awarded him Ksh. 10 million as compensation for his unlawful detention in the torture chambers at Nyayo House.
Meet Dominic Kipchirchir son of Tinderet constituency, Nandi county, the land where even boda bodas need swimming lessons. Kipchirchir is a proud member of Kumi Bila Break Choir, where he sings like an angel who swallowed a trumpet. He’s the soloist who hits high notes that make cows stop chewing just to listen.
Last time the President visited Tinderet to launch a borehole that still coughs instead of producing water, he promised to tarmac 200 km of road. Our boy Kipchirchir was right there at the rally, chest out, veins visible, shouting “Tutam! Tutam! Ngumu ni Mbwexee!” like he was the Minister for Transport himself.
Fast-forward six months later, the road has upgraded itself from bad to biblically terrible. The kind of road where even Google Maps says “Proceed at your own risk.” Now our beloved soloist is stuck in mud with his kifikifi halfway swallowed like it’s being baptized by the spirit of neglect.
From afar, he looks like a depressed alligator rehearsing for a National Geographic documentary. He was transporting charcoal to the market, hoping to make ends meet, but by the look of things, that was truly the end of his meat.
Meanwhile back at home, Mrs Kipchirchir is pacing up and down, thinking her husband is in some lodging at Tinderet Urban hotel, supplying electricity to a yellow yellow damsel from Chemelil. She has already sent him 14 missed calls and one voice note that starts with, “Kipchirchir, if you don’t love me just say,, Kaigaasí”
When he finally drags his muddy self home, he’ll wipe his hands, join his fellow tribal leaders in accusing Kikuyus of hoarding developments, tarmac, and transformers,, the holy trinity of civilization. They nowadays call it Kikuyu Privileges.
While MPs from Mt. Kenya are busy using their CDF to build schools, dispensaries, and bridges, our Tinderet leaders are somewhere in Timber XO eating development funds eat kisumoo with yellow yellow damsels, irrigating their throats with imported whiskey while measuring babes diameter and calling it capacity building.
As for Kipchirchir, he’s currently waiting for kijana ya nyumbani & his musikiti PA to tour the area again so that he can be directed on how to deal with “wale wakapila” gearing up to the next general elections. For now, he's forced to Always carry a rope, not for pulling the bike, but for tying his hope. Awuoro!!
@TouchlineX These are the kind of things Africans will attribute to evil spirit.
Especially, if he moved house and got better, they will confirm the house was haunted.
A RURAL FARMER is the only free person left on earth.
The rest are enslaved, they pay for:
• food
• water
• light
• time
• sleep
• health
• silence
It is why the system wants you caged in gated urban compartments.
Don't accept,
Reject.
Go back to rural farms.
I was watching Thhe Mara Nomads and now I think I understand the ladybirds for hating on the 9-5 brothers. Buana There are things you will never experience with your 60 sausand salary. These guys do like 900kms in the desert with cars whose consumption is averagely 4km/l. Wameeka full tank,na wakaeka petrol ingine kwa vibuyu. Tyre mpya za BF goodRich costing about 60 sausand. For one roadtrip,unahitaji kitu kama 150 sausand. Na 50 ingine ya engine service mkirudi. Its an activity for big boys. Sisi walalahoi itabidi tuendelee kuranda randa karura kama pastrolists kabla Yesu atuonyeshe mkono wake
A story is told of a Nairobi billionaire who was bidding farewell to his long-serving secretary as she retired after 30 years of loyal service. Out of gratitude, he decided to surprise her with a cheque of Ksh 500k, to ensure she’d have something to do after retirement.
To his shock, the secretary smiled and said,
“Sir, I really appreciate the gesture… but I already have enough.”
The billionaire blinked in disbelief.
“Enough? You’ve been earning around Ksh 70,000 a month all these years. How could you possibly have millions?”
Still smiling, she replied,
“All those years I’ve sat quietly in your meetings. When you bought land in Juja, I also bought a small plot nearby. When you invested in Safaricom and Equity stocks, I did the same — just with a few shares instead of thousands. When you started building apartments, I saved slowly and built rental rooms in Githurai. I simply copied your moves… only on a smaller scale.”
The billionaire was speechless.
While he had built empires, she had quietly built her financial independence — simply by observing, learning, and acting wisely.
The Lesson you learn here is that
✅ Who you surround yourself with determines the direction of your life.
✅ There are people who drain your energy, and those who sharpen your vision.
✅ If you spend time around dreamers, investors, and go-getters, their mindset will rub off on you.
✅ But if you spend your days with people who only complain about politics and gossip about others, you’ll inherit their habits — and their limitations.
Bees always lead you to flowers.
Flies always lead you to the Toilet.
Choose your circle wisely.
Walk with people who challenge you to grow, not those who make comfort look normal.
And most importantly — when you become successful, be that person who inspires others to rise with you.