Posts Tagged ‘farming in Iraq’

Chicken Farm in Zambraniyah

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Here are some photos from a recent patrol in Zambraniyah, Iraq.

Members of U.S. Department of Agriculture visit future chicken farms along with U.S. Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, in order to check the conditions and to give the owners some tips on growing the chickens in Zambraniyah, Iraq, on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Members of U.S. Department of Agriculture visit future chicken farms along with U.S. Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, in order to check the conditions and to give the owners some tips on growing the chickens in Zambraniyah, Iraq, on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

U.S. Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, and members of U.S. Department of Agriculture visit a chicken farm in Zambraniyah, Iraq, to make sure everything is running smoothly on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

U.S. Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, and members of U.S. Department of Agriculture visit a chicken farm in Zambraniyah, Iraq, to make sure everything is running smoothly on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Iraqi girls from Zambraniyah, Iraq, smile and watch as U.S. Army Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, pass by during a visit to the neighborhood on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Iraqi girls from Zambraniyah, Iraq, smile and watch as U.S. Army Soldiers from Bravo Company, 1st Battalion, 35th Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored Division, pass by during a visit to the neighborhood on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Iraqi army 1st Lt. Gazwan Majead pets a baby cow during a visit to a neighborhood in Zambraniyah, Iraq, on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Iraqi army 1st Lt. Gazwan Majead pets a baby cow during a visit to a neighborhood in Zambraniyah, Iraq, on March 2, 2009. Photo by Sgt. Kani Ronningen

Everybody’s got to eat their vegetables

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

It didn’t cost a lot of money. It’s not very long. But this new canal will make a difference in the lives of hundreds of Iraqis in Anbar Province.

Private contractor Sufjan Zubar Johan and Marine 1st Lt. Daniel Thomas inspect a newly renovated canal in Sagrah, Iraq

Private contractor Sufjan Zubar Johan and Marine 1st Lt. Daniel Thomas inspect a newly renovated canal in Sagrah, Iraq

Sagrah is a small, impoverished oasis in Iraq’s western Anbar province. The landscape is flat, cold and dry, and the small town has one hospital, but no emergency room.

Friendly waves greet the Coalition and Iraqi Security Forces as they patrol the neighborhoods where old men sit on plastic lawn chairs outside small stores smoking Jordanian cigarettes and returning complimentary gestures of “Salaam” (meaning peace, hello, and goodbye) to the patrollers.

The people here have lead simple lives and learned to live without luxury, but now they can crack a smile again because the Government of Iraq, along with Civil Affairs Team 5, Civil Affairs Group, Regimental Combat Team 8, has helped them build a water canal to irrigate land for farming.

“This irrigation system will be able to water 815 hectares of land,” said 1st Lt. Daniel Thomas, the team leader for CAT-5.

Many assessments were made by the civil affairs team and local governing authorities throughout the past year for this canal project alone.

Over $48,000 was put into the 1,000 meter canal where ten-inch pipes connect to the canal through a hand-cranked valve system that allows water to flow into selected patches of soil.

“This should replenish their food and their local economy,” said Thomas, a Santa Barbara, Calif., native.

Thomas, an artillery officer by trade, has learned a new skill set similar to that of a foreman in that he and his civil affairs team assess projects throughout their area of operations. His team is a mix of Marine communicators, food service specialists, artillerymen, and an infantry Marine.

The canal will help bring water to the barren fields of this small town, and in the spring, the locals will plant seed and care for their fruits and vegetables so that when the seasons change, the markets will have colorful displays of melons, tomatoes, cucumbers and grain.

“Everybody’s got to eat their vegetables,” said Cpl. Darnell Liesinger, a turret gunner with CAT-5 and Sioux Falls, S.D., native.

MNF-I
By Cpl. Eric C. Schwartz, Regimental Combat Team 8