Project Status



Project Type:  Dug Well and Hand Pump

Program: Wells for Masindi / Jinga Uganda

Impact: 500 Served

Project Phase: 
Community Managed
Implementing Partner Monitoring Data Unavailable
Initial Installation: Apr 2012

Project Features


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Community Profile

Our implementing partner reports from the field...

Kikoko village is located in Makulubita Sub County, in Luwero District. The District Lies amid Latitude 2 degrees North of the Equator, and between longitude 32 and 33 east. Luwero was the site of a brutal insurgency by the rebel National Resistance Army and a brutal counter-insurgency by the government of Milton Obote, known as “the guerilla war” that left many thousands of people dead during the early to mid-1980s. The area affected by the war has come to be known as the Luwero triangle and still struggles from the effects to this day. To locate Kikoko village we had to Liaise with the sub county LC III Chairperson and health Inspector who identified Kikoko as one of the poorly served villages in terms of safe water coverage and sanitation standards.

You have to go through 2 steep valleys before you reach Kikoko village, the village has 90 households with a population of 550 people. There was only one protected source located over 3km away from where Kikoko well is being constructed. Currently. this protected source is not functioning because it dried up and it’s now 6 years since it stopped working and the whole community has been drawing water from the un protected water ponds scattered in their village for that time. Agriculture is the main economic activity for this community which involves crop and animal husbandry. The agriculture is more of subsistence in nature with more emphasis put on growing Matooke, Maize, cassava and beans and keeping of local chickens and cattle as household source of food and income for their children’s fees and other basic demands.

[GPS coordinates for this project are approximate.]

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Project Type

Hand-dug wells have been an important source of water throughout human history! Now, we have so many different types of water sources, but hand-dug wells still have their place. Hand dug wells are not as deep as borehole wells, and work best in areas where there is a ready supply of water just under the surface of the ground, such as next to a mature sand dam. Our artisans dig down through the layers of the ground and then line the hole with bricks, stone, or concrete, which prevent contamination and collapse. Then, back up at surface level, we install a well platform and a hand pump so people can draw up the water easily.