Forest Products, Livelihoods and Conservation

(Darren Dugan) #1
178 Carved wooden drums and trade in Mpigi district, Uganda

Figure 3. The Republic of Uganda’s coat of arms includes a drum

the government still fails to offer any direct investment or incentives for
development of raw material production. The wood harvesters are aware
that their activities are carried out illegally.
Forest Department records of 1998 to 2000 showed that a running volume
of softwood species (under which the drum making tree species fall) is valued
at US$20/m^3 (on average a whole tree stem). This volume yields on average 10
drums of 30 cm to 45 cm top diameter, which earns US$200 to US$300, and
another 10 drums of 10 cm to 15 cm top diameter, which bring an additional
income of US$100 to US$150. This calculation excludes smaller drums of less
than 10 cm top diameter obtained from tree branches. Despite these financial
benefits there is no clear policy to regulate drum making, something that
should have been spelt out clearly in the Forest Policy.
The collaborative forest management unit of the Forest Department and the
Mpanga Forest Ecotourism Project offered the opportunity for involving the local
community in forest management while generating revenue from the forest.
Owing to financial constraints and inadequate staff, the Forest Department has
failed to implement collaborative forest management successfully in Mpanga
and the unit was disbanded. Continued tree harvesting in Mpanga forest reserve
for drum making therefore is a disincentive to tree planting to provide wood for
making drum frames. Plantation of the favoured tree species on the other hand
would act as a source of income from sustainable sources. In the long run this
would alleviate the abject poverty of the communities in Mpigi district by
guaranteeing an income from the already well-established markets. Successful
collaboration among drum makers, local community and Forest Department
would be a sound basis for achieving the goals of forest conservation and
sustainable use of forest resources in Mpigi district.

10woodcarving.p65 178 22/12/2004, 11:05

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