My fellow nurse congratulations. I am nurse midwife in Zambia I do poultry for broiler chickens and do plant farming as well like maize corn, citrus fruits, apples, avocados and a banana plantation as I preparing for in retirement.
Congratulations, my fellow nurse. Just started farming back home and am planning to quit my job and go home to organise things. Am a Kenyan working in the UK, and I feel am just working for taxes and bills, which has been stressful. You have really inspired me, and I will consider adding chicken on my list. God bless your work 🙏
Congratulations indeed to our fellow Nurse Gladys, Just wanted to let you know Agnes, please don't be afraid to relocate and start out in farming. Am a Nurse too, used to work in London for the last 13 years, I relocated back to Uganda last year and am farming too. Am growing coffee and green bananas. It's going well. I don't regret leaving my agency job, although I do have to travel back and do atleast 150 hours a year, to kp my pin number registered. It only tales a month to cover those hours so I do that in the summer, you can do that too as you start off with farming. Best of luck to you.
Well said . I am here too and the feeling is the same. Been thinking about farming too and just stuck in the UK because of kids school. Best wishes for the future.
Wow Gladys has such a good heart. And very generous to share all the info. I hope she goes from strength to strength in the business... Watching from South Africa
We need to perfect our Kiswahili for communication,it's our language while English is the master's language. In China and Japan, there are many doctors and other professionals who do not know English. Kiswahili kitukuzwe.
what does english have to do with anything, if she spoke kiswahili 150million people in east Africa would completely understand her..now congolese and burundians have left the chat, since theyre french speaking
@@mpendakiswahili3053 wachana na wivu 😏😆 Am Ugandan 🇺🇬 but I speak very good French and Swahili in addition to English!! The more languages you can speak, the better. But I agree with you: Swahili is the OFFICIAL language of communication for EAC and the African Union ❤️✌🏽
Congratulations to you Gladys! I am 61 years old and I am looking for retirement occupations to start to earn residual income and you have given me inspiration with your poultry project. Well done to you!
Good. I am 29 and have done improved chicken breeds. Maybe just a disclaimer; One thing about this venture is...PASSION!!!. If that is not the drive, one small delay or loss will leave you in depression. Generally, chicken farming the best for me.
Very encouraging dear. Nurses are resilient, I'm encouraged . Having retired from nursing,I've been thinking and infact started to look for good breed of local chickens .My desire is to give them free chemical feeds and sell them for eating. Watching you work is encouraging Already I have 4 large pens ,our economy is biting hard . I'm wishing myself success. Kudos to Gladys
Thank you Aim agriculture for enlighting farmers ...i wonder how such a vibrant lady like Gladys is doing marvelously.. congratulations Gladys keep up the spirit
I do congratulate you sir Gladys. You're not only helping youths and women...BUT.,even old Muzees out there.(old men) I have benefited a lot. God bless.(Zambia)❤
Congratulations and proud of you.....wow ..you did the bravest work sister ....happy to follow your footsteps when am back in kenya Happy to meet you 🎉🎉🎉
Im a government worker. But let me tell you ...kazi ya serikali mostly this lower civil servants like ..all forces , nurses, clinical officers na walimu ..ukikosa kuchanuka , you can end up being a slave ......you find your salary 80 percent is for paying bills ....its better mtu afanye miaka kidogo atafute capital akafanye kitu ingine ..unaweza retire matako tupu
Job well done, Gladys. The guy who is interviewing and advising you on this video is very knowledgeable, BUT the only issue is he MUST prevent walking in the poultry pen without walking past a disinfectant BIOSECURITY SHOE BATH or at least SHOE COVERS to avoid transferring diseases to the chickens.