Solar Cooking
Spirit in Action Kenya 2007
Food tasting in Kenya

Children in line to taste food.

CAMILY food tasting photo

Everybody enjoys food cooked by the sunshine

Camily Wedende is the director of Sun Cookers International in Eldoret, Kenya. Sun Cookers International received a grant from Spirit in Action in support of their solar cooker shop. Sun Cookers International builds and sells durable plywood solar box cookers, and stocks various solar cooking supplies such as pots and instruction manuals in his shop. He also conducts solar cooking demonstrations and gives out samples.

Camily and his wife Gaudenziah were trained in solar cooking by Peace Corps volunteer Barbara Rose, who herself was trained by Solar Cookers International.

Solar cooking shop

Sun Cookers International runs a shop in Eldoret that sells the following supplies:

  • Aluminum foil
  • Recycled corrugeted cardboard
  • PVA glue
  • paperboard
  • dark pots with lids
  • oven bags

News and recent developments

  • February 2011: Student success shows independent spread of solar cooking. The Eldoret Student Projects in Kenya, spearheaded by Camily Wedende and aided by long-distance advisor, Sharon Cousins, who serves on the Solar Cookers International board as well as working as an independent promoter, took an important step in that spread with a student team who not only learned how to cook with sunshine but also learned to take a creative and scientific approach to solar cooking. Students researched existing solar cookers—an assignment made possible by the Solar Cookers World Network site on Wikia—then put their heads together, combined ideas, and came up with new ideas to try. They performed comparative tests on an existing model and two of their prototypes. While all three reached cooking temperatures, one innovation showed the strongest performance at their location. The team has named their new design the Panel Stove Cooker. All twenty students built durable Panel Stove Cookers to take home to the camps where they live, where they have been using them to prepare food and pasteurize water for their families and keeping records of their progress and experiments, amazing the neighbors who stop by to see food cooking in a stove powered by sunshine, a stove that children in their community helped to invent. The entire neighborhood has become more interested in solar cooking due to this project's success. At an upcoming ceremony, students will receive certificates of achievement and other rewards and honors, to celebrate their successful science project. Some of the local media have said they will attend. Camily and the team hope that other schools and clubs can use the example of their pilot project to help more youth become scientists for solar cooking, to aid in the spread of this bright idea whose time has come.
Eldoret, Kenya students 2010

Eldoret, Kenya students with their recently constructed solar panel cookers.

  • November 2010 Sharon Cousins of Solar Cookers International, recently gave an update on the Eldoret Student Projects in Kenya. She has been involved as an long-distance advisor to the program. Under the local direction of Camily Wedende, twenty grade school students each constructed a model of a new solar panel cooker design, to take home to the camps where they live, where each cooker will benefit an entire family. They also received the necessary pots and cooking bags as well. Each student has been provided with a notebook and pen to keep records of their progress and further experiments, and Camily will keep in touch to check on their progress. Now a lot more students want to be involved with the project to study solar cooking science, and more adults are taking a fresh look at solar cooking's potential.
Camily Wedende 2009

Camily Wedende demonstrates solar cooking.

  • May 2009: Solar cooking is expanding in Eldoret, Kenya! Sun Cookers International received a grant from Spirit in Action in June 2008 to train community members and refugees how to use and build solar cookers. Camily reports “We are in the world of solar!” He has trained over 50 families in refugee camps and over 100 people total. People receive training on how to build light weight wooden cookers using plywood, glass, aluminum foil, wood shavings and black paint. Typical food cooked in the solar cooker are rice, bananas, eggs, tea, bean and meat. Cookers are also used for pasteurizing water. Camily is very positive about the changes he sees when people learn about solar cooking and is committed to spreading the word in his community. From Camily, "SOLAR COOKERS WORK – SEEING IS BELIEVING."

Contact

Camily Wedende
P.O. 2986
Eldoret
Kenya

camilyw@yahoo.com