Watershed and Baseline Survey
Watershed and Baseline Survey
Watershed and Baseline Survey
Watershed
Development
Watershed development is budgeting for the
water received from precipitation
Through soil & water conservation
Harvesting of excess run of
Proper utilisation of the moisture conserved
for improving productivity of crops
Cropping pattern shifts
Integrated development of area for improving
the livelihood of the watershed communities
Watershed development
Addresses
Food security
Environment protection
Poverty mitigation
Rural migration
Energy requirements
Women empowerment
P1: Check-list
Clear objectives (what is the
problem?)
Clear idea of how you will achieve
the objectives
Clear and measurable indicators
Clear
Relevant (to objectives)
Monitorable
Example of a causal
chain
Example: APDPIP
Impact
Outcomes
Outputs
Activities
Inputs
Phase 2: Implementation
P3: Check-list
Data Entry
Make the data entry system as fool proof as
possible - has unique identifiers to link both
household, village and GIS data
Ensure database allows for merging of data
Do not change/erase data on questionnaires
Raw data should always be input as is,
changes can then be made in the database
software (programatically) with
documentation
Socio Economic
Survey (Door to
Door Survey)
Bio-Physical Survey
Field to Field Survey)
Household
Information
Population &
Gender Information
Migration
Information
To identify village
Agriculture
Situation
To identify present
Livelihood situation
Bio-physical Survey
Geo-referenced data collection of particular natural resources.
Geo-referenced soil sample collection from representative area.
Survey number wise collection of land details about land acreage,
ownership, crop cultivated(season), irrigation source and season
details.
Natural Resources
Bio-physical survey
Household Census
Baseline survey
Information collected
1. Socio-economic status of the farmers and landless people
(household and demographic characteristics, land
ownership, land use, livestock and other assets), crop
production, cropping patterns,
yields, markets and
livelihood opportunities;
2. Soil characteristics, climate, cropping systems, their
productivity and
inputs (GIS maps were prepared for soil types, soil depth
and crops grown in the village);
3. Soil, water, nutrient and pest management practices
followed by the villagers;
4. Production constraints, yield gaps and opportunities for
crop intensification.
CAPACITY BUILDING
Phase 1: Design
Phase 2: Implementation
Organize an impact evaluation workshop if
necessary
Pay reasonable wages to surveyors (if possible)
Show the client and firm that you care
Thanks