Seeds of the Future is piloting in 2026 with selected schools in Kenya. We are currently onboarding founding schools and partners.

Founder

Founder’s Story

Joe Okelo

Founder, Seeds of the Future | Regenerative Farmer | Youth Enterprise Advocate
okelostudio-photo

I started Seeds of the Future from a desire to build something practical — a programme that could create visible, measurable impact within schools and communities.

Growing up, tree planting was always part of our consciousness. Like many Kenyan children, we were encouraged to plant trees — in school compounds, at home, and during national environmental drives. Over the years, I witnessed both the promise and the shortcomings of these initiatives.

Some trees flourished and transformed landscapes. Others never survived beyond the ceremonial planting day.

That contrast stayed with me.

It planted an early question: How do we move from symbolic tree planting to sustainable ecosystem restoration?

My inspiration has also been shaped by the work of environmental leaders such as Wangari Maathai and many others who brought environmental conservation and climate justice to the forefront of public consciousness.

Today, my perspective is further informed by my work as a regenerative farmer.

Working the land has deepened my appreciation for soil health, biodiversity, and the delicate balance between human activity and nature. Farming has made climate change tangible — not theoretical. You see it in rainfall patterns, soil degradation, and crop resilience.

Seeds of the Future was born at the intersection of these experiences:

  • Childhood exposure to tree planting

  • Inspiration from environmental champions

  • Hands-on regenerative farming practice

  • A desire to create structured youth engagement

I realized that schools offered the most powerful starting point — not just because they have land, but because they shape mindsets.

Through Seeds of the Future, we work with schools to establish tree nurseries, climate clubs, and environmental enterprise education.

The goal is not just to plant trees — but to grow climate leaders.

At its heart, Seeds of the Future is also a vehicle for giving back to the environment — an acknowledgment that we have taken much from the land, and that restoration is both a responsibility and an opportunity.

My vision is to see Seeds of the Future scale across schools, counties, and eventually the continent — building a generation that sees environmental restoration not as charity, but as duty and enterprise.

Because the seeds we plant today — in soil and in young minds — will define the Africa we inherit tomorrow.

About Us

Planting Seeds in Soil and Minds

School-Based Climate Action

We transform schools into active participants in climate mitigation and adaptation. By establishing nurseries that grow both indigenous and fruit trees, schools become hubs for environmental education, food production, and community engagement.

Evidence-Based Approach

Our model is grounded in climate science, nutrition research, and educational best practices. We use GPS mapping, AI-driven monitoring, and transparent reporting to ensure every tree is tracked and every outcome measured.

Community-Centered Solutions

We work in partnership with schools, parents, teachers, youth groups, and local leaders. Our success depends on genuine community ownership, participation, and long-term stewardship of environmental resources.