Welcome to NeVhu

We are building living systems rooted in soil, people, and possibility.

NeVhu exists to nurture regenerative food systems through agroecology, biodiversity restoration, food preservation, value addition, training, entrepreneurship development, and storytelling. At its heart, it is about restoring connection — between people and land, knowledge and practice, and communities and opportunity.

Everything begins with the ground beneath us

NeVhu is derived from the Shona word vhu, meaning soil. It reflects a simple but powerful truth — that everything begins with the ground beneath us.

From this understanding, NeVhu has grown into an ecosystem of practice that brings together agroecological production, biodiversity restoration, food systems innovation, entrepreneurship, and storytelling. It is a space where knowledge is lived, shared, and grown collectively within communities.

At its core, NeVhu is about regeneration — of land, of livelihoods, and of opportunity.

NeVhu field work in practice

A living ecosystem in motion

NeVhu is best understood through what it looks like in practice — seedlings being nurtured, indigenous trees returning, food being preserved and transformed, women and young people learning new skills, and stories being told from the ground.

Nurturing Growth

Seedlings being nurtured and indigenous trees returning to the land.

Value Transformation

Food being preserved, solar dried, and transformed with care.

Collective Learning

Women, young people, classrooms, farms, and communities working together.

Grounded Voices

Stories being told directly from the ground where change lives.

Core engagement pathways

Learning

Access knowledge, training materials, and agroecology guides through our resources hub.

Access Resources

Partnership

Collaborate on shared goals in food systems, biodiversity, and community resilience.

Partner With Us

Giving

Invest in school feeding, women's empowerment, and climate resilience from the ground up.

Give to NeVhu

NeVhu in practice

More moments from the field