Home DIASPORA NEWS Meet Tony Kiragu, a Kenyan Who Has Built a Sh20 Million Agri-Business...

Meet Tony Kiragu, a Kenyan Who Has Built a Sh20 Million Agri-Business after Ditching Lucrative Job in the US

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Meet Tony Kiragu, a Kenyan Who Has Built a Sh20 Million Agri-Business after Ditching Lucrative Job in the US

When Tony Kiragu moved to the United States 10 years ago, he was convinced that life in the ‘land of opportunities’ was going to be smooth and beautiful like he was made to believe.

Kiragu, who relocated to the US on a Green Card in 2008, settled in well and was able to secure a well paying job, actually two jobs!. The Veterinary Medicine degree holder says he maneuvered his way and managed to acquire a practicing license as a vet without additional training.

Kiragu however explains that deep inside him, he always felt he was not in the right place and three months later he was already thinking of returning home.
 
“I mean by year seven I had settled in very well. I had two vet related jobs and I was earning good money. But for some reason, I was not fulfilled. My heart has always been in Kenya,” he says.

“Actually, three months after settling in the US, I knew deep in my heart, I would not last long here. Though the money was good, the life was fast, cold and unfulfilling,” he adds.

At first, he found it hard to get a vet related job since most specialized degrees from Kenya are not recognized in the US, but he never lost hope.

“I tried to get a job as a Vet but for a while nothing was coming through because my degree was not really recognised. But I got a breakthrough when I landed a job as a technician in an animal clinic,” he recalls.

“The owner of the clinic noticed that I was very good with animals and I had hands on training and skills that were very useful in the clinic. Slowly, I rose through the ranks to the point of practising as a vet but under the proprietor’s licence,” the father of two narrates.

After a seven-year stay, the 36-year-old decided it was time to end his ‘American dream’ and return to his motherland. When he shared the news to his friends and peers, many said he was ‘crazy’; why would he go back to Kenya when he had established good networks and doors were beginning to open one after the other?

This didn’t stop him as he had already made his mind that he was returning to his country to start poultry farming business.

Today, Kiragu runs Kuku Nature Farm located in the outskirts of Naivasha town, Nakuru County where he rears Kari Kienyeji chicken. He is one of the largest chicken supplies to local farmers and institutions in the entire Nakuru County and looks to tap into a wider market in the near future.

The University of Nairobi graduate estimates the value of his business at around Sh20 million. He also trains local farmers on best practice at a subsidized fee.

“I noticed that hybrid farmers are keen on management issues, but kuku kienyeji farmers are lax because of this mentality that these birds are hardcore and can survive without proper care. But I am trying to change that mindset and showing farmers how to take good care of this resilient breed for maximum yield,” he says.

Does he regret quitting a well paying job in the US? “Should I have stayed in the US a little longer?” “Naaah… no regrets for me…,” he says with firm assurance.
 

10 COMMENTS

  1. Good move mr Kiragu!I made…
    Good move mr Kiragu!I made the same move too n I don’t regret at all.Life is short n it’s good for us to understand what we really need to leave better life with fulfilment in ourselves.Know who ur n what u want n it says 70% of us we still don’t know ourselves we copy others lives!Mr Kiragu nitakutafuta.Diasporas u can hear for yourselves especially those majority who r always negative about returning back home.

  2. this is what we need to hear…
    this is what we need to hear often.Kudos to you sir. $o original, $o inspiring.

  3. I also relocated back to…
    I also relocated back to Kenya in 2004 on expiry of my H1B visa (6years) and i have never ever regretted. My heart is happy here at home and doing what I love. Good for you Tony Kiragu. keep it up.

  4. Congratulations. Much…
    Congratulations. Much respect for anyone who would make that move. Kenya is the place to prosper with hard work and get piece of mind which is priceless.

  5. Well put Mr Kiragu. Most of…
    Well put Mr Kiragu. Most of us have been dreaming of immigrating to “the land of opportunities” but after reading this…I am changing my mind. Need your contacts

    • Plan well. I am in Kenya…
      Plan well. I am in Kenya lots these days and a big advocate of a planned relocation. I have recently watched a few returnees come back after things didn’t pan out in Kenya. They went back as employees without independent sources of income. Plan plan plan, that is my two cents.

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