A Holistic Approach
Our programs have profound and long-lasting impacts on:
food sovereignty
biodiversity
… and more.
Our programs have profound and long-lasting impacts on:
food sovereignty
biodiversity
… and more.
And we’re only getting started.
We teach partner farmers how to restore the environment using practices such as:
environmental education
agro-ecological plots
reforested areas
Our efforts to improve food security and food sovereignty focus on providing access to nutritious and culturally relevant food through methods such as:
organic vegetable gardens
grain silos
irrigation systems
improved chicken coops
We provides climate resilient technologies to improve families’ health and sanitation while also protecting the environment. Technologies include:
wood-conserving stoves
water filtration systems
composting latrines
In addition to personalized technical assistance for partnering farmers, we offer group workshops open to the public. Workshops provide training on nutrition, small business development, organic fertilizers, environmental stewardship, and more, amplifying our impact many times over.
Rosa creates and sells achiote, a paste made from the fruits of the tree behind her, at her local fair in Honduras. Rosa, like many other women farmers, support their families primarily through agriculture. Rosa feeds her family nutritious, organic food, then creates the achiote products with her excess harvest. “It’s a way to make things that we immediately use in our household,” says Rosa. Nothing is wasted, and everyone eats.
Growing up, Demetrio saw his family burn the forest every year to grow crops, but they never grew enough to feed themselves well or sell for income. Demetrio later worked on a conventional rice plantation far from home, with meager pay, and the heavy use of chemicals made him sick. Now, he works on his own farm, has a diversified income, and a health survey affirmed that his family’s health is better than that of other families in the area.