About Erin Snow

Erin Snow joined Heifer International in 2007 after earning a degree in Mass Communication from UALR. She lives in Sherwood with her husband and daughter. Passionate about cultivating positive and healthy relationships with her family, friends and the planet, Erin enjoys yoga, meditation, music, creative writing and travel.

From the Field: Heifer’s Work Around the World

This weekly post shines a light on a handful of stories from Heifer.org’s “From the Field” section.

There is much to be learned from a friendly exchange. With no preference for age, gender or national origin, it’s available to everyone everywhere. The latest field stories are all about information sharing. These exciting collaborations aren’t just casual conversations. They’re creating roadmaps for the future. 

Area Vice President Oscar Castañeda shares the six steps of implementation for Heifer USA’s Seeds of Change project in a short video.

Talking Business in Cambodia

Members of an agricultural cooperative in Cambodia know that when useful information is shared widely, the benefits begin to multiply. Agricultural Cooperative Helps Start-up Businesses in Cambodian Village tells how the entrepreneurial spirit is thriving in Battambang City.

Youth in Armenia are learning the value of networking, too. Read Exchange Visit Brings Together Youth from Surrounding Communities to learn how these young leaders aren’t waiting to grow up to make a difference in the world. 

Ending hunger and poverty is a universal mission that is important to us all. That’s why Heifer Georgia and the Japanese Embassy signed a grassroots grant agreement that will extend its current partnership and help ensure economical sustainability for many residents of Georgia’s Kvareli region.

Better Living Through Improved Cookstoves

Improved cookstoves improve life in a variety of ways. More spacious stoves can accommodate multiple pots at one time, significantly reducing the time it takes to make dinner. With improved ventilation methods, families don’t have to inhale dangerous smoke. A decreased reliance on firewood means healthier soil. The list goes on and on.

These photos were taken in Lower Gweru, Mdubiwa Ward, Matshina Village, Zimbabwe, where the community was recently outfitted with improved cookstoves.

Before: outdoor open-fire cookstove

Open-fire stoves are typically surrounded by smoke and the smell of burning wood. They require large amounts of firewood to cook for the entire family. Each dish must wait its turn because these stoves only hold two pots at a time. Soot builds up on the bottom of the pots and it takes a lot of time to start a fresh fire for more cooking.

After: improved indoor cookstove

In the photo above, a woman proudly displays her new improved cookstove. She is able to cook three pots at once and use residual heat on the corner of the stove to warm an additional pot of water to use later for bathing. The new stove is conveniently located indoors, where it is safe from the weather, and features a vent that funnels the exhaust outside.

 

From the Field: Heifer’s Work Around the World

This weekly post shines a light on a handful of stories from Heifer.org’s “From the Field” section.

Planting seeds, literally and figuratively, changes lives. The countless stories of gifts that spark an entrepreneurial spirit and partnerships that yield and multiply benefits beyond expectations illustrate the life-changing miracles inside the seeds that Heifer plants every day. 

Heifer Armenia’s 29th rural youth club just started in Debed village. Read The New Armenian Youth Club in Debed to find out what these young leaders have in mind for the future of their community.

Growing Seeds of Change in the USA

Watch Heifer’s Seeds of Change: Food Security in the Arkansas Delta, Appalachia and learn about Heifer’s signature project in the USA. 

For the Iskandaryan family in Armenia’s Lukashin village, change started with one pregnant heifer. In the short year since her arrival, the family of eight eats better and farms better. The Iskandaryan Family Sees Success from Growing Farm shows us what sprouting success looks like.  

Collaboration has historically yielded great results and the Armenia-Poland partnership is no exception. From Armenia to Poland and Back: Long-Term Partnership, Tangible Results highlights two recent study tours in which Armenian project participants visited dry fruit processing and milk production projects in Poland.

Self-Help Group Leaders Learn from Successful Farmer Cooperatives in Cambodia

Editor’s note: story by Chheang Sokmao | Program Officer – Northwest Region | Cambodia

Mr. Oun Sophal shares experiences from Rattanak Pol Rort Samai Cooperative

From August 13-15, 2012, Heifer Cambodia and two project partner organizations from the northwest region conducted an exchange visit to two successful farmer cooperatives. The exchange facilitated by Heifer Cambodia staff and executive directors from Cambodian Human Resource Development Organization (CHRD) in Banteay Meanchey province and Farmer Organic for Development Association (FODA) in Siem Reap province entailed visits to two successful farmer cooperatives in Kampot province: Rattanak Pol Rort Samaki and Samaki Sang Kroh. In attendance were 11 key community leaders and project management committee representatives, two community facilitators, one project coordinator and one commune council member.

Exchange Visitors at Kraing Snai Commune Cooperative

During the visit, participants learned about cooperative businesses, including credit, rice bank and rice business cooperatives, and the provision of other services for self-financing. The visitors enjoyed a firsthand look at the cooperation among community members on activities such as mobilizing social capital for local infrastructure, education, food security, sanitation and healthy hygiene, as well as strategies to reduce poverty for sustainable community development. The day-long sharing allowed the exchange of experiences and best practices between key community leaders and host cooperatives in Dong Tung and Chhouk district, Kampot province.

“Their cooperatives have been established for a long time, and they have good experience in leading the communities and their business development,” said Ms. Krouch Suk, a community facilitator from CHRD. “My team and I will bring experiences and best practices on business credit cooperatives, rice cooperatives, development themes and their leadership to improve my community.” Suk’s community group was organized two years ago, and she is proud of its achievements and looks forward to a future of close cooperation and continuing progress. She hopes that over the next few years it will grow even stronger.

Exchange Visitors at Damnak Dokrom Commune Cooperative

“At my community, the rice interest rate set by private lenders is very high, 50 percent per season, and this is a challenge for us,” said Ms. Rean Sokhom, a commune council member from FODA. “I want to have a community rice bank in my village where it will help the community during rice shortages.” The topic of business credit cooperatives was also a point of interest for Sokhom. She wants each self-help group to work together to have a larger savings fund at the commune level, as demonstrated by their hosts. She will propose these ideas at the next commune council meeting.

After the exchange visit, project partner representatives made a stop at Bokor Mountain Resort, where they took many photos. On the way back to their respective provinces, they shared experiences, built relationships and showed a strong commitment to use everything they learned to propel their communities toward prosperous business communities in the coming year.

From the Field: Heifer’s Work Around the World

This weekly post shines a light on a handful of stories from Heifer.org’s “From the Field” section.

Resiliency is an accurate description for Heifer’s project participants. In Armenia, the Kyureghyan family lost all their livestock in an earthquake and struggled to make ends meet. Find out what happened when Heifer came to town in The Secret to the Kyureghyan Family Success

For Carol T. Balisong of the Philippines, life just keeps getting better. This past Women in Livestock Development (WiLD) award winner owns a popular cafe in her town. Read more about Carol in Revisiting the Past: WiLD Awardee Still Doing Wonders

Resilient women in Haiti

No stranger to natural disasters, residents of Haiti are learning sustainable practices through Heifer’s REACH project. Check out What’s New in Haiti to learn more.

Literacy has a big part to play in making one resilient, and the younger literacy skills are acquired, the better. Celebrating Literacy for More than Just One Day spotlights various South African schools that are finding success with Heifer’s Read to Feed program.

Children Benefit from Heifer China Self-Help Group

Story and photos by: Yu Hongshui, Anhui Regional Manager, Heifer China

On August 7, the sun blazed like a fireball. Residents of Huwan Village, Guji Town, didn’t

Children give final performance of the summer

work on their farms. They carried small stools to the village playground because the children were going to perform a show.

Heifer China’s Self-Help Community Development Project in North Anhui started in Huwan Village, Guji Town, Jieshou City in April 2011. In coordination with Jieshou City Poverty Alleviation Office, Heifer’s project partner, and the project community management committee, 132 poverty-stricken families from five self-help groups (SHGs) became the first group of project participants. They began raising goats to promote sustainable development in the community. In the past year, goat-rearing activities have been scaled up, leading to an increase in income for most project participants..

In a recent management committee meeting, SHG members brainstormed ideas to do something different during summer vacation. With Fuyang Normal College as liaison, Huwan Village organized a college student volunteer activity. As volunteers, two students from Fuyang Normal College, Chen Tao and Chen Zhou, lived with project participant families and taught kids to paint, play sports, dance and perform martial arts. Village leaders, farmers and students strongly supported the students’ volunteer efforts. All the students at Huwan Primary School participated in this activity. Even students studying in the township returned to the village to attend the final performance of the summer vacation activity on August 7.

At 9 a.m., children dressed in gorgeous costumes started performing various numbers, including martial arts, dancing and singing.

The changes evident in Huwan Village are the best interpretation of Heifer’s “Not a cup, but a cow.”

From the Field: Heifer’s Work Around the World

This weekly post shines a light on a handful of stories from Heifer.org’s “From the Field” section.

Heifer’s work is built on the 12 Cornerstones for Just and Sustainable Development because they work. In India, several groups of women were so inspired by these principles that they began training other groups. Learn more about this domino-effect success in Extending Cornerstones Training to a Whole Village.

It has been a year since the Margaryan family received a pregnant heifer in a Passing on the Gift® (POG) ceremony in Armenia’s Myasnikyan village. Read about how their cow Roza provided them with a new happiness.

Children show off their drawings

Also in Armenia, a YES Youth Club in Lernagogo community taught young children how to be friends with nature. The fun ecology trainings provided lessons the students will carry with them for a lifetime. 

Finally, check out the latest on Armenia’s signature project in Milk Production Rises 25 Percent Under CARMAC Project.

Heifer Restores Hope for a Seaside Community in Georgia

The Lamparadze family drinks fresh milk every morning

By Maka Kapanadze, Heifer Georgia Volunteer

Georgia is blessed with a wonderful location, a remarkable natural setting and hospitable people. The Black Sea borders the country on the west, providing the region with a relatively mild and humid climate throughout the year. Buknari is a seaside community in Kobuleti municipality, and during the Soviet period Buknari was considered a favorite resort spot for Russian tourists. Residents of Buknari lived a happy life. While the majority of their income came from tourism, they raised citrus and tea plants to earn additional money. As the Soviet Union collapsed, so did Buknari’s lucrative tourist industry. In 2006, an import ban on Georgian agricultural products ultimately broke all financial links between Russia and Georgia. Without its main trading partner, the happy life of the people of Buknari ended. A high rate of inflation on Georgia’s currency, the GEL, reflects Russia’s economic embargo. Prices on daily consumption products have increased dramatically. Faced with limited choices, Buknari residents either had to start farming livestock or starve.

Oleg Lamparadze grew up in a big, welcoming and friendly family, where mutual respect and understanding ruled. He now has a wife, Juliet, and two children, 11-year-old Sofio and 8-year-old Mikheil. They live in Buknari with Oleg’s mother Eter, brother Vazha and sister Izo. They once ran their own small family farm and got by just fine; however, over the last seven years, it has become more difficult to survive. It was so hard that older family members often went to bed hungry because their crops produced just enough to feed the children. Oleg took on seasonal construction work that paid very little. Eter’s small pension provided the only other source of income. They didn’t make enough money to purchase much-needed medicine. “Someone may think that if you are not lazy, you will always survive in the village,” Oleg said, ”because compared to town, there are more options: different agricultural activities, fruit-growing, animal and poultry farming, small gardening. But believe me, we have not slept for nights. Our labor was very hard and unbearable, but it was difficult to fight with empty hands. When I say empty hands, I mean a lack of any resources that might be helpful for agricultural activities. I wanted to start animal farming, but had no sufficient money to buy a cow or even a goat. My family was like a squirrel in the cage. I felt that we needed a small push to move from a dead spot. God heard my prayers and I got the biggest push from Heifer International.”

In the fall of 2009, Oleg’s family was selected to join a Heifer project in their community.

Lamazo produces more than 80 liters of milk each week

They received a pregnant heifer and training for successful livestock keeping. “My family had some experience in livestock keeping, but after the trainings we received from Heifer, we significantly improved our knowledge on animal keeping, breeding and feeding,” Juliet said. “We are happy to have a very competent project veterinarian, Nugzar Khimshiashvili, who is a famous veterinary doctor in the region. His trainings in animal health issues and proper feeding are positively reflected by our cow’s productivity. We yield more than 80 liters of milk per week, which is a maximum for the local breed cows. We have enough milk for family consumption and surplus for marketing. Mostly we make cheese and yogurt for sale. Our family budget has greatly improved. Recently, we started vegetable growing and using animal manure for soil fertilization to improve our harvest. Our kids also are actively involved in farming activities. Sofio looks after the cow and Mikheil takes care of the calf.”

Lamazo's milk keeps the children strong and healthy

“When we received a heifer, I was almost 8-years-old,” Sofio said. “When the cow entered our yard I was impatiently waiting for her beside the gate. She was walking so beautifully that I decided to call her Lamazo, which means Beauty.” Sofio’s mother used to saved her grandmother’s pension to buy milk. Now, thanks to Heifer, Sofio and her brother Mikheil drink fresh milk every morning. Lamazo’s milk keeps them strong and healthy. They have already passed on the gift of a heifer to the family of Sofio’s best friend, and Lamazo has already given birth to another calf, which the family will keep. Oleg renovated their old shed into a more comfortable one for Lamazo and her calf.

“We know that Heifer helps indigent people throughout the world and we are happy to be among those lucky families,” said Oleg. “We want to thank Heifer International’s generous donors and those kind people in the USA and all over the world. Special thanks to Heifer Georgia’s caring staff for their diligent and devoted attitude to us and our lives!”

Despite poverty, Buknari people never lost their pride, and with Heifer’s help, hope for the future has returned to them. Indeed, there are still many families in need in Georgia. Oleg’s family is a good example of how Heifer transforms families’ lives, giving them a light of hope for improvement and a better future.

From the Field: Heifer’s Work Around the World

This weekly post shines a light on a handful of stories from Heifer.org’s “From the Field” section. 

Find out how one family’s year became more productive thanks to gift of a cow through the Peace to Our Homes project in Armenia. 

Then travel to Vietnam and discover how Kim Chia will soon be able to trade his old thatched-roof house for a new, more sturdy home. 

Exciting developments are in the works for members of the Developing Dairy Zones for Smallholder Farmers in the Philippines project, as they enter into the promising dairy industry. 

Passing on the Gift in Xianling

Read how Lyovik Grigoryan and his family experienced a positive change in difficult conditions through successful pig-raising activities in Armenia.

Finally, see how the Heifer spirit is alive and well in China’s Xianling community. A joyful Passing on the Gift® ceremony held earlier this month was a life-changing event for new project participants and new donors.

Heifer Georgia Family Gets Their Dream Horse

Story and photo by Zaur Chartolani, project leader

The large Jachvliani family received a mare in September 2010. Before the family got their horse, Edward and Olya’s oldest son George rented a mare from a neighbor in order to provide horse trekking services to tourists. It was George, a mountain guide and experienced horse rider, who encouraged his family to join the Heifer project. Being a guide is a very popular business in the mountainous Svaneti region and often the only cash income families can earn in an entire year. Without proper quality animals for the job, most families rely on old riding horses, which greatly hinders the development of this highly profitable business. Edward is a seasonal worker for a local road construction firm. With inconsistent earnings, George’s additional income was always very helpful. Now, with his own horse, George can do his job without paying rent for the use of a neighbor’s horse. He has become more enthusiastic about his work and is benefiting from the huge stream of tourists eager to use horses trekking services in the summer. George’s income is increasing yearly, which helps his parents and grandparents take better care of his two younger siblings, 2-year-old Anastasia and 3-year-old Davit. Anastasia and Davit like to help their big brother take care of the horse, giving it all the necessary food and treatment to make sure it stays healthy and strong.

A severe mountainous climate with long winters and low temperatures doesn’t come with many options for agricultural activities, so the Jachvliani family budget is built mainly on small-scale animal farming. These activities include heavy labor, especially when the family has to transport hay from high steep mountains. The mare provided a great relief for Olya, as she uses the horse in agricultural tasks as a means of transportation. Overall, the family received a helper in their household, which allows them to look further, have bold plans and be positive about their future. The family is a shining example in the community. The horse has already produced an offspring, which will be grown up and passed on to another family, who will soon be as happy as the Jachvilianis.

“My family is large,” Olya said. “I have a husband and three children. Two of them are underage. My husband’s parents, Vakhtang and Ketino, also live with us. The only person who earned money in our family was my husband and his salary was hardly enough to feed our children. My eldest son decided to support our family and he hired a horse for trekking that is so popular among the tourists in Svaneti. Though the community horses were very old and not attractive for clients, the rent was very high and thus this business became unprofitable. But Heifer came as a savior to my family, now we have our own horse and my son is able to develop his own business. Some time ago, I could only dream about that; now it is reality. God bless those kind people who made my children so happy. Our horse has already had a foal. We shall grow it up and then pass it to another family. This is great charity. I am very happy that Heifer gave me chance to make another family as happy as I am now. This is a great feeling.”