Over the River and to the Goats

Heifer Board member Sandra Godden leaps river rocks on her way to the Heifer project village Shaktikhor. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee.

Heifer Board member Sandra Godden leaps river rocks on her way to the Heifer project village Shaktikhor, with member Efrain Diaz Arrivillaga close on her heels. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee.

SHAKTIKHOR VILLAGE, Nepal—You don’t have to go far in the Chitwan region of Nepal to get a good look at a goat; they’re everywhere you look. However, to see true innovation in the raising of goats for profit, Shaktikhor village is the place to be. It takes a bit of a stroll to get there, over a river and through farmers’ rice and vegetable fields, but it’s worth the trip.

Heifer Board members and staff walk through being plowed on the way to a project visit. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Heifer Board members and staff walk through fields being plowed on the way to a project visit. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

shaktikhor-nepal-bugbee-5Several Heifer Board and staff members are in Nepal this week visiting Heifer projects related to a new goat project that will eventually reach 138,000 farmers in 28 districts by 2016.

Through this innovative project, Heifer aims to reduce live goat imports by 30 percent and milk by 10 percent in the same time frame.

In Shaktikhor, Heifer farmers continue their own experimentation, through what’s called a farmer field school, to come up with the right combination of nutritional fodder, minerals, shelter and veterinary care to quickly produce the healthiest goats to be ready to take to market.

For farmers such as Niramala Magar and her husband Som Bahadur Magar, the project is paying off very well. Five years ago, Niramala received Heifer goats, and soon after her husband received animal health care worker training and now serves as an expert to help others in the community.

They started with only five does and now have more than 20, with a goal of having 50 in the next few years. Responding to a question from Heifer Board member Jay Whittmeyer, Som said that when he gets to that level, he believes he can employ others in the village to help him with the enterprise. He also is hopeful his young sons, now 10 and 8 years old, will follow in his footsteps in the goat-raising business.

Som Bahadur Magar and wife Niramala Magar show off kids, one just a couple of days old, in Shaktikhor village. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Som Bahadur Magar and wife Niramala Magar show off kids, one just a couple of days old, in Shaktikhor village. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

“We had been raising goats for years and were not convinced we needed to plant fodder trees and use that method when we first heard about it,” Som said. “Once we started thinking about commercial farming, we decided to test for ourselves what worked best. We have been very keen on calculating every input and benefit it gives. Through our own testing, we found it was definitely more beneficial to follow this advice and began to plant fodder trees.”

The couple says despite all their success, a goat enterprise is not as easy as it looks. They have to take in consideration of pen space for the goats, feed, water and veterinary care, and then still find a way to get the best prices for their animals. Yet Som and Niramala are ready for any challenge. Som, with his village’s cooperative, just opened a small market collection center and is getting out the word that every Tuesday anyone can come to the village to purchase goats.

“I feel it is my responsibility to get a better price for all goat farmers in this area,” Som said.

Heifer Board member Jay Whittmeyer, who is fluent in Nepalese, jokes with children in Shaktikhor. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Heifer Board member Jay Whittmeyer, who is fluent in Nepalese, jokes with children in Shaktikhor to get them to smile for a photo. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee 

Heifer Board Gives 100%

The Heifer International Board of Directors has achieved a 100 percent personal giving level for fiscal year 2013. We are excited for and proud of our board’s fundraising committee, and especially the committee chair, Francine Anthony, for this accomplishment!

Board giving

We must all work together. Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee, courtesy of Heifer International.

From Francine Anthony:

My dear committee members all know how fond I am of using quotes, so in keeping in character, I leave you with the following from the late, great Arthur Ashe – “From what we get, we can make a living; what we give, however, makes a life.”

Thank you each and every one of you for contributing to Heifer International’s ability to “make a life” for so many unfortunate others across the globe.

If you’re not a member of a nonprofit board or staff, it may be difficult to know why this is such a big deal. Here are some reasons, from BoardSource:

  • Board member giving is a public commitment to the organization’s work;
  • Board members might pay increased attention to the nonprofit’s mission and financial health when their own money is engaged;
  • Many other donors and institutional funders will not give to organizations that don’t have 100 percent board participation as current donors

Despite all of these great reasons, 100 percent board giving is in the minority. According to a survey by BoardSource (summary here), 68 percent of nonprofits surveyed have a policy requiring board members to donate to the organization; average board participation is 74 percent, and only 46 percent of nonprofit boards had 100 percent participation.

Our board reaching 100 percent personal giving is exciting, because they are publicly demonstrating how committed they are to Heifer International’s success.

Are you part of the nonprofit sector? How do you feel about the importance of board giving? Tell us in the comments section below.