Give a Water Buffalo, the Tractor that Poops

Want more great content from the Heifer Blog? Subscribe in a reader or by Email.

Known as “the living tractor of the East,” the water buffalo is used mostly for plowing and transportation by families in Asia. In addition to plowing, water buffalo also provide nutritious milk and organic fertilizer.

Photo by Russell Powell

The isolated village of Simbalan is among the poorest in the Philippines. Damiana and Danilo Ramos had finally saved up enough money to buy their own land, but they never could save enough for a large animal. That’s when Heifer gave them a water buffalo. The Ramos family estimates they can now plow and plant five times faster with the help of their water buffalo. And that means they have been able to more than double their income to about $2.77 per day by selling yams and a variety of fruits and vegetables.


Muscle
With a water buffalo, families can plant up to five times more crops than they would be able to plant by hand. More crops mean more food to eat and store at harvest time, and more left over to sell for extra income.

Biogas
An adult water buffalo can produce up to six tons of manure a year. For families that have biogas digesters, the methane gas released by the manure can be used to power cook stoves and lamps. Biogas stoves eliminate wood-burning stoves that lead to deforestation and can cause respiratory ailments.

Milk
The milk from a water buffalo is rich in nutrients. Buffalo milk is higher in calcium and protein than cow milk–two nutrients critical for growing bodies. Plus, the fats in buffalo milk make it ideal for processing into cheeses that also help build strong bones.

This holiday season, give the gift of a water buffalo to your college roommate, Corey, who was a beast and could bench press 300 pounds easy.

Shop@Heifer Online

I hope you’ve been enjoying our series highlighting some of the livestock and other options from the Heifer Gift Catalog. I know many people like giving and receiving the gift of a goat or a share of a water buffalo. It’s not only a great way to honor someone you care for, it’s also kind of nice to give something you know isn’t going to end up in the give-away pile by February.

But sometimes you really do just want to give something tangible, in addition to the gift of world peace. Well, here’s some good news: Shop@Heifer is back online, just in time for the holiday season. These gifts not only help spread our mission, the sales benefit Heifer as well.

Giving a share of a pig to your 5-year-old nephew? Get him a plush pink pig to help make the gift of hope a bit more tangible for him.

My other favorites are the Heifer grocery bag set (I’ve given several as gifts and have a set for myself, too.) and the children’s book, The Chicken and the Worm.


Shopping for yourself? Wear your love for Heifer with a ballcap, scarf or t-shirt (I’d take a hoodie, myself).

Give a HEIFER Heifer: It’s the Sustainable Thing to Do

There’s a reason animal gifts are popular right now. The idea is fun; the animal is cute, easy to give as an alternative gift and is readily available from several organizations that all tout it as a means to help impoverished communities become self-sustaining. But it takes more than an animals, and only one organization works to that end–Heifer International.

For more than 67 years, Heifer International has recognized the cow, goat, sheep or rabbit is but one of the ingredients needed by a family or community to become self-sustaining. Along with that animal must come training: in animal care and management, in how to use its byproducts–muscle and manure, for example–for benefit.

And there must be values training, which is the very core of our successful model of sustainable development. These trainings, in sharing and caring, nutrition and income, improving the environment, full participation and gender equity that empowers both men and women together, create the social capital that contributes not only to the success of the participating family, but also to the community.

Only Heifer requires project participants to Pass on the Gift–giving the first-born female offspring of their animal, along with the training they have received–to another family. There are communities where pass-ons are in their fifth, 10th, even 13th generation. So the gift of a cow isn’t really the gift of a single cow with Heifer. It’s the gift of a herd.

There’s no question that other organizations that provide animals to families in need do good work, but livestock inputs are but one item of the smorgasbord of work these agencies do. Giving livestock and training is all we do, and we do it exceptionally well, according to evaluators from Western Michigan University, who visited more than 139 Heifer projects in 20 countries and interviewed 5,000 Heifer program participants.

In their summary, evaluators stated, “In virtually every evaluation, the evaluators noted improvements in nutrition, agriculture, income, hope and opportunity, access to health care and medicine, livestock management. And mentioned in nearly every report was Heifer’s signature, Passing on the Gift (POG) program.”


Heifer’s work lasts much longer than the mere delivery of the animal as well. Projects and work with families, by Heifer country staff (who are native to the country), last years, not days or even weeks. And even before an animal is delivered, the family spends up to a year training, building safe and sturdy animal sheds and learning to grow food for the animals that don’t impinge on the family’s own gardens and food.

Since 1944, we have worked with and helped ignite transformation for more than 71 million people in more than 125 countries around the world. That’s a true track record for an organization that began its journey with a shipment of three heifers–Faith, Hope and Charity–to Puerto Rico.

Animals as alternative gifts are easy and cute, but only Heifer International considers the animal a catalyst to the heavy lifting that the families provide every day to pull themselves up out of poverty and into prosperity.

So give a Heifer animal. Because you know you’re giving so much more when you do.

Can’t decide which animal to give? Check out our series highlighting some of the options from our Gift Catalog:

Give a Goat: It’s the Poor Man’s Cow
Don’t BE a Heifer, GIVE a Heifer
Share a Sheep: Ewe Will Be Thanked
Llamas and Alpacas: Your Black Friday Alternative
Pick a Chick on Cyber Monday
Give Trees: The Perfect Alternative Gift for Vegetarians

Oh! And use our new Facebook “Like” button to show your friends you like us.
You Really Like Us.

Give Trees: The Perfect Alternative Gift for Vegetarians

All Heifer projects strive for sustainability, and that’s why we often provide trees of different varieties to families in need. Trees enrich the air with oxygen, help maintain soils and provide fruits and nuts, as well.

Watch this video to see how Heifer’s efforts at reforestation and other agroecological methods are promoting soil conservation, erosion control and improved farming in Ecuador.

Fruits and Fodder
Planting trees ensures families have a source of fodder for livestock. Fruit- and nut-bearing trees provide nutritious and fresh foods, and surpluses can increase income.

Better Soil
In many countries where Heifer works, poor families cook on wood-burning stoves. Families must cut down trees to ensure they have enough firewood. Without trees, soil washes away. Tree roots hold together topsoil and help to sustain moisture and nutrients.

Firewood
With many families foraging for firewood in similar areas, sometimes families have to walk miles just to find enough wood to burn so they can cook a meal. When families plant trees, firewood is no lnger scarce and is available in the immediate area.

This holiday season, give the gift of trees in honor of your tree-hugging, vegetarian sister-in-law; and help a community grow food for themselves and their livestock while preventing soil erosion and water loss. And learn more about Heifer’s agroecology and agroforestry work by digging into our archives.

Pick a Chick on Cyber Monday

It’s Cyber Monday. Don’t let your boss catch you surfing the web for the best deal on a TV. Instead, let her know you’re spending your holiday savings ending world hunger. Pick a chick this Cyber Monday!

For just $20, a gift of chicks, ducks or geese can quickly turn into a sizable flock that can triple a family’s income. The fowl are easily managed as they require little space, and they can help control garden pests and improve soil quality. And through Heifer’s Pass on the Gift model, your gifts will continue to change communities for years to come. Can’t say that about the latest e-reader, now can you?

Photo by Geoff Oliver Bugbee

Anju Chaudhary lost everything she owned when a sudden flood struck her town of Bhandara, Nepal, several years ago. Not long after, Anju’s husband left the house one day and never came back. Anju suddenly found herself all alone with two little children to feed. That’s when she joined a local women’s group, and soon she received the gift of a chicken, which quickly produced eggs and chicks. Anju fed some of the eggs to her children and sold the rest for income. She now has 16 eggs ready to hatch. “We’ll have lots of chickens soon,” Anju says proudly.


Eggs
One large chicken egg contains more than six grams of protein, which the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization indicates is about half the daily requirement for toddlers. Both chicken and duck eggs contain selenium, which helps build a strong immune system, and B vitamins that help convert food into energy. Plus, chickens and ducks can lay nearly 200 eggs a year.

More Land and Better Crops
Chickens, ducks and geese require little space, so families who have only small plots to farm can maximize what they plant. The fowl eat insects and remove weeds as well, which increases crop yields and provides more food to sell at market or to feed their families.

Increased Income
In addition to providing hundreds of eggs a year or hundreds of chicks, ducklings and goslings to sell at market, these animals thrive on food and garden scraps. That means families don’t have to spend a lot of money to feed the fowl, enabling them to pay for food, education and medicine.

Want to really impress your boss? Give her a Flock of Hope this holiday season. And if it doesn’t already, encourage your organization to participate in our employer matching gifts program, turning your $20 or $60 gift into twice as many birds. Read more blog posts about how Heifer uses fowl to improve lives around the world.

Don’t feel like picking a chick? How about an alpaca, sheep, heifer or goat?

Llamas and Alpacas: Your Black Friday Alternative

Dario Mayta, the son of Jose Mayta, with one of the
alpacas that his father received from Heifer.

Llamas and their cousin the alpaca have been invaluable for the people of South America since the Incas domesticated them around 4,000 B.C. While llamas are best known for their wool, they also have keen eyesight and can act as guards, protecting other herds from potential predators.

Jose Mayta and his wife Utilia Chura-Laura.

In the isolated village of Pallallani, Bolivia, Jose Mayta and Utilia Chura-Laura took the gift of two alpacas and made a thriving farm. The couple now has 60 adult alpacas. Each is sheared once a year and provides about four pounds of wool. Though the market is a seven-hour walk, Jose knows the money he  makes there will go toward the children’s education. In god years, alpaca wool sells between $5 and $7 per pound, so he can earn a total of $1,300 to $1,700 from his alpaca herd.


Clothing and Blankets
The wool that llamas and alpacas provide is prized when woven into blankets, ponchos, carpet and rope. And with each animal providing between four and eight pounds of wool a year, weaving can become a lucrative business.

Protected Ecosystems
Pasture land in the Andean Mountains is scarce, and vegetation at high altitudes is fragile. But with their padded, two-towed feet, llamas leave little impact on the mountain ecosystems. Their droppings can also help fertilize the scarce topsoil.

Transportation
Families high in the Andean mountains use llamas as pack animals to move goods to markets. Depending on the terrain, llamas can carry up to 30 percent of their body weight, making them better pack animals than horses.

This holiday season, give the gift of a llama in honor of Cousin Frank, who always won the spitting contests when you were kids. Read more about Heifer’s work with llamas and alpacas to see why they’re a winning pick for many families in South America.

Photos by Christian DeVries.

Share a Sheep: Ewe Will Be Thanked

Feliciana’s daughter, Flor Isabel. Photo by Jake Lyell.

Domesticated by humans nearly 12,000 years ago, sheep provide a number of benefits to families. Their wool has long been used for clothing, and sheep milk and meat are full of nutrients that are keeping children healthy around the world.

Feliciana Sanchez Calderon and her family live in the Peruvian village of Marayhuaca near the border with Ecuador. This area is characterized by high levels of poverty and malnutrition. But with training, Feliciana’s family is now thriving. Along with the gift of sheep, Feliciana and others in the community were taught organic gardening, semi-grazing and sustainable livestock production. With the animals and training, the family has established food security. “Now we are working together for a better future,” Feliciana said.


Wool
Depending on the breed, a single sheep can produce between two and 30 pounds of wool each year. The waterproof and durable fiber is both a valuable and a renewable resource for small famers from Brazil to the Ukraine, who can use it for clothing or sell it for increased income.

Improved Nutrition
Sheep meat is rich in iron and zinc, two minerals that are key in a child’s mental development (iron deficiency is the most prevalent form of malnutrition worldwide). The milk is also rich in calcium, another vital mineral in a child’s development.

Growing Flock
Given the right conditions, sheep can often give birth to twins or triplets. For struggling families in need of income, a fast growing flock provides even more wool that can be sold. It also provides them with a steady source of dairy and meat products, as well.

This holiday season, give the gift of a sheep in honor of your best friend, who can knit three hats a day. And read more blog posts about sheep here.

Don’t BE a Heifer, GIVE a Heifer

When a family receives a heifer, they receive much more than an animal. It’s a gift that provides all of what Heifer calls the seven Ms: Milk, Manure, Muscle, Meat, Money, Materials and Motivation. And those seven things turn into health, houses, education and nutrition.

Orphans at the Prison Fellowship
Romania Center share a meal.

Maria Moraru (above) is involved in a project called Farmers Feed the Children in Romania. In return for a heifer, 150 project families agreed to not only Pass on the Gift to another family in need, but to also donate a portion of the milk to feed local children. Milk is distributed among 12 children’s hospitals and orphanages. So far, more than 22,000 gallons of milk have been delivered, and more than 5,000 children per year are benefiting from this project. Maria’s cow Americana has produced a total of seven offspring and produces eight to nine gallons of milk a day–plenty to drink, sell and donate.


Milk
A cow can produce several gallons of milk a day. That milk provides needed protein for undernourished children or adults sick with diseases like HIV/AIDS. Milk also contains vitamins A, C and D, which help eyesight and bone strength.

Manure
Families are taught how to use cow manure as a fertilizer for gardens or crops. Cow manure can add significant amounts of organic material to the soil, improving the overall health of the Earth and producing healthy, vigorous plants.

Money
With gallons of milk a day, families have more than enough to drink. Often, the leftover milk is sold at market to provide extra income for the family, which can pay for food, health care, home improvements and school fees so children get an education.

This holiday season, consider giving the gift of a heifer in honor of your childhood babysitter, who always fixed you chocolate milk before bed. And read more blog posts about how cows have changed the lives of our project participants all over the world.

Photos by David Snyder

Give a Goat: It’s the Poor Man’s Cow

Goats are versatile animals and are at home in a number of environments. Heifer uses goats in projects from Albania to India to Uganda. In addition to being one of Heifer International’s most popular gift animals, goats are an amazing resource to families.


Photo by Jake Lyell
After childhood illnesses left both Monica Mulongoti and her husband Jackson blind, the couple and their children lived for many years at the Fisenge Blind Center near Luanshya, Zambia. There was only enough food for one meal a day. But then Monica received dairy goats through a project Heifer had begun at the center. Monica now earns $5.38 per day from the sale of the goat milk, and the money affords the family three meals a day. “Heifer goes to those who are really needy, the really poor. They give animals that help us get food for our children,” said Monica.

Preserved Pastures
Grazing animals can damage vegetation and soil. Heifer project recipients are taught zero-grazing: a technique where animals are kept in adequate enclosures and fodder is brought to them. This technique preserves pastures and leads to higher milk outputs and better manure for organic gardening.
Dairy
Goats can have two to three kids a year. More goats means more milk, and more people worldwide drink goat’s milk than cow’s milk. Goat’s milk is easily digestible because of the smaller milk fats. Goat’s milk can also be turned into cheese and yogurt for family consumption and sale.
Education
The sale of extra milk or the money earned from renting a buck to others in the community for breeding can dramatically increase income for a poor family. For many, this enables them to send their children to school, an almost guaranteed way to break the cycle of poverty.
This holiday season, consider giving the gift of a goat in honor of Uncle Steve, whose laugh sounds more like a bleat. And read Heifer CEO Pierre Ferrari’s 18 Ways Goats Change Lives.

Know Your Animals: A Heifer Livestock Primer

The López-Durán family of Bolivia with their sheep.
Photo by Christian DeVries

As the holiday season approaches, you might find yourself debating which Heifer gift will be the best for Aunt Franny or the Boss. Well stress no more! Over the next few weeks, I’ll dive into the wide spectrum of livestock and other agricultural items we put to use in our projects all over the world. Look forward to learning more about:

Goats
Heifers
Sheep
Llamas
Chicks, ducks and geese
Tree seedlings
Honeybees
Water buffalo
Pigs
Rabbits
Camels