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.

Heifer 12 x 12 USA Round-Up

I hope you caught Betty Londergan of Heifer 12 x 12 as she reported on her travels with Heifer in the United States. If not, check out this round-up of her posts from Appalachia and the Delta:

Squash plant in Appalachia

Photo by Betty Londergan

Stay tuned on Heifer 12 x 12 as Betty writes about her travels to Rwanda. And click here to help Betty reach her Team Heifer goal of raising $5,000 for Heifer.

For bonus photos, check out the Heifer 12 x 12 Flickr Photostream.

U.S. Drought Hurting Small Farmers, Too

The United States continues to suffer worst drought in half a century. Most of the media coverage tells of horrible corn and soybean yields and the rising food costs we’ll be seeing in grocery stores next year.

U.S. Drought map

Often left out of the conversation, however, are the small farmers who grow for local markets, particularly those who can’t afford crop insurance or who raise livestock (which doesn’t have the same safeguards as staple crops). Despite being typically diverse in what they grow (generally a good strategy for mitigating disasters like weather or pests), the lack of rainfall and incredibly high temperatures are taking a serious toll.

One of these farmers is a personal friend of mine. In fact, we first met as volunteers at Heifer Ranch. Katie Short of Farm Girl Natural Foods raises pigs, cattle and chickens. She was recently interviewed by a Central Arkansas newspaper, Sync Weekly, about how the drought has affected her operations. She said:

Spring rains usually give us enough grass; it’s called stockpiling, and it piles up in pasture enough to get through hot dry months. But we did not get that spring rain, so we did not get the spring grass. So that’s been the number one concern — is there enough forage to feed our animals, primarily the cows? We supplement the chickens and pigs with grains, and they’re eating more grain than they would otherwise. With the cattle, we’ve had to make some hard decisions, and we’ve started to cull the herd to preserve grass we have.

And:

Think of the range in this drought; much of the grain fed to chickens and pigs is grown in the grain belt in the Midwest, and they’ve been impacted. I’ve seen some forecast of grain prices, and that’s terrifying. It affects the decisions we make in the long-term of our operation in terms of animals we can support sustainably.

 

Jersey-red angus cross cow

One of Farm Girl's cows. Photo by Adelia Kittrell.

Small livestock farmers like Short are being slammed in all directions as a result of the drought. Lack of rainfall dries out pastures; it’s too expensive to irrigate the fields; they can’t afford the supplemental feed the animals need in the short-term; they’ll end up selling their products sooner and at lower prices; the livestock feed costs for next season will be even higher, as this year’s grain harvests will be so bad; and there is little to no external assistance available (while President Obama’s announcement that the U.S. government would purchase $170 million in meat from farmers and ranchers, it is unclear what the qualifications for receiving this assistance will be) .

This isn’t happening only in Arkansas (though can I say we’re looking particularly bad on the map above?). And it’s not just small livestock farmers. So what can we do about it? Well, this is a great example of when buying locally really can make a difference. Go to your farmer’s market or nearest produce stand. Buy the ugly tomatoes, the smaller-than-desirable ears of corn, the cuts of meat you usually pass over. Meet the farmers, get to know their stories. Ask them how they’re coping with the weather. Offer your sympathy, and buy some of their products.

 

Daughter of Heifer Founder Visits Arkansas Delta Farmers

Editor’s note: Jan Schrock is a former Heifer director of church and community relations who is now retired and serving as an area volunteer coordinator in Maine. Jan is the daughter of Dan West, Heifer’s founder. On June 13, Jan spend the day visiting the Seeds of Change project in the Arkansas Delta with Heifer supporters Jill Bloom, wife of Heifer CFO Bob Bloom; Becke Corkern; Ron Sherck; Senchel Matthews, Arkansas project manager for Heifer USA; and Perry Jones, Heifer USA country director. Following is Jan’s report on the visit. Photos by Becke Corkern, former Heifer study tour coordinator and Heifer Ranch volunteer.

Jan Schrock visits Delta farmers.

Jan Schrock visits with Delta farmers.

Six of us spent a day visiting the Seeds of Change project, Heifer USA’s new project, in the Arkansas Delta. We were privileged to have Perry Jones, Heifer’s USA country director, as our guide and driver. Before our journey, we gathered for breakfast at The Root Café in Little Rock. The food was delicious, the café inspiring. All of their food is grown and purchased within a 50-mile range of Little Rock. It’s exciting to experience locally grown food as a part of the growing “Grow Local” movement! I noticed a map of Arkansas with pins indicating farms and gardens that grow and sell produce to the café.

As we drove east on Route 70, Perry explained the goals of Heifer’s work in the coming five years: to create community food enterprises for healthy, local, organic food and to create jobs in communities linking small-scale farmers to larger and diverse markets. The work in Arkansas is carried out in communities in five counties.

The Delta stretches west, deep into Arkansas from the Mississippi River, which is the eastern border of Arkansas. Extreme poverty exists in the entire Delta region. Perry, who worked with Heifer in Bolivia for many years, said he never saw poverty like this in South America.

Residents of the Delta, who are mostly African American, were initially brought to the region as slaves, and after the civil rights movement, they became sharecroppers, then agricultural day laborers. Now many are jobless, poor and malnourished (40 percent unemployment, and 25 percent of children are food insecure).

The Delta is one of the USA’s valuable breadbaskets. Chief crops in the area are cotton, corn, rice and soybeans. In the past decades, farming has become big business. Now, one business man can manage 10,000 acres and employ 10 workers with enormous farm machinery, leaving thousands of former workers jobless.

On our ride, we saw several crop-dusters flying over the fields. We also saw enormous tractors that are able to pull a dozen plows and cultivators. We saw huge harvesters capable of gathering the crops. These big machines have replaced laborers, who, in the past, earned income for their work in the fields. Trees and fences have been removed, and big irrigation systems supply water during the dry months.

As we traveled, we saw signs of poverty: abandoned houses and buildings, boarded-up businesses, dirt roads and many run-down houses. The Delta is a food desert. Grocery stores are scarce. “Food” is purchased in fast-food chains and service stations. The only grocery store in our destination, Hughes, Ark., had gone under. A drug culture exists. Many have chronic illnesses. Youth often purchase a one-way bus ticket out of the Delta.

We arrived at the East Arkansas Enterprise Community, Inc. (EAEC), an organization that started in 1995 as part of the national rural development program through the USDA. EAEC is dedicated to providing financial and technical assistance for the poor. EAEC, one of Heifer’s partners, supports programs in the Delta, Appalachia and in the Colonias, along the Texas border. We were greeted by Senchel Matthews, Heifer’s Arkansas project manager for Seeds of Change.

Heifer supporters and staff visit Arkansas Delta.

Top row: Jill Bloom, Donald Crutcher, Senchel Matthews, Ron Sherck. Bottom row: William Eldridge, Perry Jones, Jan Schrock.

We sat in a comfortable conference room where we were welcomed by Senchel and received an overview of the work of EAEC and the role of two professors, Dr. Robert Cole and Dr. Mildred Griggs, who both grew up in the Delta, worked in academic institutions, and have recently returned to work with EAEC as volunteers in their retirement. William Eldridge, a young man who is working in a new community garden that we would later visit, also joined our discussion. We listened, shared our stories, and I explained how and why Heifer began about 70 years ago. I shared a story from before the civil rights movement of early projects that involved heifers from Indiana farmers that were given to African American Mississippi farmers, who chose to pass on a new heifer to white farmers.

Heifer supporters and staff visit Arkansas Delta.

Dr. Cole, Jan Schrock, Perry Jones, Dr. Griggs.

We enjoyed a delicious lunch of locally grown food. The sweet potato dish was outstanding. We learned sweet potatoes are a “high dollar product.” Following lunch, we visited a large new community garden that is also a training model. We saw healthy crops and drip irrigation (hoses placed along rows).

Heifer supporters and staff visit Arkansas Delta.

Collards, summer squash and drip irrigation hose. The drip irrigation helps farmers' improve yields and maximize the growing season.

Next, we visited a large garden by the home of Donald Crutcher, whose son has returned to help grow the garden and market the produce—a healthy sign that there is work for youth, one of the economic and social focuses of Seeds of Change.

Our last visit was to the home of 94-year-old Rev. Dubois and his wife, who are growing “everything we need all year ‘round.” We saw a very healthy garden and learned that they can and freeze their produce. They invited us into their small home cooled by fans. They were happy to welcome us and witness their self-sustaining lifestyle. We saw a few similar homes and gardens on our way back to Little Rock.

Along the way, we stopped at an old building that likely was once a local café or bar. There was a big sign painted on the building: Pie Store. Inside, we saw two elderly women who were making their living baking and selling pies, using two big ovens in the back room. We each had a slice of their delicious chocolate pie with meringue about two inches high. This is the famous stop in DeValls Bluff at Mrs. Mary’s.

Of course, we had many questions for Perry on our drive back to Little Rock. One remarked that she would love to come and work with the community gardeners. One said, “OK. I know now where to send my Heifer gift. I’d like to volunteer here.” Another said, “I wish every Heifer volunteer and donor could witness what we saw today.” I said, “I wish my father could see what we saw. I wish he was here.” Another said, “Jan, perhaps he is here.”

We were a tight little one-day community in a rented van, with more questions and much gratitude for Heifer’s new work that joins with our nation’s local food movement by assisting impoverished small-scale farmers in the Delta to work together to end their poverty, feed their families, learn growing and marketing skills, earn an income, become healthier, connect to larger markets and discover the strength of resilient communities. We felt so fortunate to have Perry as our guide, and we wish to thank the people of the Arkansas Delta for sharing their knowledge, their work and their vision for healthy families!

Heifer USA Projects Envision the Future

Editor’s note: This post was written by Heifer’s USA Program Officer Larissa Barry

As a part of the exciting work in the Seeds of Change Project, the Heifer USA team hosted a training in each of the Arkansas and Appalachia project areas in mid-June. Heifer staff from the United States Program including Tamidra Marable, Gretchen Schirmer, Senchel Matthews, Jeffrey Scott and Larissa Barry traveled to each of the trainings to bring our individual and collective expertise to the communities. Working with the growing community coalitions, we guided the communities through a process of collective visioning and then a discussion on the mechanics of project design.

Collective Visions of Seeds of Change Participants in ArkansasIn Arkansas, the training was held Thursday, June 14 in Forrest City.  Over 20 community members attended from across the nine-county region that makes up Seeds of Change.  Working through a participatory process, groups worked to create a visual representation of their collective vision.  They used pictures and words from magazines to show what they expect from their participation in Seeds of Change.  The themes across the collages included hope, change, family, healthy environment, food for all, inclusiveness and success.

Collective vision of Seeds of Change participants in Appalachia

 

The training continued in Appalachia on Tuesday, June 19 in Boone, North Carolina, in a similar fashion. There were just over 20 participants representing the five-county region in the High Country of Appalachia. Many of the themes that came out of their collective visioning exercise were similar to those from Arkansas. Some of the new ideas were that we are on a long journey, the need for quality food, work being trusted for generations and thinking about people from before birth to death.

Seeds of Change ParticipantWhen Heifer works in communities, we believe strongly in the knowledge and power that comes from the collective of ideas and experience from the community. We believe that communities are in charge of their destiny and that they are the only ones who know what is right for them. By guiding groups through this process of collective visioning, we are helping them articulate what they want for a brighter tomorrow. I was honored to be a part of this important work.

Help fund Heifer’s work in Arkansas and Appalachia to help us bring a brighter tomorrow for more communities, families and individuals in our own backyard.

Heifergraphic: Seeds of Change

Here in the United States, a child is born into poverty every 27 seconds. Data from the USDA suggests that this results in 1 of 5 children being food insecure, meaning that at any time during the year, a child is hungry because of the household’s lack of money and other resources for food. Additionally, the leading causes of death among Americans—heart disease, stroke, diabetes and cancers directly linked to poor nutrition—are rapidly on the rise.

There is a direct connection between economic and physical health and our nation’s food system. In communities across the United States some of the critical missing elements to building localized food systems are farmers, businesses, jobs, capacity and infrastructure.

Two significant pockets of poverty in the United States are the Mississippi River Delta in Arkansas and Southern Appalachia. Heifer USA is focusing its work in these two regions, and if you check out the Heifergraphic below, I think you’ll see why:

Heifer USA infographic

Click Heifergraphic to enlarge.

To help end hunger and poverty in the Arkansas Delta and Southern Appalachia, donate here.

From the CEO: Fighting Poverty Locally

When some people think of hunger and poverty, they picture people struggling in different parts of the world – many of the countries where Heifer is already working. Very rarely do we picture families and individuals that are living in the United States, but it is a reality we need to recognize.

Many Americans are just one major illness or job loss away from sliding below the poverty line, and millions are already there. Roughly 46 million people in the United States live below the official poverty line. One in every five children in the country is food insecure, meaning he or she may have to forgo nutritious foods or meals all together because there’s not enough money to pay for them.

I think we overlook the poverty here in the U.S. because it is difficult to accept and it is even embarrassing. With all the abundance of resources we have, why are people still hungry? Whatever the reason is – perhaps lack of knowledge or lack of access – it is undeniable that families are struggling.

But it doesn’t have to be this way. And it is not a problem that “someone else” can fix. I want to ensure that we rid the world of hunger and poverty, and sometimes that means that the work starts at home.

I’ve received many letters or met with donors that have asked me how they can support Heifer’s work in the United States. Heifer USA recently kicked off Seeds of Change, a five-year project to support and cultivate sustainable community food systems and create jobs in Arkansas and Appalachia. In collaboration with the U.S. Department of Agriculture and other partners, Heifer USA will build a food system value chain that connects farmers with businesses , markets and their communities. I’m so excited about the outcomes from this project and most important is that this project links healthy local food and meaningful work.

Photograph by Russell Powell, courtesy of Heifer International

Now this work will not happen overnight. It will take a lot of time, dedication and effort – from ourselves and from our participants – but change is coming.

Hunger and poverty aren’t tomorrow’s problems. We need to address them today, and with your support we can help families and individuals in need become empowered, self-reliant and economically stable.

I invite you to read the latest issue of the World Ark to read more about Heifer’s work in the United States and how you can support Heifer USA’s Seeds of Change.

Heifer Ranch Trains New Farmers

Some residents of the Arkansas Delta – potential participantsin Heifer’s new Seeds of Change project – got their first look at functioning organic agriculture last weekend at Heifer Ranch in Perryville, Ark.

Trainer Chuck Crimmins shows off new seedlings

Because there are few examples of chemical-free agriculture in the Delta, where cash crops dominate, the four visitors had a lot to learn. Some have already grown crops on the fertile Delta land and others are first-time producers. They were intrigued by niche animal agriculture, including goats, chickens, and bees.

Farmer Everette Woods
Everette Woods of Colt, Ark. currently farms 240 acres of wheat, soy, and sorghum. “When I was young, I swore I’d never go into farming,” he chuckled. But eventually the family business called him back.

Now, as Woods feels himself being squeezed out of the industry by larger players, he’s looking to try a different style of farming. Heifer is a natural partner. Seeing the breadth of knowledge needed to keep an organic farm in balance without chemicals he marveled, “This is hard work!”

The Ranch has been in Heifer’s hands since 1971, originally used to raise livestock that was shipped overseas. Since Heifer began locally sourcing its animals within other countries, the Ranch has been used mainly to educate the public and Heifer supporters. The training day represents a chance for the Ranch to participate directly in Heifer’s mission, as a training facility and resource for project participants.

In one day, trainers Chuck Crimmins and Paul Casey could only skim their detailed knowledge of sustainable agriculture. Every question that the participants asked only cracked another volume of unique challenges and clever solutions. Rotating crops for healthy soil? Chuck could spend days on it. Sheep parasites? Paul could write a book.

Trainer Chuck Crimmins and Chris Johnson of Hughes, Ark. talk chickens.
The participants got more out of their trip than technical instruction, though. Their eyes were opened to opportunity. They learned about the sizzling market for locally-produced food and saw the potential for earning money with Earth-friendly farming. “I feel like a kid again, going on a field trip,” said Antoine Burks, from Hughes, Ark. “Except this was a field trip of dreams.”

The Seed of Change is Planted in Hughes

Heifer CEO Pierre Ferrari and Pearlie S. Reed of the
 USDA sign a proclamation of their support for the Delta.
Photo by Russell Powell.

As we mentioned in an earlier post, Heifer and USDA officials on Monday marked a joint focus on areas of the impoverished Arkansas Delta. The flatlands there are some of the poorest parts of the United States.

The ceremony took place in the town of Hughes, a place where, despite a dwindling population, drug abuse, narrow opportunities and poverty, many residents still share a sense of place and hope for their children.

Photo by Russell Powell.

There’s one store to buy food in Hughes, one gas station and a diner. Some homes in town are tidy and neat, defying their age, while others have caved-in roofs, boarded-up windows and insulation bursting from the walls. It can be difficult to distinguish the abandoned houses from the occupied ones.

Photo by Russell Powell.

At Monday’s ceremony, all the people who are trying to turn Hughes around – scores of them – gathered to celebrate the new Seeds of Change program. Its aim is to increase income in this agricultural area by building up a sustainable local food system.

The produce section at Hughes’ grocery store.
Photo by Russell Powell.

One speaker, Dr. Robert Cole, the director of the East Arkansas Enterprise Community, mentioned the Bible verse that says even if you only have faith as tiny as a mustard seed, nothing will be impossible to you. “Today,” Cole said, “the seed is planted.”


Cole was saying that with hope and hard work, we can create something much, much larger than anyone envisioned at the beginning.

Heifer CEO Pierre Farrari was given a new hat by Delta officials.
He’s joined by Robert Cole of EAEC and Theodore Eldridge, Sr.
Photo by Russell Powell.

When Cole said, “Today, the seed is planted,” I looked around and knew it to be true. Seeing all the people, from inside and outside Hughes, gathered with such hope and excitement, I saw that Hughes is fertile ground in more ways than one.


Leaders in the town are ready for positive change, and with the right plan, Heifer International will now be a partner in their transformation.

Weekly Article Roundup: Ending U.S. Hunger in 2012

Even though we are only a couple of days into the new year, I think we should all make the same resolution; to help end hunger and poverty in our own U.S. backyard. Heifer even has a new U.S. project called Seeds of Hope. This program will work in the Delta of Arkansas and Appalachia on building healthy community food systems. To do this, it will help to organize and provide resources and support for local communities to fight hunger, poverty and environmental degradation.

If you haven’t read any of our past blog post about U.S. hunger and poverty, check them out here. With 49.1 million Americans living in poverty, it’s time that we take a stand and start making a difference in our communities. 
Check out what we’ve been reading this week around the office:
Want to learn more about how Heifer is helping to end hunger in 2012? Check out this video below: