|
This year we planted a small coffee plantation using terraces with very large holes. We filled the holes with the chicken manure and rice husk fertilizer and mixed with good soil. It is really helping the coffee seedlings to grow. We are also creating compost with all of our waste from the kitchen, along with the leaves that we sweep up in the yard. With the help of SHI, I now have a small chicken coop and have begun selling eggs in a small shop that I opened. This has helped me to keep sending my daughter to school to finish her secondary classes. I am very grateful for your support of SHI. I can’t tell you how happy I am. I hope my neighbors will have the same fate as I do and can be helped in the same way. Thank you,
How can you help? Join us on our Smaller World Honduran Coffee Tour, or give a Reforest a Family Farm Gift of Hope to your friends and family!
|
For Rita Julia, working with SHI has been life changing
- font size decrease font size increase font size
-
Published in
Email Updates
Related items (by tag)
Article Archive
Newsletter Archive
Download past SHI
newsletters in PDF format.
2011 Spring | Fall
2010 Spring | Fall
2009 Spring | Fall
2008 Spring | Fall
2007 Spring | Fall
2006 Spring | Fall
2005 Spring | Fall
2004 Spring | Fall
2003 Spring | Fall
2002 Spring | Fall
Download Adobe Reader
for free to view these PDFs.
Audio Interviews
Voices from the Field
Video Interviews
Find Articles by Tag
2008Fall
2008Spring
2009Fall
2009Spring
2010Fall
2010Spring
2011Fall
2011Spring
animal husbandry
awards
bees
belize
biochar
business
children
coffee
community
compost
CSA
dairy goats
demo farm
education
fertilizer
field trainer
fish
garden
global issues
graduate
grain
homestay
honduras
jatropha
lending
maine
market
men
microcredit
nicaragua
nutrition
panama
partners
pesticide
pest management
photo
poverty
reforestation
rice paddies
rural banks
seedsaving
smaller world
soil
stove
stoves
techniques
testimonials
trees
volunteer
waste disposal
watershed
women
worm composting
Since I began working with SHI, so much has changed in my life, especially now that I understand things such as how to use chicken manure and rice husks for fertilizer. My field trainer, Daysbeth, has shown me how to ferment this into a liquid mix that is very hot at first, but after ten days it is ready to be used.

"SHI is our favorite organization to support. They are well run and have a grounded, workable knowledge of what can be done to help improve the lives of those they serve. In fact they serve us all. The impact of their work affects not only farmers in Central America, but also their families, communities, countries, and ultimately it plays it's part in the sustainability of our global ecosystem. SHI thinks globally, acts locally. Their hearts are in the right place. Please support them if you can." 


