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Showing posts from March, 2023

Storytelling Strategies for Agricultural & Economic Development in Guatemala

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Volunteering with USAID-funded Farmer-to-Farmer Program in San Pedro Las Huertas By Laurie Posner, F2F Volunteer in February 2023 A sapphire sky ringed by hulking volcanoes. Sun yellow, brick red and ochre facades giving way to cobblestone streets, then dusty roadways and forested hillsides. These, the impressions that arise as we head toward the outskirts of Antigua to Yogi Super Foods’ factory in San Pedro Las Huertas. In late January, Guatemala’s Central Highlands region is pretty much the polar opposite of my home in Southeast Michigan. Emphasis on polar. Rooftop solar panels installed at Yogi Super Foods’ factory in San Pedro Las Huertas. Photo: Laurie Posner When we reach the small factory, it’s bustling with construction — and creativity. This past year, YSF founder and CEO Marco Barbi and his team have installed rooftop solar panels to make good on the company’s promise of greater energy efficiency and sustainability. Meanwhile, production manager Hector Jolón tests new equipme

World Water Day: Community Water Conservation and Education in the Wayuu Indigenous Community

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I previously volunteered with Farmer-to-Farmer in the Dominican Republic, but this was my first assignment in Colombia. When I was contacted for a water quality focused assignment in northern Colombia, I was thrilled to accept the assignment. My assignment was to train schoolteachers and other members of the Wayuu indigenous community in water desalinization, water purification techniques, and other agricultural activities.  After an initial meeting with the local sponsoring organization, Fundación Maria Luisa , and teachers at the school, I was given a tour of typical vegetable, fruit, and livestock production. I was also shown sources of water which include shallow hand-dug wells, a few windmill or solar-powered community wells, and a nearby river. Access to clean and adequate quantities of water is always a struggle, particularly for rancherias further away from wells. During dry months, water is scarce and often has trace salts and other contamination issues. The community was very

Interactive and Accessible Watershed Conservation Education through Scale Models

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Pictured above from left to right: F2F Field Officers Franqui Linarez and Maria Montas, F2F Volunteers Patricia Algara and Cesar Cahusac  Last year, Patricia Algara was invited to the Dominican Republic to consult with APEDI and Fondo Agua Yaque del Norte through Partners of the Americas’ USAID-funded Farmer-to-Farmer Program. In their effort to promote education and conservation of the Yaque del Norte River's natural resources they want to build a interactive scale model of the entire watershed at the Parque Central in Santiago so that people can better understand the importance and magnitude of the river and the impacts that urban and agricultural pollution is having on its waters.  The Yaque del Norte River Basin is the most important one in the Dominican Republic, with an extension of 7.053 km², equivalent to a 14.6% of the national territory. It impacts around 1.8 million people in 40 different municipalities from six different provinces. It has a length of 296 kilometers an

A Packed two weeks of Agro-Processing in Guyana!

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By: Carolyn Kreuzkamp It has now been four days since I left my F2F assignment in Guyana. The emotions I feel are mixed: sadness from leaving the country right when I was becoming familiar with its rhythms, people, and food; joy for having been kindly welcomed into the homes and workplaces of total strangers; exhaustion from working day & night to complete a years’ worth of work and research in two weeks; and hope for the opportunity to return and build upon the strong foundation of both personal and professional relationships I invested in while on my first F2F assignment. Within two weeks of finding out about the F2F Guyana opportunity, I was screened, onboarded, and delivered to Georgetown with an open mind. I was excited to work with Ashdel Enterprise, a women-led agro-processing company, as a business plan and marketing specialist. I jumped right in when I arrived. Grace Parris, the owner of Ashdel Enterprise and I made a list of needs much more thorough and nuanced than the

International Women's Day: Women in F2F!

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Happy International Women’s Day! Did you know that women make up 43% of global agricultural labor force? The Farmer-to-Farmer program at Partners of the Americas is proud to work with talented women throughout the Americas, from our US-based volunteer experts to the communities of women agricultural producers and leaders.  Since 2019, we have hosted over 180 women volunteers in the six countries that we work in. Meet some of our women volunteers and women-led hosts below! Maria Luisa's Foundation, Colombia Jan Surface traveled to La Guajira, Colombia to support the Wayuu indigenous community at their school, Pulitchamana . She conducted trainings in water management, conservation, and basic desalination and filtering techniques, improving the quality of water to which children and the entire community have access. Institute of the Environment, The Dominican Republic Kristina Howlett worked with students at the Institute of the Environment as an ESL Specialist. She created didactic