By Suzanne de Berge | President
Fighting Malnutrition in Rural Guatemala continues to expand to additional villages in the region, so more families are participating, and their friends, family members and neighbors are being exposed to ideas and skills they can use to ensure that their families have enough to eat, and that each meal has improved nutritional content.
We’re also introducing a new concept, the Casa-Granja, or Household Farm, which is designed to bring even more food and nutrition to families, and also offer opportunities for additional income, to further stabilize and improve the household economy.
In many rural communities, the pattern is for a family to have a residential location in the village and further away, a larger “parcela” where a cash crop is farmed (usually by the men.) Household sites vary quite a lot in size and shape, but the casa-granja concept can be applied very flexibly to accommodate both the available space and the family’s needs and interests.
The casa-granja is an organized method of integrating vegetable, fruit and animal production in a compact space, with the left-overs and by-products of each supporting the production needs of the other. Meanwhile, the family diet is enriched with eggs, meat, fish and high-nutrition greens, as well as onions, chile peppers and other tasty condiment plants.
While many families have had a few chickens or a fruit tree for years, organizing the various components of food production into an integrated system is a new concept for families and means learning new ways of doing things.
The Seeds for a Future team provides the basic conceptual knowledge and ideas, and helps customize these for each family. Then, most important, we follow up with regular group meetings and weekly household visits for several months, to provide coaching and follow-up as well as printed materials for the family to keep and refer to.
Our coaching and knowledge-sharing includes the environment (separation and recycling of household waste); the importance of good nutrition and what foods are rich in nutrients; kitchen hygiene and clean water; and especially, how to use the nutritious foods to enhance familiar recipes or prepare new dishes to please their families. Working together, our staff and the women participants have created several booklets of recipes to share with one another.
This is the kind of exciting work your earlier contribution helped us to achieve.
PLEASE RENEW YOUR SUPPORT NOW TO HELP RURAL GUATEMALA FAMILIES SUCCEED IN THE FIGHT AGAINST MALNUTRITION. Click the GIVE NOW button below, share this report with your friends and colleagues and follow us on our Facebook page.
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