Pamela Anderson Meets Local Farmers
Local farmer Martin shows Pamela Anderson around his new Inga alley plot and explains the difference the project is making for him and his family.
Local farmer Martin shows Pamela Anderson around his new Inga alley plot and explains the difference the project is making for him and his family.
Pamela Anderson made the journey out to Honduras to see for herself how our work is protecting the rainforest and providing families with secure, sustainable livelihoods. Here she is getting stuck in and helping...
Our Director, Mike Hands, has just returned from an action-packed 3 weeks out visiting our projects in Honduras. Keep an eye on out over the next few days to find out about all the...
And just 1 week on, those same Inga seeds have come to life. Another 6 months and they will be nearly head height. 2 years on and they’ll be part of working Inga alley...
Inga seeds have no dormancy period which can make logistics a little complicated at times. Often the safest way to keep them for a few days extra while the newest families finish preparing their...
We’re seeing more and more families wanting to give up slash and burn in favour of Inga alley cropping. So many in fact that we’ve been struggling to track down enough Inga seeds for...
The Guardian today launched the 1st of a new three-part series of short films looking at the devastating consequences to the Honduran rainforest of slash-and-burn farming and how our work can help end this...
You might remember Don Santiago, the resourceful farmer and beekeeper who wanted to take up Inga alley cropping because of the benefit it would have to his bees. Well, he’s now in the process...
The young Inga alleys at our new Project Centre are starting to take shape – in under 2 years they will be mature and ready for use as Demonstration Plots to help us convince...
We’ve just started a whole set of new families on their way toward giving up slash and burn. The first step for each family is to create their own Inga Tree Nursery. We’re still...