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As well as using Inga to grow food, families can also use it for cash crops, providing a reliable and sustainable income. One of

Our director, Mike Hands, giving a talk in front of the Inga alley exhibit at the Eden Project earlier this week. The talk was

The number of local farmers interested in our work in Honduras is growing week by week. Marvin is one of the newest farmers to

Having finished planting his first plot of Inga alleys, local farmer Martin is now starting on a second. Today Pablo, another Inga farmer from

We teach every farmer who joins our projects to make these A-frames which allow them to work out where the contours lie on their

Though still less than 6 months old, local farmer Paulino’s Inga alleys are rapidly taking shape. 18 months and they will be ready for

Marvin and his family are yet another example of a Honduran family forced to make a living on incredibly steep land like this.  Through

Getting 5000 Inga seedlings in the ground is a big job but Pedro and his family have now planted out every one of these.

Haiti is infamous for the level of deforestation across the country and soil erosion is a huge problem for local farmers. Two members of

Remember Don Santiago, the resourseful local beekeeper and farmer who wanted to plant Inga to benefit his bees – well, he got all his