small scale farmers

El Salvador: environmentalism in action
El Salvador: environmentalism in action logo
I wasn’t sure what this blog's theme would be, I intended to just update you on the week’s activities but it seems to have evolved into a blog about the environment. Climate change muralAfter being ill, I got back to work on Wednesday, where we finished the climate change mural in the school. I painted a few flowers – I was afraid to do anything importan
Progressio,
8 August 2011
Drought and doubt in El Salvador
Feature,
15 November 2010
Organic small-scale farming - a UK farmer writes
Organic small-scale farming - a UK farmer writes logo
Victor Barry (above, second from the left) reflects on what it’s like to be an organic and low-carbon farmer in the UK. I’m an organic and low-carbon farmer on Treloan Farm, in the beautiful and designated heritage coastal area on the south coast of Cornwall not far from Truro. The fields of the farm end abruptly and cliffs plunge into the sea below.
Progressio,
5 August 2010
Farming for food security in Zimbabwe
Farming for food security in Zimbabwe logo
Progressio regional managers oversee five or six country programmes from the UK. Even when I travel as far as one of our country offices, I can get so bogged down in spreadsheets and visits around town that I never leave the city. So I was particularly excited last week when I set off in a 4x4 for the town of Wedza, 200km south east of Harare. Barney Mawire, the director of our partner o
Progressio,
4 August 2010
Poor farmers escape poverty by going organic, says Progressio
As debate rages in Britain about the relative benefits of organic food, Progressio says that 'going organic' is changing the lives of poor farmers and their families across the developing world. Following a recent report by the UK’s Food Standards Agency, which suggested that organic food has little difference in nutritional value and “no health benefits”, debate has been raging ab
Daniel Hale,
6 August 2009
Poor farmers escape poverty by going organic, says Progressio
As debate rages in Britain about the relative benefits of organic food, Progressio says that 'going organic' is changing the lives of poor farmers and their families across the developing world. Following a recent report by the UK’s Food Standards Agency, which suggested that organic food has little difference in nutritional value and “no health benefits”, debate has been raging ab
Daniel Hale,
6 August 2009