Showing posts with label mission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mission. Show all posts
Friday, May 18, 2018
Fishing
Things are expensive. Yes, even in Malawi. There, people can pay two full days' pay for a small bag of beans. Knowing this, I can appreciate the question posed to me by, what I hope are, well-meaning individuals.
Why don't we buy the supplies needed to build the dehydrators here, in the United States, and take them with us when we go to Malawi? Or, better yet, why don't we simply build the dehydrators and ship them over?
Although either of these options would be less expensive and, quite possibly, less of a hassle, they do not match up with our mission.
I was recently reminded that we are fishing. Obviously, we are not actually fishing with rods and reels. However, we are fishing like the saying: Give a man a fish and you feed him for a day - teach a man to fish and you feed him for a lifetime. It is important to us to teach the ins and outs of solar dehydrators - how to build, fix, and use them - so that when we are gone more can be made and used. This will not happen by buying and building here.
Another reason taking the cheaper route in building dehydrators does not match up with our mission has to do with the fact that Malawi is ranked the third poorest country in the world. We believe it is important to support the local economy, to support those people who are working hard to provide for their families.
So, although money is important, especially to non-profit organizations like ours, we believe people are more important. And because of this, we will happily continue to buy locally. And we will continue to fish.
Sunday, January 29, 2017
Standing Together
There is hardly a more inspiring picture of strength and dedication than a mother taking care of her family. The mothers of Malawi are a prime example of this as they overcome a slew of obstacles on a daily basis simply to meet their families' needs. We are here to stand with these remarkable women to help them meet those needs a little easier, equipping them with the resources they need to increase food security.
Saturday, July 2, 2016
Thoughts from Riley Richards
Wonderful people, I have recently been given the incredible opportunity to become the Marketing Director of the organization Tricycle Harvest International.
But the more profoundly exciting thing is that by utilizing sustainable solar dehydration techniques, as well as encouraging, educating, and equipping people to do the same for themselves, hunger in rural Africa could conceivably be eradicated in the foreseeable future. This is the aim of Tricycle Harvest. It is not simply about saving lives (as vitally meaningful as that is), but it is about cultural enrichment and breaking the cycle of poverty for people who have known little else. Starving people could finally have enough food.
I would be deeply honored and delighted to have you all be a part of this as well, in whatever capacity you are able. It simply can't be done without help, and we would love to have yours.
Take a peek at the website, www.tricycleharvest.org for more information.
Stay gold.
Thursday, June 23, 2016
the Mission
I started Tricycle Harvest International because the idea of someone dying every four seconds simply because they didn't have enough food became unbearable to me. The effects of a lack of food are life long and ending hunger became my passion. But, admittedly, the task seemed overwhelming. That is until I remembered Mother Teresa's quote: "If you can't feed a hundred people then just feed one." And I thought, I can do that. And then that one person turned into one family and then one village and then one district.
The solution to ending hunger in rural Africa came to me after traveling to developing nations and seeing rotting piles of produce in fields, by the street and behind markets. People had worked so hard to grow fruit and vegetables but because of a lack of electricity there was no refrigeration. And without money and access to jars and lids there was no canning. There simply was no way to preserve the food. And then I had it.
I grew up with my mom drying food and I have been using a food dehydrator in my own home for several years. Put that together with the sun's energy - a free and renewable resource available to all, even the extremely poor in rural Africa, and we have sustainable food preservation. By using solar dehydrators the food is kept safe, away from bugs, rodents, and bacteria as it dries.
That is why Tricycle Harvest International exists - to end hunger through the teaching, building, and giving of solar dehydrators to those living in extreme poverty in the villages in Africa.
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