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-   -   Heirloom Tomatoes to the Rescue (http://www.tomatoville.com/showthread.php?t=20594)

OtterJon December 18, 2011 08:11 PM

Heirloom Tomatoes to the Rescue
 
Short video I came across on how local foods help malnutrition in Guatemala. Thought it was interesting.

[url]http://www.takepart.com/video/heirloom-tomatoes-rescue[/url]

Douglas14 December 18, 2011 11:35 PM

Interesting indeed. Thanks!

Alpinejs December 18, 2011 11:44 PM

OtterJon.....Thanks so mujch for that video. The need in the mtns. of Guatamala is great.
I sponsor a young boy up there through Common Hope and my son goes there for a
week in the spring and again in the fall to do free surgeries, many of which we rarely
see such as cleft palates, hairlips, goiters, etc., but they are life altering if not fixed.
An unmended cleft palate person has little chance of ever marrying as just one example.
What an impact from the efforts of someone to provide renewable seed for even small
gardens. Judging by the foliage, the soil must be plenty adequate.

Way off topic, but I, like many others like to spend Bill Gate's money. I think he should
make an offer of one billion (yes, billion) dollars to any University in the world that can
perfect an economical huge volume de-salination plant where ocean water could be
pumped through pipelines like oil to parched areas for agriculture and re-forestation.
The end effect on this ol' planet is mind boggling!! Sorry for straying.

Medbury Gardens December 18, 2011 11:53 PM

A diet made up of beans and maze only!! :shock:no wonder they were suffering from malnutrition

habitat_gardener December 19, 2011 01:27 AM

[QUOTE=Alpinejs;244155]...Way off topic, but I, like many others like to spend Bill Gate's money. I think he should
make an offer of one billion (yes, billion) dollars to any University in the world that can
perfect an economical huge volume de-salination plant where ocean water could be
pumped through pipelines like oil to parched areas for agriculture and re-forestation.
The end effect on this ol' planet is mind boggling!! Sorry for straying.[/QUOTE]

Yeah, the most effective use of money (if you have billions) is often infrastructure. But I'd spend it on lower-tech, smaller-scale innovations. I attended a talk by Radha Basu this summer and was astounded at all the frugal innovation.
[url]http://www.scu.edu/socialbenefit/news/blog.cfm?b=142&tag=2975[/url]


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