Grow Clean Food & Harvest Water in Rural Oaxaca

Grow Clean Food & Harvest Water in Rural Oaxaca

Grow Clean Food & Harvest Water in Rural Oaxaca

Marking contour lines in the landscape

Marking contour lines in the landscape
During a workshop at the Instituto Tonantzin Tlalli (the ITT, the Group's education center in Ejutla, Oaxaca), participants learn how to read the landscape and apply land restoration techniques. By digging drenches, or swales, following the natural contour lines of the land, runoff water is slowed down and permeates the soil, recharging underground acquifers.

Manual rope pump with solar power alternative

Manual rope pump with solar power alternative
The rope pump exemplifies appropriate technologies that the Group promotes within rural communities - it is inexpensive, easy to build, practical, and has the potential to dramatically improve living conditions. The solar panels are used to pump large quantities of water to storage tanks at higher elevations. From there, gravity distributes water throughout the landscape of our education center, irrigating our organic gardens and providing water for use in the dormitory and kitchen.

Circular biointensive gardening beds

Circular biointensive gardening beds
Participants during a sustainable agriculture workshop engage in hands-on activities to learn about organic gardening techniques. Biointensive beds are designed to cultivate as many vegetables as possible, in the least amount of space possible. A drip irrigation system that conserves water is layed on top of the bed. Participants learn about composting, seed saving, natural pest control, and diversifying for highly nutritious crops.

Organic nopal and medicinal herb garden

Organic nopal and medicinal herb garden
At the Instituto Tonantzin Tlalli, our education center in Oaxaca, we cultivate a variety of crops and demonstrate various agricultural techniques. Nopal, prickly pear cactus, is a staple ingredient in the Mexican diet - it is highly nutritious and easy to grow. In addition to growing a wide variety of medicinal herbs, we organize workshops on herbalism and natural healing. We believe in valuing traditional, local knowledge and complementing it with modern science.

Building a ferrocement water cistern

Building a ferrocement water cistern
Ferrocement is a versatile construction technique that uses readily available and affordable materials to build structures such as water cisterns. Workshop participants form a wire mesh into a cylindrical shape and then cover the mesh with a mixture of cement & sand. Ferrocement water cisterns are much cheaper than pre-fabricated plastic tanks and the technique is easy to learn and replicate. Household water cisterns are designed to collect and store rainwater.

Using plastic bottles to build a water cistern

Using plastic bottles to build a water cistern
We have adopted an innovative construction technique that reuses plastic soda bottles as "bricks" for building up the cylindrical wall of a water cistern. The women and children in the community recovered over 4,000 used bottles, filled them up with sand, and then participated in the construction process. The cistern was designed to collect rainwater from the roof of a chicken coop also built during a 3 week workshop (on left, naturally built out of rammed earth).

Sustainable Agriculture workshop

Sustainable Agriculture workshop
Men, women, and children from a rural indigenous community in the State of Mexico participate in a workshop to learn how to produce their own food. Two years later, this community produced enough organic spinach and tomatoes to consume internally and sale the excess in a local market, thus increasing their health and family income.

Classroom and workshop area at the ITT

Classroom and workshop area at the ITT
At the Instituto Tonantzin Tlalli (ITT) in rural Oaxaca, the Group has welcomed diverse groups of people from around the country to participate in residential living and learning experience. When possible, we allocate scholarships for local community members who otherwise would never have the opportunity to learn about appropriate technologies.

Participatory diagnosis visits with local families

Participatory diagnosis visits with local families
Photo from Progress Report 'Participatory Diagnosis of Local Needs'

Materials for building composting toilets

Materials for building composting toilets
Photo from Progress Report 'Participatory Diagnosis of Local Needs'

Composting toilets out of upcycled materials

Composting toilets out of upcycled materials
Photo from Progress Report 'Participatory Diagnosis of Local Needs'

Doña Juana participating in a hands on workshop to build her fam

Doña Juana participating in a hands on workshop to build her fam
Photo from Progress Report 'Fuel efficient stoves, the glory of rainwater, and regenerating organic landscapes '

Thanks to the rainwater cistern we built last year, Don Tino has

Thanks to the rainwater cistern we built last year, Don Tino has
Photo from Progress Report 'Fuel efficient stoves, the glory of rainwater, and regenerating organic landscapes '

A woman participates in the construction of a fuel efficient sto

A woman participates in the construction of a fuel efficient sto
Photo from Progress Report 'Fuel efficient stoves, the glory of rainwater, and regenerating organic landscapes '

Cistern under construction

Cistern under construction
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater harvesting for a Oaxacan family'

Guadalupe working on the cover for the cistern

Guadalupe working on the cover for the cistern
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater harvesting for a Oaxacan family'

The Aragon Rios family proudly standing next to the completed ci

The Aragon Rios family proudly standing next to the completed ci
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater harvesting for a Oaxacan family'

Jorge and his family proudly standing by the new rainwater stora

Jorge and his family proudly standing by the new rainwater stora
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater storage tanks and solar ovens appear in the Oaxacan landscape'

Women learning how to set up the solar energy cooker

Women learning how to set up the solar energy cooker
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater storage tanks and solar ovens appear in the Oaxacan landscape'

Children are especially excited about the solar cooker

Children are especially excited about the solar cooker
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater storage tanks and solar ovens appear in the Oaxacan landscape'

Don Tino's rustic house and farmland

Don Tino's rustic house and farmland
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater cistern improves farmer's access to clean water'

Don Tino and is family next to the rainwater cistern

Don Tino and is family next to the rainwater cistern
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater cistern improves farmer's access to clean water'

Volunteers and construction crew

Volunteers and construction crew
Photo from Progress Report 'Rainwater cistern improves farmer's access to clean water'

Reusing plastic bottles to build a rain water storage cistern

Reusing plastic bottles to build a rain water storage cistern
Photo from Progress Report 'Upcycling platic bottles for composting toilet and rainwater cistern'

Reusing platic bottles to build walls of a composting toilet mod

Reusing platic bottles to build walls of a composting toilet mod
Photo from Progress Report 'Upcycling platic bottles for composting toilet and rainwater cistern'

Upcycling plastic bottles for building rainwater storage cistern

Upcycling plastic bottles for building rainwater storage cistern
Photo from Progress Report 'Upcycling platic bottles for composting toilet and rainwater cistern'

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