Radio Scripts in Chronological Order
- 83.10 Financial Management For Smallholder Farmers
- 83.9 Rainwater From Large Rock Surfaces Can Be Used To Irrigate Crops: A New Technology From Kibaale District, Uganda
- 83.8 Farmers’ Cooperatives Help Zambian Farmers Survive And Thrive
- 83.7 Forming An Effective Farmers’ Cooperative
- 83.6 Cooperative Farm Labour: Many Hands Make Work Easier
- 83.5 Seeing The Difference: Project Makes Farming More Attractive By Improving Farming Methods And Income
- 83.4 Radio Spots: Protect Your Health And The Community From Agricultural Pesticides And Fertilizers
- 83.3 Market News from MEGA FM
- 83.2 Maternal Health, Part Two
- 83.1 Maternal Health, Part One
- 82.10 Local groups in Cameroon work to eradicate 'breast ironing'
- 82.9 Widow cleansing: 'Good' intentions – negative consequences
- 82.8 Rural women process and sell shea butter
- 82.7 Appropriate farming tools for African women farmers
- 82.6 Fonio
- 82.5 When parents die of AIDS, farming knowledge often dies too
- 82.4 No more female genital cutting: Villages in Senegal celebrate 10 years of women's rights
- 82.3 Maternal postpartum depression
- 82.2 Selenium can help people living with HIV and AIDS
- 82.1 Violence against women and HIV/AIDS
- 81.10 Fruit Changes Farmers' Lives
- 81.9 Let's Preserve Our Fruit and Vegetables!
- 81.8 Deforestation and Global Warming: Who is Responsible?
- 81.7 Gender and HIV/AIDS
- 81.6 Farmers Try to Beat a Virulent Disease
- 81.5 The Grim Fate of Farm Labourers in the Western Cape, South Africa
- 81.4 New Technique Reduces Work Needed to Thin Millet
- 81.3 The Speaking Scarecrows
- 81.2 Powder of Little Pepper Protects Stored Rice
- 81.1 A Local Plant Prevents Pest Damage to Stored Seeds
- 80.10 Smartly Designed Animal Cart Helps Sudanese Farmer
- 80.9 Growing Potatoes Brings Increased Income to Farmers in Kabale, Uganda
- 80.8 Legumes Make Their Own Fertilizer – With Help From Their Friends
- 80.7 Jatropha – Not Just a Biofuel Crop!
- 80.6 Raising Snails for Food and Profit
- 80.5 Tanzanian Farmers Succeed With Co-operative Cashew Growing Plan
- 80.4 Fact Sheet on Bamboo
- 80.3 Farmers Can Earn Income Producing Compost
- 80.2 Raising Rabbits for Meat and Profit: Part Two
- 80.1 Raising Rabbits for Meat and Profit: Part One
- 79.9 A Law on Bush Fires
- 79.8 Storing Cowpea Seeds for a Season and a Reason
- 79.7 Biosecurity – A New Way to Look at Avian Flu Prevention
- 79.6 Three Fishing Ladies with a Message about Solar Dryers
- 79.5 High Quality Crops Improve Income and Reduce Poverty
- 79.4 Micro-doses of Fertilizer Increase Yields in the Sahel
- 79.3 Aflatoxin, Enemy of Food and People
- 79.2 Avian Influenza Spots
- 79.1 Improved Honey Production and Processing in Dryland Kenya
- 78.10 Local Experts Give Practical Advice to Care for the Environment
- 78.9 Our People
- 78.8 Pass on the Message and Not the Virus
- 78.7 The Trial of the International Monetary System
- 78.6 Community Reforestation Brings Back the Rains in the Brong Ahafo Region of Ghana
- 78.5 School Without AIDS
- 78.4 Nutritious Foods are Important for All Babies, Rich or Poor
- 78.3 Promote Gender Equality and Empower Women
- 78.2 Fan Clubs for Education
- 78.1 Making Traditional Mustard in Moba Country, Togo
- 77 The Long Dry Season: A Tale of Greed and Resourcefulness
- 76.10 Mangoes can be a good investment for farmers in drylands
- 76.9 A woman farmer harvests water and grows vegetables in the dry season
- 76.8 Which is the most important tree of all?
- 76.7 Villagers in Malawi discuss the role of trees in their community
- 76.6 Camels provide farmers in drylands with milk and income
- 76.5 An alternative fuel source: Make charcoal briquettes from banana peels
- 76.4 Improved fallows provide benefits for farmers
- 76.3 Improved fallows for African farmers
- 76.2 Is tillage really necessary? The benefits of Conservation Agriculture
- 76.1 The promise of Conservation Agriculture
- 75.9 Catch rain from your roof
- 75.8 Grow more food in drylands with planting pits
- 75.7 Kenyan farmer uses organic farming practices
- 75.6 Farmers have important knowledge about weather and environmental change – Part II: Preparing for drought
- 75.5 Farmers have important knowledge about weather and environmental change – Part I: Learning about local signs of drought
- 75.4 The slow march of the Kalahari
- 75.3 Secondary school in South Africa harvests rainwater from the roof
- 75.2 Malawian farmer catches water for crops in trenches and pits
- 75.1 Nature is never naked: The importance of mulch
- 74.9 Choose the right trees to grow with crops
- 74.8 Farmers who use improved fallows must replace phosphorous in soils
- 74.7 Radio spots: tree planting
- 74.6 Kenyan farmer treasures the calliandra tree
- 74.5 Trees provide fodder for livestock
- 74.4 Visit to a tree nursery
- 74.3 "When it rains": The role of trees in preventing soil erosion
- 74.2 Dilemma of a cocoa farmer: To keep or cut the trees?
- 74.1 The fight between the big trees
- 73.10 Story ideas to help rural communities cope with labour shortages and other impacts of HIV and AIDS
- 73.9 Mummy Cheetah and her babies: A story to help orphaned children talk
- 73.8 Misconceptions and acceptance: People living with HIV/AIDS need love and compassion
- 73.7 Share farming knowledge with your children
- 73.6 The importance of security crops
- 73.5 Cereal banks can contribute to food security
- 73.4 Women, property and inheritance
- 73.3 Choosing crops for drought-prone areas
- 73.2 Improved cookstoves make life easier for women
- 73.1 Community responses to HIV/AIDS
- 72.11 Pesticide accumulation: a chain of poison
- 72.10 The "push-pull" approach to controlling stem borers in maize
- 72.9 Controlling the diamondback moth: a serious pest of the Brassica vegetable family
- 72.8 Managing the banana weevil
- 72.7 Protect stored grain from beetle damage
- 72.6 Crop rotation and intercropping reduce damage from striga weed
- 72.5 Remove striga weeds carefully from your field
- 72.4 Reduce pests naturally with biological pest control
- 72.3 Radio spots: Can you control pests without pesticides?
- 72.2 Understanding plant diseases
- 72.1 Is an insect always a pest?
- 71.10 Supply water directly to plant roots with pitcher and drip irrigation
- 71.9 A community builds a groundwater dam to solve its water problems
- 71.8 Harvesting water using earth banks
- 71.7 Use barriers to harvest run-off water for crops
- 71.6 Farmers can catch more water in their fields: Radio spots
- 71.5 Alternatives to slash and burn agriculture: improve fallows with Tithonia, the wild sunflower
- 71.4 Grow moringa for food and fodder
- 71.3 The many uses of the moringa tree
- 71.2 Recommendations for managing bacterial wilt in bananas for eastern Africa
- 71.1 Farmers in eastern Nigeria grow the fluted pumpkin
- 70.5 Making something with nothing: the rubbish garden
- 70.4 Families benefit when girls go to school
- 70.3 Nutrition – advice to an expectant mother
- 70.2 Sara's mother goes to work and brings home healthy food
- 70.1 Women produce most of our food
- 69.11 Make sure tools and workloads are appropriate for children
- 69.10 Protecting children from child labour
- 69.9 Protect children from pesticides
- 69.8 AIDS orphans need care, protection and education
- 69.7 AIDS orphans: Overcoming stigma, discrimination and denial
- 69.6 HIV/AIDS: Preventing mother-to-child transmission
- 69.5 Who benefits when girls stay in school?
- 69.4 Children have a right to play and to learn
- 69.3 Children need vitamin A
- 69.2 Sometimes old ways need to change
- 69.1 A healthy diet for babies and young children
- 68.9 Protecting farmer innovations and traditional knowledge
- 68.8 Comparing crop varieties: start small, go slowly
- 68.7 Save time with rainwater harvesting
- 68.6 Harvesting soil and water on hillsides
- 68.5 Earning extra income for the family - one woman's success story
- 68.4 Mushrooms for sale
- 68.3 Rehabilitating degraded land: planting trees in pits
- 68.2 Sharing farmer innovations
- 68.1 Compare farm methods on different test plots
- 67.10 Mummy Tiger and her babies: How children experience conflict
- 67.9 Health considerations for refugees
- 67.8 Women face many challenges after conflict
- 67.7 Conflict over natural resources: A short story
- 67.6 Dispute over a sacred stream: Villagers describe the conflict
- 67.5 Growing vegetables in a refugee camp
- 67.4 Sharing the load after conflict: Villagers start a revolving loan fund
- 67.3 An innovative farmer grows food for refugees
- 67.2 "Survival" crops provide food during times of need
- 67.1 Rebuilding local seed supplies after armed conflict or other emergency situations
- 66.10 Farmers' helpers : radio and extension help farmers plan
- 66.9 Marketing : calculating your costs
- 66.8 Where to sell : making the best choice
- 66.7 A glut in the market : how supply and demand affect prices
- 66.6 Trusting the trader : the importance of reliable information
- 66.5 Low-cost food processing : making tomato sauce
- 66.4 Low-cost food processing : preserving foods as jams or sauces
- 66.3 When rats gain, farmers lose : how to store grain properly
- 66.2 Avoid post-harvest losses with proper handling : 8 radio spots
- 66.1 Avoid farm losses by improving storage methods
- 65.9 Nutrition and health : story ideas for the radio
- 65.8 Which farmer would you rather be? A story about diversification
- 65.7 Food is medicine : HIV/AIDS and nutrition
- 65.6 Families benefit when girls go to school
- 65.5 Good nutrition for the whole family : radio spots
- 65.4 Winning the race with traditional foods
- 65.3 What is food security?
- 65.2 Sara's mother goes to work and brings home healthy food
- 65.1 Diversify crops to keep your family healthy
- 64.10 Disaster prevention, mitigation and recovery : story ideas for the radio
- 64.9 Helping survivors cope after a disaster
- 64.8 Your community group can help in times of disaster
- 64.7 Storing grain for times of need
- 64.6 Farmer Phiri uses infiltration pits to combat drought
- 64.5 Communities manage watersheds together
- 64.4 Soil conservation saves the land, even when a hurricane strikes
- 64.3 Protect your livestock in times of emergency
- 64.2 Trees against disaster
- 64.1 How farmers can adapt to a changing climate
- 63.9 Keep livestock clean and comfortable
- 63.8 The adventures of Neddy the ParaVet : fodder trees provide nutritious livestock feed
- 63.7 The adventures of Neddy the ParaVet : the value of indigenous veterinary practices
- 63.6 A mystery at the dairy : the importance of proper sanitation when working with animals
- 63.5 Animal diseases can affect people
- 63.4 Practise pen and pasture rotation to reduce parasites in livestock
- 63.3 The role of native breeds in maintaining livestock health : story ideas for the radio
- 63.2 Radio spots about livestock health
- 63.1 A guide for broadcasters to some important livestock diseases
- 62.11 Information sources about HIV/AIDS
- 62.10 Mummy Cheetah and her babies : a story to help orphaned children talk
- 62.9 An AIDS widow learns her rights
- 62.8 Successful enterprises bring needed income in times of crisis
- 62.7 A community revives a traditional method of grain storage
- 62.6 Women save time on the farm
- 62.5 Anybody can get AIDS
- 62.4 Misconceptions and acceptance : learning to be compassionate towards people with HIV/AIDS
- 62.3 Quiz show : questions and answers about HIV/AIDS
- 62.2 HIV/AIDS : myths and facts
- 62.1 Suggested story ideas to help broadcasters meet the challenges of HIV/AIDS and its impact
- 61.12 The work of the earthworm
- 61.11 Dealing with rats
- 61.10 Use manure to protect trees from animals
- 61.9 Dr. Compost answers questions about soil improvement
- 61.8 Prevent bird damage to crops
- 61.7 Make compost in pits
- 61.6 Dr. Compost talks about compost piles
- 61.5 A scientist respects farmers' wisdom
- 61.4 Farmers and scientists harvest rainwater in India
- 61.3 Farmers profit from financial planning: Three short stories
- 61.2 Ekua makes a budget
- 61.1 Farmers profit from a budget
- 60.10 Indigenous knowledge and livestock raising
- 60.9 The Mazibuko trench garden
- 60.8 The importance of making soup
- 60.7 Making peanut butter the local way
- 60.6 Interview with the potato
- 60.5 One good idea leads to another in Cameroon
- 60.4 A traditional milling technique
- 60.3 A local farmer predicts floods
- 60.2 Farmers and scientists working together
- 60.1 The importance of indigenous knowledge
- 59.12 A better life in the country
- 59.11 Rural youth success stories
- 59.10 Youth credit supports youth business
- 59.9 Young people can learn from their elders
- 59.8 Children have a right to play and to learn
- 59.7 Young people are at risk on the farm
- 59.6 Habits ... a drama about youth and drugs
- 59.5 AIDS: Young people talk about how AIDS affects family life
- 59.4 AIDS: Youth take action to prevent a killer disease
- 59.3 Understanding each other: The importance of listening to youth and children
- 59.2 Sara learns about health and nutrition at school
- 59.1 Sara stays in school
- 58.11 Grow and eat nutritious yams
- 58.10 My friend the dependable sweet potato
- 58.9 Farmers experiment and discover: you can store cassava
- 58.8 Green leafy vegetables are healthy foods
- 58.7 The advantages of growing and using finger millet
- 58.6 The three sisters: maize, beans and squash
- 58.5 Grow your own fertilizer : Plant cover crops with maize
- 58.4 Growing maize with trees
- 58.3 Diversity beats disease in the rice field
- 58.2 Improve rice yields without buying fertilizer
- 58.1 Protect your rice: prevent grain loss from harvest to storage
- 57.12 It's important for women to vote in elections
- 57.11 Women working together can make a difference in their community
- 57.10 My body, myself: A bittersweet choice
- 57.9 Land ownership rights: Access denied - why women need equal access to land
- 57.8 Making ends meet
- 57.7 A community school for boys ... and girls!
- 57.6 Nutrition - advice to an expectant mother
- 57.5 Women and credit - Part 3: Women set up a purchasing and marketing cooperative
- 57.4 Women and credit - Part 2: Women start a revolving loan fund
- 57.3 Women and credit - Part 1: Women learn about credit
- 57.2 Salma goes into business
- 57.1 Women produce most of our food
- 56.8 Storing seeds in a community seed bank
- 56.7 Collecting seeds for a community seed bank
- 56.6 Starting a community seed bank
- 56.5 Does your community need a seed bank?
- 56.4 Grow many different crops and crop varieties: Radio Spots
- 56.3 Farmers use traditional seed storage in Botswana
- 56.2 Plant breeding in the Philippines
- 56.1 Diversification on the farm
- 55.9 Trees and terraces prevent hillside flooding
- 55.8 Food, fruit and fuelwood from a small hillside farm
- 55.7 A farmer turns wasteland into rainforest
- 55.6 Radio spots: tree planting
- 55.5 The forest garden: a garden with shelves
- 55.4 The supermarket garden
- 55.3 Grow vegetable crops with coconuts
- 55.2 Who owns the trees?
- 55.1 Choose the right trees to grow with crops
- 54.11 Use moringa seeds to clean dirty water
- 54.10 Velvet bean shades the wash basin
- 54.9 These crops will help you through the drought
- 54.8 The many uses of water hyacinth
- 54.7 Catch rain from your roof
- 54.6 A dryland garden tour
- 54.5 Save soil on hillside plots
- 54.4 Infiltration pits catch water for crops
- 54.3 Garden while you shower
- 54.2 How trees store water and protect springs
- 54.1 Trees and rain
- 53.10 Intercropping: radio spots
- 53.9 How to intercrop yam, maize, melon and cowpea
- 53.8 Cuba parks its tractors and returns to oxen
- 53.7 Container gardens provide fresh vegetables for city dwellers
- 53.6 Grow food in the city
- 53.5 Cuba promotes "green" medicine
- 53.4 Be careful when you transport bananas
- 53.3 Cuba rediscovers the value of root crops
- 53.2 The big-headed ant - a farmer's friend
- 53.1 Mr Santana's rooftop garden
- 52.10 Breathe easier in your home: reduce indoor air pollution
- 52.9 Deforestation and health: a woman's perspective
- 52.8 Mosquitos and dengue fever
- 52.7 A village in India promotes sanitation
- 52.6 The importance of latrines
- 52.5 Dirty water is dangerous
- 52.4 Local plant controls pests in lowland rice
- 52.3 What is integrated pest management?
- 52.2 Pesticide accumulation: a chain of poison
- 52.1 Pesticides can hurt unborn children
- 51.9 Eat garlic for good health
- 51.8 A fodder hedge provides feed for cattle in the dry season
- 51.7 Chickens eats ticks on cattle
- 51.6 A house to keep chickens healthy
- 51.5 Alternative feeds for poultry and pigs
- 51.4 Treat animal diseases with medicinal plants
- 51.3 A farmer practices zero grazing
- 51.2 The cow that reunited a family
- 51.1 Livestock and the natural environment
- 50.10 Stop plastic pollution
- 50.9 Pesticide safety: radio spots
- 50.8 Why bees and pesticides don't mix
- 50.7 Stop soil erosion with living plant barriers
- 50.6 Growing coffee with shade trees : a conversation
- 50.5 A school garden in India
- 50.4 Farmers in Nicaragua challenge El Nino
- 50.3 Choose energy sources wisely
- 50.2 Farming for the future: some practical methods
- 50.1 Farming for the future: introduction
- 49.9 Woman farmer invents a cassava grinder
- 49.8 Marie and Jean Thomas grow tropical flowers in coconut husks
- 49.7 Medicinal plants reduce muscle pain
- 49.6 Iodine : the hidden hunger
- 49.5 Jamaican cooperative members join a credit union
- 49.4 A successful cooperative in Jamaica
- 49.3 Learning to manage a loan
- 49.2 Women start a loan fund
- 49.1 Banks open for small business
- 48.12 New international law will affect farmers in developing countries
- 48.11 Harvest fresh vegetables for several months
- 48.10 Use hot peppers to protect stored grain
- 48.9 Improve manure to make better fertilizer
- 48.8 A school garden brings land back to life
- 48.7 Corn in the classroom
- 48.6 Grain amaranth : beautiful and nutritious
- 48.5 Sunchokes provide food for people and animals
- 48.4 Tips about tools and transplants
- 48.3 The beekeepers of Shewula
- 48.2 Equipment to start beekeeping
- 48.1 A simple way to feed baby rabbits
- 47.9 What is El Niño?
- 47.8 Making something with nothing: the rubbish garden
- 47.7 How bees help you make money
- 47.6 How bees make honey
- 47.5 Why plants make good neighbours
- 47.4 Compost a friend to trees
- 47.3 Compost - a wonderful food for your garden
- 47.2 You can make compost in two to three weeks
- 47.1 Make compost as your vegetables grow
- 46.10 A mother helps to start a school garden
- 46.9 Choosing a school garden site
- 46.8 Keeping food safe, part two
- 46.7 Keeping food safe, part one
- 46.6 Use branch cuttings to create living fences
- 46.5 The many uses of bitter leaf
- 46.4 A simple tool to harness fruit
- 46.3 From loss to profit - an organic farming success story, part 2
- 46.2 From loss to profit - an organic farming success story, part 1
- 46.1 Apply water evenly with a watering wand
- 45.9 Understanding plant diseases - Part two
- 45.8 Understanding plant diseases - Part one
- 45.7 Growing vegetables when water is scarce
- 45.2 Villagers use grazing system to protect their land
- 44.9 Save soil on sloping land
- 44.8 The many uses of the prickly pear cactus
- 44.4 Protect tree seedlings from termite damage
- 44.3 Cross-ridging holds precious rainwater on the land
- 44.2 Windbreaks protect crops and soil
- 44.1 A fertility trench holds water in dry lands
- 43.8 Stone lines reduce erosion
- 43.5 A woman farmer fallows with trees
- 43.4 Reduce, reuse, recycle: radio spots
- 43.3 Prevent erosion - plant vetiver grass
- 42.8 Use half-moon ditches to prevent soil erosion
- 42.6 Stop your land from turning to desert
- 42.2 Save your own seeds - Part two: Seed storage
- 42.1 Save your own seeds - Part one: Seed selection
- 41.13 Live fences protect crops and plants
- 41.12 Anemia, a sickness of the blood
- 41.11 Growing fruit in the city
- 41.10 AIDS Part 4: Ali's special friend
- 41.9 AIDS Part 3 : You can stop the spread of sexually transmitted diseases
- 41.8 AIDS Part 2 : Sarah practices safe sex
- 41.7 AIDS Part 1: What am I?
- 41.6 New skills help women earn extra money
- 41.5 Gardening in tires
- 41.4 The ceramic jiko stove
- 41.3 Hints for the small farmer
- 41.2 Reduce lead in city gardens
- 41.1 Make drylands productive with planting pits
- 40.8 You and your environment: radio spots
- 40.7 What is happening to the weather?
- 40.6 Use the sun to cook your food
- 40.5 Acid pollution is in the air
- 40.4 Cleaning without polluting
- 40.3 Environmental conservation begins at home
- 40.2 Dams and hydroelectricity
- 40.1 Let's save our tropical forests
- 39.4 Chickens fertilize and weed the garden
- 39.3 Prevent blindness with vitamin A
- 39.2 Garden on your rooftop
- 39.1 Grow vegetable vines in small spaces
- 38.10 Integrated pest management - radio spots
- 38.8 Friends and enemies of aphids
- 38.7 Preserve fruit by making jam
- 38.6 No pit latrine produces fertilizer
- 38.5 Choosing a fishpond site
- 38.4 Hand held scale to identify low weight newborns
- 38.3 Diffused light storage for seed potatoes
- 38.2 Farming hints
- 38.1 A special clay pot helps tree seedlings survive
- 37.9 How farmers use biological pest control
- 37.8 Women start a loans fund
- 37.7 Why women need to know about land rights
- 37.6 How to manage maize stemborers
- 37.5 The jab-seeder: a tool for manual seeding
- 37.4 Forage system for semi arid areas
- 37.3 Build and maintain contour ridges
- 37.2 Prepare a home first aid kit
- 37.1 Plant high quality cassava cuttings
- 36.8 An improved stove can change your life
- 36.7 Handle livestock with care
- 36.6 Biological pest control: reduce pests naturally
- 36.5 Hints
- 36.4 Food chain story
- 36.3 A kitchen garden for the family
- 36.2 Farmers increase yields by growing many crop types
- 36.1 Cut tree branches carefully
- 35.11 Raise your own fish fingerlings
- 35.10 Raise fish in the rice paddy
- 35.9 Fish are good for your rice and good for you
- 35.8 Intercropping with paulownia trees
- 35.7 Care of trees after transplanting
- 35.6 Transplanting seedling trees
- 35.5 Where and when to plant trees
- 35.4 Starting seedlings
- 35.3 Replace every tree you lose
- 35.2 Why young brides should delay having babies
- 35.1 Planned pregnancies are best for mother and child
- 34.11 Use chili peppers to control pests
- 34.10 Groundnut (peanut) hay is good feed in the dry season
- 34.9 Fewer children mean healthier children
- 34.8 Why children are a lot like carrots.
- 34.7 Protect tomatoes from frost
- 34.6 Banana trunks: a treasure for your garden in the dry season
- 34.5 Grow and eat nutritious yams
- 34.4 Improve straw for livestock feed
- 34.3 Liquid manure is good fertilizer
- 34.2 Mulch increases yields at Sustenance Farm
- 34.1 More with mulch
- 33.9 Where to find compost materials
- 33.8 Growing bamboo
- 33.7 How trees store water and protect springs
- 33.6 Starting a community seed bank: Part 4
- 33.5 Starting a community seed bank: Part 3
- 33.4 Starting a community seed bank: Part 2
- 33.3 Starting a community seed bank: Part 1
- 33.2 Rabbits are a good source of low fat protein – Breeding rabbits and taking care of them
- 33.1 Rabbits are a good source of low fat protein – Part 1: Building a rabbit hutch
- 32.8 Participant notes on natural pest control, onion seed
- 32.7 Reuse and recycle your garbage
- 32.6 The comeback of quinoa
- 32.5 Combine controls to manage striga
- 32.4 Retain nutrients in stored manure
- 32.3 Coping with tuberculosis
- 32.2 Control grasshoppers and locusts on your farm
- 32.1 Sweet potatoes: easy to grow, good to eat
- 31.8 Participatory experiments with green manure
- 31.7 Breaking the guinea worm cycle
- 31.6 Neem leaf spray controls pests
- 31.5 Women use wild plants for food and medicine
- 31.4 Eat grain sprouts for better health
- 31.3 Muscovy ducks are easy to raise and they control flies
- 31.2 Grow your own living fence
- 31.1 Ethiopian farmer grows seeds of survival
- 30.10 Participant notes
- 30.9 Breastmilk keeps babies healthy
- 30.8 Breastmilk can protect your baby from sickness
- 30.7 Mexican sunflowers provide support for beans
- 30.6 Good cow feed for all seasons
- 30.5 Women know about food from trees
- 30.4 Jenu Kuruba returns to the land
- 30.3 Neem seed spray protects crops
- 30.2 Eucalyptus leaves control grain moth
- 30.1 Local plants help control pests
- 29.7 The Parracana Cooperative: farmers and teachers working together
- 29.6 Putting worms to work for you
- 27.12 Prevent cholera : radio spots
- 27.8 Treat coughs with ginger, lime and tamarind
- 27.3 Changes for men and women on the farm
- 27.2 Trees in your garden give you fertilizer
- 26.9 Good soil management increases harvests
- 26.4 Village-based forest management in Ecuador
- 26.2 Profit from raising rabbits in the city


