o—Lancaster Farming. Saturday, September 21.1968 HONDURANS ARE TAUGHT to keep chickens in pens by the agricultural mis sionaries Gailand Gmgench reports Agricultural Missionory Reports (Pert N) , the chickens in Honduras We Hondurans Are Poor ot the fowl they are keeping are , „ „ not too fai lemoved fiom the gram They are left to shift for Wlld 3un g] e fowl themselves finding what forage they can Sows in Honduras frequently Chickens lay an average of 20 raise only 2 or 3 pigs per litter :o 25 eggs per year Chickens These pigs m turn take 9to 12 ire left run throughout the vil- months to reach'a weight of 200 age including a fi ee run of the pounds As with cattle and chick- by Garland E. Gingerich Penn Manor Vo-Ag Teacher Ed. Note: This is the second part of a three-part series. During the 1967-68 school year Garland E. Gingerich was on sabbatical leave from his posi tion as teacher of agriculture, Penn Manor High School, Mil lersville. During that period of time, Gingerich served as an agricultural missionary in San Pedro Sula, Honduras, Central America. He served as an agricultural education ad viser for a coordinated effort by three church groups to pro mote communit} development on the northern coast of Hon duras. Honduias, like most develop ing nations has two classes a uch class and a pooi class The uch class makes up about 10 °o of the population the pooi class 35 the remaining 90% Theie is nc middle class of any measui i'ble size The large masses, the 90% who are pooi, aie veiy. very poor From Hondman Govern ment leports we learn that then aveiage income is S4B per yeai This salary does not go very far, a loaf of biead costs 25c and a quart of milk 18c At those pnc es on their income they do not a 1 ink veiy much milk They eat meat about once per week The poor, the masses of the people, Lve a subsistence type existence Every day is one of getting food on the table. What aie some of the physical factors contnbutmg to this deep set poverty’ There are seveial physical things Some of the mme notice able-include 1) watei. pure po table watei 2) education 3) slash and burn agncultuie 4) b anspoitation 5) agucultmal pioduction 6) pioductive land Let’s look at some ot these L ii ngs individually and see how tney aie causing poveity in Hon dui as Fust of all, agucultmal pio duction Most cows pioduco 3 oi 4 quails of null: pei day as then average pioduction The^ajoi- chickens in Honduras lay an average of 20 to 25 eggs per year and are left to run throughout the village. houses No attempts are made to house or feed the majority of ons, hogs are left to run and to shift for themselves. They too are in and out of the open doors of the houses creating health problems from the worms and parasites with which they are constantly infesting the area in and around the house. Corn production pegged at 35 bushels per acre is considered to be a good crop. These are a few of the agri cultural production figures that further illustrate the fact that Hondurans are poor. Education certainly has to rank high as one of the root causes of poverty. About 60% of the Hondurans are illiterate. At the present time most of the children do have the opportunity to receive a third grade educa tion. But, for the majority, third grade is the end of their formal education. Education beyond the third grade is not readily avail able to children in Honduras. There is practically no vocation al education. Only one school in all of Honduras offers a course in vocational agriculture. The ability of the people to read a newspaper or bulletin from GET THE BIG WIDE MONEY SAVER: Solid Kaiser Aluminum Diamond-Rib* roofing and siding. Diamond-Rib roofing saves you money when compared with other roofing materials. 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It’s dirt roads would connect Harrisburg and Pittsburgh and reach from Philadelphia to Scranton. These dill roads are impassable during 2 to 3 months of the year be* cause vast areas of Honduras are in a high rainfall area. Some areas get up to 150 inches of rain per year and as high as 50 inches in one month, a total more than we get in a full year m Lancaster County. Honduras does have about -234 miles of railroad. But of this 234 miles there are 3 different gaug* es, making the convenient inter* change of railway cars impossi ble. Airplane travel is not at all reliable. Vast areas of Honduras 'Continued on Page" 7) AVAILABLE AT BEE-LINE SUPPLY CENTER PH. 717-397-4761