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    Arkansas

    November 05, 2007

    Heifer Ranch: Educating People about the Needs of the World

    Babygoat_2Each holiday season an unusual catalog arrives in my mailbox...

    ...the non-profit organization Heifer International's book of "Udderly" original gifts -- gifts of livestock that make a difference in the lives of poverty-stricken families around the world.  And each year I send Heifer a check to cover a gift of honeybees, a share of a llama, or a trio of rabbits.

    Heifer's mission is commendable:  to work with communities to end hunger and poverty and care for the earth.  They accomplish this by giving cows, goats and other food and income producing livestock to impoverished families around the world.  But it wasn't until I attended a recent conference in Little Rock, Arkansas, that I understood the full scale of this organization's impact.

    The conference featured an optional trip to Heifer Ranch, a working farm and ranch with certified organic gardens and a conference and retreat center that promotes sustainable solutions to global hunger, poverty and environmental degradation.  Because I wanted to learn more about Heifer International's work, I immediately signed up for the tour.

    At Heifer Ranch, located on 1,200 acres in the midst of the beautiful Ouachita Mountains, visitors partcipate in seminars, service learning projects and in-depth educational experiences, giving them a better understanding of how their choices affect the world.

    Water_buffalo_2Ranch volunteer Berta Rieby met our bus as we arrived, then led us to a building where we'd watch a video narrated by Ed Asner that would tell us about Heifer's history.  Heifer International, we learned, buys animals locally then trains people around the world in environmentally sound agricultural practices, integrating crops and animals.  Heifer International bought the ranch in 1971 to educate people about the needs of the world.

    After watching the video, we headed outside.  The smell of fresh hay filled the air as we climbed aboard a wagon for a ride though Ranch property, winding along roads with evocative names such as "Pig Trail" and "Llama Loop."  Rieby pointed out the conference center, the Show Barn, and the "Heifer Hilton Bunk Barn", a name fondly given to a dorm where volunteers sleep.  She also showed us dairy and horse barns and pastures in which cattle, water buffalo, and llamas grazed.

    As we headed back to our bus, Rieby said, "We think Heifer is about animals, but it isn't.  Heifer is about people.  We're trying to help people."

    And so far, Heifer's done a remarkable job of that.  I thought of how much prosperity and hope the gift of just one animal can bring to a family in need.  This year, I decided, when I receive my catalog of "Udderly" original gifts, not only would I share it with my friends, but I'd add a gift of a goat to my order as well.

    • Learn more about Heifer International by watching this three-minute video.
    • Like to volunteer?  Some 250 people volunteer at the Ranch each year.  Learn how you can join them.

    BookcoverI recommend:   Bill Clinton's inspiring new book, Giving.  This book shows how we can all help to save lives or solve problems, no matter how much or how little we have to give.

    Heifer International is featured in Chapter 7:  Gifts that Keep on Giving.  One of Heifer's unique concepts is "Passing on the Gift."  Recipients of  livestock are required to share some of the offspring their animals produce with others in need, multiplying Heifer's impact dramatically. 

    For example, in China, a project begun in the 1980s with 105 rabbits has generated hundreds of thousands of offspring that have helped more than 2,200 families.

    May 21, 2007

    The Peabody Ducks

    Little Rock's "Five Duck" Hotel

    Dsc09163_7Two weeks ago, while attending the annual NATJA conference in Arkansas, I spent several nights at The Peabody Little Rock.  And strange as this may sound, my favorite part of staying there was watching the Peabody ducks. 

    Each day at 5 PM, I joined the crowd as the Peabody Duckmaster, clad in his traditional red jacket with gold braids, paraded the five Peabody Big_photo_lib_11_4Ducks down three stairs from the marble lobby fountain.  Then, one by one, they waddled along a red carpet to the elevator.  On the Ballroom level, the Duckmaster put them in their "Duck Limousine" (wagon) and took them to their Duck Penthouse Palace on the Plantation Roof, where they munch on Duck Caesar Salad all night.

    Okay, they don't actually eat Caesar salad; they feast on hand shredded romaine lettuce, grated carrots, and Peabody Duck Trail Mix.  But the Peabody Duck Parade is a long standing tradition.  I saved a cocktail napkin with the "Legend of the Ducks" printed on it, so here goes...

    Dsc09187_4The story of these VIP's (Very Important Poultry) began in the late 1930s at the Peabody Memphis.  General Manager Frank Schutt and a friend, Chip Barwick, returned empty-handed from a weekend hunting in Arkansas.  After consuming a bit too much Tennessee sippin ' whiskey, they decided to play a joke and put their five duck decoys (it was legal at the time for hunters to use live decoys) in the Grand Lobby fountain.  When the hotel guests saw the English call ducks in the fountain, their reaction was absolutely enthusiastic. 

    In 1940, Bellman Edward Pembroke, a former circus animal trainer, offered to help with delivering the ducks to the fountain each day, and so the tradition began.  Each day at 11 AM, a red carpet is rolled out and the ducks march to the fountain through crowds of spectators to the tune of John Phillip Sousa's King Cotton March.  The ceremony is reversed at 5 PM each evening.

    Actually, that wasn't all on the cocktail napkin, I did a little research.    But you can see why I was so entertained by the ducks.   

    I enjoyed my stay at the Peabody Little Rock -- the hotel is beautiful, the employees are friendly, and the location is great (downtown Little Rock overlooking the Arkansas River).  And if you really like ducks, The Peabody is Duck-topia:  there's duck soap, duck gifts, and a duck bar (Mallards), as well as all kinds of other duck things.  You can even visit the Peabody ducks in their Duck Palace.

    If you're not planning to be in Little Rock anytime soon, there are also Peabody Hotels in Orlando and Memphis.  And did you know, there's a Peabody duck farm in Arkansas that supplies ducks to all three Peabody Hotels?

    Bottom photo:  Peabody Duckmaster Matt Headley. 

    Fountain photo courtesy of The Peabody Little Rock.