No slowing down for USAID's nearly 30-year-old Farmer-to-Farmer program

Charles Mitchell doesn’t do vacations. He would rather go on a 60-mile bike ride than lounge on a beach. Mitchell inspects and certifies organic farms for his day job, runs his own 50-acre organic homestead on the side and recently returned from a three-week trip to Myanmar, where he chewed betel leaf for the first time and helped show fellow farmers how to make bio-fungicides with locally available ingredients.

David Henzler’s own children aren’t sure what he does for a living, though they know he flies to places like Kenya and Kyrgyzstan to help veterinarians prevent the spread of avian influenza and other animal-borne diseases.

“They call me ‘the chicken healer,’” said Henzler, a published research scientist who holds a doctorate in veterinary science.

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