Category: Uncategorized

  • Holiday Survival Guide for Retailers

    Holiday Survival Guide for Retailers

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        Say it isn’t so!

    OK, we know this season can be stressful for retailers. But here are a few things we can offer to make it more doable:

    1) Call us anytime 509.448.6561: to see what’s in stock  (we are happy to pull special colors/sizes depending on your needs) . If you need some talk therapy to get through the season’s hysteria, we’ve got that covered too.

    2) Know that we have plenty of knits in stock, so if you haven’t ordered any yet, we have you covered

    3) Need to get your goods fast? Get your order in before NOON PST and we will ship it the same day.

    4) Join our Retail Support Group (email us your request) on Facebook where you can get peer support from the most compassionate, hilarious people on this planet. Seriously, we can vouch, most of these people are our customers, and you guys are THE BEST.

    5) If all fails, put a kitten on it! This makes everything feel better.

     

     

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  • Happy Doshain

    Happy Doshain

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    copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-copy-of-paper-sale-62Fall is a time of great celebration in Nepal and a time when families & friends come together, work is put aside and they celebrate life and the ties that bind them. It is one of the most beautiful times of the year to be in Nepal and their month of festivals are a huge reminder that it is a gift to be here in this life and to have the blessings of those who have come before us.Flowers are everywhere and ultimate joy is in the air, the difficulties of life are left behind and gratitude prevails.

    In North America we enter the fall season in a different way! A huge sense of anticipation and angst emerges as we gear up for our own holiday seasons and this year for the U.S. elections.  Somehow it seems draining and difficult on so many levels. I want this issue of our newsletter to bring you the sense of Nepali joy and celebration so that we can remember that even in the busiest and most divisive of times we can step back and celebrate that we are part of an amazing human family and lucky for us we are part of an amazing Fair Trade family as well.

    It always brings a huge smile to my face to think about how lucky we are to be a part of the Fair Trade family, one that has religious differences, political differences, racial differences, all kinds of differences but one where we have at our common core a sense that everyone on the planet should be treated with love and respect and given the chance at a healthy and stable life.

    So I hope that you can also leave the everyday difficulties of life behind, find joy in the air and join our Nepali friends in celebration of happiness & our common human bond.

    -Denise & all the Ganeshees[/fusion_text][/fusion_builder_column][fusion_builder_column type=”1_1″ background_position=”left top” background_color=”” border_size=”” border_color=”” border_style=”solid” spacing=”yes” background_image=”” background_repeat=”no-repeat” padding=”” margin_top=”0px” margin_bottom=”0px” class=”” id=”” animation_type=”” animation_speed=”0.3″ animation_direction=”left” hide_on_mobile=”no” center_content=”no” min_height=”none”][fusion_text]

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  • Untitled post 28627

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    ARTISAN SPOTLIGHT:

    Khlapsang Karpo Women Recycled Handcrafts

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    Due to its remote location, Ganesh Himal Trading had to be creative with the raw materials used for products made by this group. All scraps of sari fabric and beads are transported on the backs of the villagers over a two day mountain trek to their community.  Lack of tools and electricity create another obstacle to producing products.  Determined to provide economic opportunity to women in this village following the devastating earthquake of April 2015,  Ganesh Himal Trading combined simple skill with beautiful detail to make this one of a  kind wearable art.

     
    Two days walk from any road lies the village of Sertung.  Ganesh Himal Trading’s owners walked through this village in the fall of 2015 during their survey of damage in the remote Northern regions of Dhading district following the April 2015 earthquakes.  During this visit they met a young woman who was the health care worker there and her husband.  Their village was so heavily damaged and they wanted to know if we could help them get some economic income to the women and children left in the village (Conscious Connections Foundation also provided blankets).
    “Namaste, I would like to thanks for order necklaces. Our women life story is  in Sertung women are  maximum uneducated but they are everyday hard working.   They do old type of farming and after planting they wait six month to get the crop.They have no [income generating] work. They are after earthquake live in small trap. This recycle necklace made them if you buy continue this necklace they get good incoming job.and help thier child study.”  -Yogendra
    The group name chosen by the women was “Khlapsang Karpo Women Recycled Handcrafts”, Khlapsang means “Good God” and Kharpo means “white”, this is the Tamang name for Ganesh Himal, the mountain whose shadow they live beneath. To start they are training about ten women and one man with others who are eager to be trained.  The women include: Chesang Tamang, Khasa Maya Tamang,  Tikhri Tamang, Lili Maya Bika, Heni Maya Tamang,  Kheti Maya Tamang, Bata Maya Tamang, Ruku Maya Tamang, Gyalmo Tamang, Mili Maya Tamang,Toni Maya Tamang, and Yogendra Tamang.
    Learn more about the Tamang people  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamang_people

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  • Artisan Update: Ram Shekar

    Artisan Update: Ram Shekar

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    Denise, Ram, Cameron & Grant

    We have worked with Ram for almost 30 years and he does many of GHT’s beautiful block print bags, hats and wallets. His home is badly damaged by the earthquake and his entire family was relocated to a tent for several months but unfortunately at 5am one morning they awoke to water pouring into their tents which quickly rose to their necks. They were flooded out of that place so that he and his family had no choice but to move back into their damaged home.

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    The Flood

    In October we visited with Ram in his home and saw that the top two stories of his ancestral home had collapsed and that the home had been
    deemed unsafe. GHT & CCF are helping him by providing monthly rent for a safe space for him to work so that he can continue to make an income. We don’t have the capacity to rebuild his home but if he can work & if they receive earthquake relief from the government they should be able to rebuild soon. We will continue to monitor his situation to see if there are other ways that we can assist him to stay on his feet and for his family to reconstruct a safe dwelling.

    A few of Ram’s fun block-print products that we sell:

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  • Namaste

    Namaste

    Namaste from Nepal! 

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    Read the whole newsletter here

    There is nothing like seeing hope for the future in the midst of hardship and devastation that seems insurmountable. But it’s here, alive and well in Nepal and it’s unbelievable.  The unbeatable Nepali spirit is a constant inspiration and makes me realize that perception can often help us beat the odds. For Nepali’s they have no option so they make the best of a very, very difficult situation and amazingly theydo it with a smile.  So we move forward into a New Year (literally, the Nepali New Year is in a few weeks) with the odds still difficult but the will as strong as the Himalaya!

    Being in Nepal we get to see the spirit of the future in the brightness of the eyes of the 3 young women who received the Joy Attwood College Scholarship fund from CCF several days ago. Three girls who worked hard, even when they lost their homes.  Girls who had the tenacity to continue to work hard in school and apply for and win the CCF scholarships. They and their parents were so proud. The
           scholarship recipients
    y kept their hope alive through it all and see themselves becoming nurses and a cardiologist and returning to their villages to care for the poor. Their parents work with the Fair Trade organization, the Association for Craft Producers, which has had the foresight to organize stipends from CCF’s Power of 5 donations to enable the producers to keep their girls in school. It keeps hope alive. We have seen first hand the effect of your donations to Conscious Connections Foundation and the effectiveness that this money and kindness has wrought. We have been very deliberate with this money and have seen hope come alive in areas where we thought none could exist. We cannot thank you enough for that support, both monetarily and spiritually. CCF board member Cameron Conner and CCF volunteer Grant Gallaher have just completed an extensive evaluation of the work of CCF over these past 11 months of Earthquake relief so that you can see where your dollars went and how effective they were. We invite you all to take a look at this and realize how your donations have kept hope alive.
    Through these past 11 months we have also witnessed, in a very unique way, the value of economic partnership, through long-standing fair trade relationships. Fair Trade Federation members, in addition to Ganesh Himal, have kept producers hope alive and helped them weather an incomprehensible natural disaster. It strengthens my belief in the Fair Trade model even more and makes me understand how valuable it is in creating a future that is hopeful. There is a Hindu proverb that says it all “Help your neighbor’s boat across and lo, your own has reached the shore”. It really is that simple. We can help each other; it keeps hope alive.
    There are so many stories I could share with you but right now we have a clinic to build, a small rural K-3 school to finish, more food aid to distribute, producers to work with and new products to create!  Thank you for standing beside us and keeping our hope alive. I hope to have more amazing stories to share with you in the near future.
    Namaste,
    Denise & Ric

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  • A Day in Kathmandu

    A Day in Kathmandu

     

     

    Future Plans and New Connections

    We returned from our two week trek with a massive amount of information, amazing memories, and an entirely new understanding of the Nepali people and their current situation. Now we were faced with this question: with all this new information, how can the Conscious Connections Foundation most effectively help these people?

    As has been mentioned in several recent blog posts, the resounding message from the vast majority of the villages we visited was that they lacked permanent shelter and that their current temporary shelters were largely inadequate for the deadly, chilling winter. With this identified as the greatest need, we knew we had to do something to help the shelter situation. CCF, as a smaller organization, obviously can’t rebuild an entire village – no matter how much we wish we could. Different approaches were necessary to address this pressing issue. With this in mind, the organization is already putting into motion earthquake recovery programs that largely aim to achieve the following two goals:

    1. Spread new, innovative, earthquake resistant building techniques to villagers to promote sustainable rebuilding and to increase future resilience
    2. Supply villagers with warm, high-quality clothing and other necessary items for the winter

    This first goal seeks to provide a long term solution to the shelter crisis by empowering villagers with new ideas to build new homes and a better future. Cameron and I have done extensive research and contacted many experts on earthquake resistant building techniques such as earthbags, rammed earth, and gabion bands. All of these techniques have been shown to survive earthquakes, but again, CCF can’t build homes like these for every single villager in need. Instead, CCF’s shelter recovery programs will work to build sample homes in the villages using these techniques, giving villagers the opportunity to learn about and understand these new ideas, allowing them to decide for themselves what materials they want to use to rebuild their own homes. Additionally, these new ideas could also be applied in the villages in the rebuilding of permanent schools and health clinics (such as the one in Baseri!).

    With our remaining month and a half in Nepal, Cameron and I are undertaking the project of building one earthbag house in Baseri. To prepare for this, we be heading back out into the field in the next few days to volunteer with another organization on an earthbag building project in the villages. We will then return to Kathmandu, gather materials and tools for our own project, and head up to Baseri to begin! Though it is unlikely that this house will be completed before Cameron and I have to leave in December, we will be working with experienced earthbag engineers and supervisors so that we can leave the project in capable, trustworthy hands. This first earthbag house will serve multiple purposes – being a model house for the villagers to possibly base their own homes off of, as well as being a test to see if earthbags could be a potential material for the future, larger project of rebuilding the Baseri clinic!

    The second goal is more of a short term band-aid for a much larger problem. Clothing and blankets won’t directly fix the shelter issue, but they may be the difference between life and death in the winter.  Almost immediately after returning from trekking, we set out to find a way to send warm clothes up to some of the remote villages we stayed in. This goal is already becoming a reality thanks to the amazing people and products of Everest Hardwear, a Nepali manufacturing company that produces excellent clothing and trekking gear! Sonam Sherpa and Ghyami Hyolmo of the company were generous enough to sell us 100 high-quality jackets at a ridiculously low cost, as well as donating 100 fleece hats to be distributed in the villages of Rasuwa! Even though it meant a loss of some profit for them, they were more than happy to partner with us in this endeavor to help those in dire need. I’m happy to say that out of this experience, we not only acquired this clothing to help people, but we also made some wonderful friends.

    See slide show here>>

    Ram, who left on another trek a few days ago, took all these jackets and hats along with him to distribute them to the people of Rasuwa. Hopefully we’ll have some pictures of that to share once he returns! In the future, CCF will continue to work with Everest Hardware and other partners on this sort of project to provide potentially life-saving winter items to the people of Nepal who need them most!

    We are incredibly excited to be starting soon on this earthbag project and other CCF recovery programs – it’s an amazing and inspirational feeling to be doing this work! Stay tuned for more details and pictures in the future! Thank you!

    All the best,

    Grant

    Check out Everest Hardwear at their website (http://www.everesthardwear.com.np/) and on Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/Everest-Hardwear-371079756430780)!

     

  • The Journey of a Lifetime

    Minutes after I published our last written blogpost, we hauled our bags down the five flights of stairs at Chunta’s apartment and piled them, along with the four of us, Pradeep, Ram, and our driver into a small backcountry jeep. We drove through countless winding streets, many deserted because of the petrol blockade, and burst forth into the beautiful fields and scattered buildings that surround the stifling city. Seven hours later, in a ride that was marked most memorably by poor Pradeep losing his lunch violently all over the back of the jeep, we arrived at our actual jumping off point: Syabru Besi.

    The following 15 days were spent climbing up into the mountains, through the most remote regions we could access in that limited time and following trails that few foreigners had traveled since Maoist insurgents had made them impassible 20+ years ago. From the beginning, we had a very limited idea of what to expect and attempted to prepare for the worst case scenario in advance by carrying what food, shelter, and emergency supplies we might need along the way. To aid in this endeavor, we enlisted the help of four faithful porters: Gukarna, Ramesh, Kumar, and Anil, and one less than faithful cook, Tek; who never actually did any cooking… In total, we passed through 4 districts: Nuwakot, Rasuwa, Dhading, and Ghorka, traveling an average of 8 miles a day over mountainous terrain and hazardous landslides, climbing several 12-13,000ft passes, and sleeping on any flat ground – a valuable commodity in a country that goes from sea level to 29,000ft in less distance than lies between Spokane and Seattle – that we had the luck to find.

    Yet 15 days is far to short a time to understand one small village, let alone 11; each more unique than the last, and all separated from any outside contact by miles of mountainous terrain. Our goal for this trip was to assess CCF’s work in 5-6 communities which we had provided various forms of immediate aid to following the earthquake, and survey where else we might be of service in the future. The process of doing so was heartbreaking. We saw hundreds of homes reduced to piles of rubble, families of four or more living in tarp tents that were close to six months old, individuals without even a clue of what the future would bring.

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    We conducted many interviews with people while standing among the rubble of their own homes.

    Together, Grant and I had the task of talking with these men, women, and children, in order to formulate appropriate recommendations to the board of CCF as to what our next steps should look like. Before beginning our trek – before we even arrived in Nepal – we had arranged a set of questions to ask in just such a situation, yet it was apparent from our very first interview that these would have to be heavily modified and adjusted. Our initial questions had been based on the assumption that we would move fluidly from one person to the next, asking a relatively standard set of questions to generate largely quantitative information. Yet the people with whom we talked could not be clinically quizzed on the aid they received, in what time, and from whom. When asked what their biggest need was at the moment, many said that they simply wanted to invite us into their tin shelter for a cup of milk tea. So from village to village we amended a new set of questions that we began from scratch. The final result looked more like a list of open ended conversational prompts than any formal survey or interview, but the reactions and responses we received were more heartfelt and heartbreaking than we ever could have expected. 

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    Reviewing and revising our interview questions with Pradeep, Anil, and Gukarna

    So we have returned, overwhelmed with information, but with a more realistic perspective on the obstacles the obstacles faced by those we seek to assist. Now we begin the process of attempting to overcome these obstacles. After climbing back up the final flights of stairs with our now familiar bags to greet a warmly welcoming Chunta, we shrugged off our packs one final time and rushed to wash away two weeks of grime and sweat before sitting downto begin the long process of restoring hope! 

    Thank you all for your support and stay tuned for more posts in the next couple days!

    Cheers,

    Cameron[/fusion_builder_column][/fusion_builder_row][/fusion_builder_container]

  • Peace, Primates, and Productivity

    Peace, Primates, and Productivity

    Check out our very first vlog and some pictures from our adventures! Please leave a comment letting us know what you think! Thank you!

     

  • Light Up Rural Nepal!

    The Conscious Connections Foundation (CCF), a registered 501(c)3 EIN# 471602190 founded in 2014 by Ganesh Himal Trading, is working with Alison Thomson, Third-Wave Volunteers and Solight Design to bring SolarPuff lights to remote areas in Nepal where CCF has been working.  SolarPuff has committed to  donate between 100-200 lights that CCF can distribute to the areas where we have contacts and where there is dire need. In the future we are discussing the possibility that they ship the lights directly to Nepal for a low cost and then hopefully together we can help someone set up to sell them in Nepal, preferably in the remote areas.  Fully waterproof and shatterproof, with a built-in rechargeable battery, all-in-one SolarPuff lanterns hold a charge for up to 12 hours and stay bright all night. The small solar panel is viable for 10 years and the LED lights last 2-3 years. http://www.solight-design.com/#solarpuff These lights will be invaluable to people who have no electricity and in areas where electricity is erratic. To find our more about their fundraising to bring more lights to Nepal please visit https://www.crowdrise.com/lettherebelight/fundraiser/lahafinc

    Watch their beautiful video here:

     

  • Back to School Fair Trade Style 2015

    Denise Attwood
    Co-Owner
    This is the time of year when we in North America think “back to school”.  There’s a bit of excitement in the air as we anticipate minds filling with new ideas and dreams of a brighter world to come.  I have been thinking a lot about education of late as we delve deeply into learning about earthquake relief and the best way to distribute resources to those who are in grave need. I think about the learning required to rebuild lives and yet carry on tradition; the learning behind how to work with partners who are suffering great loss but who must still strive to support themselves and their families. Once again I am brought back to the importance of relationships and how it is through interaction and love for each other that we learn and accomplish the most.
    In the past few months since the earthquakes we have allocated resources to many of our producer partners through both Ganesh Himal Trading and through the Conscious Connections Foundation’s Artisan relief fund.  We have watched as these funds have been put directly into people’s hands and used to provide monetary relief, emergency food, tin for roofs, tarps, medicine and more. These resources were provided to directly address the self declared needs of those affected by the earthquake.  Having up to 30 year long relationships with the individuals dispersing these funds and knowing that we could trust their judgment has helped us learn and further appreciate how listening to your friends and trusting them to control resources results in amazing accomplishments. People are now beginning to rebuild and restore, and, in order to catalyze this process, as you have seen through our recent shipments, they are getting back to work.
    We are poised to learn more in the months to come as Ric, myself, and our son Cameron together with his friend Grant travel to Nepal, at our own

    Food and supplies delivered to Baseri, Nepal after the earthquake

    expense, to explore further how CCF and GHT funds have been used, evaluate their effect, learn about how to do it better and discuss with our partners in Nepal the next best steps in moving toward permanent rebuilding and what our role in that can be. We will spend a month visiting the villages and producers who received relief as well as talk with the village council in Baseri about the rebuilding of the clinic there. Then Cameron and Grant, taking a bridge year before they head to college, will spend the next 2 months looking at other small, medium and large scale aid to try to learn about what worked best and where.  Follow along by visiting the Conscious Connections Website. They will be writing a blog on our findings and we’ll post that on the CCF and GHT Facebook pages as well. This is a huge learning curve and you can be right there learning with us!

    Just as there is a need to restructure the trading system through relationship, partnering and Fair Trade, we believe that as the world deals increasingly with disaster we must learn to restructure the “aiding system” as well. It is imperative that we begin the discussion about relationship in aid, learning from those on the ground who we believe have much to teach us.

     

    Thank you for all of your help!
    Denise