Tag: Internship

Growth in ECHO’s Internship Program

Teamwork is at the heart of what ECHO does. Our mission is Hope Against Hunger, and to achieve this we work alongside people who are also passionate about using sustainable farming methods to fight against hunger around the globe. Through the years, interns have formed a vital part of the work that is done at ECHO Small Farm Resource Center in North America.

Equipping interns for international service is core to ECHO’s mission. Interns are immersed in hands-on experiences in the various tropical gardens, enjoying the bounty of crops that grow well and learning hard-earned lessons when a crop doesn’t pan out.

Interns also gain experience through classes, seminars, and time with each of the animals on the farm. This provides a more rounded experience with goats, pigs, chickens, and the forage bank —  after all, knowing what crops to grow to feed the animals is also important.

When we met up with interns Sarah Harding and Robert Beaty, they were cutting and tying bunches of lablab and mucuna vines and hanging them up to dry. Sarah and Robert were hot but smiling.  Working together as intern buddies on the project, they expressed how much they appreciate the teamwork, collaboration, and learning opportunities of the internship tasks. They shared that they’ve already learned about how the dried cover crops can be a rich fertilizer when mulched around future millet plants in a nearby garden plot.

We look forward to sharing updates with you in the next months and years as we see ECHO’s mission take root in the lives and futures of these passionate young people.

“We are always amazed at what God has done. We started small and worked with what we had and took each step as it came. We would never have dreamed that ECHO would become what it is today,” shared Martin Price, Founding CEO. Dr. Martin and Bonnie Price arrived at ECHO’s Fort Myers property on June 18, 1981. The internship program started later that same year with the arrival of Elise Hansen.

“ECHO’s property was flooded when I arrived, so my first official task was to assist Martin in digging drainage ditches by hand. He joked that I probably never imagined my college degree would prepare me for that job!” Elise recounts. “I became very close to Martin and Bonnie that year, as we initiated many of ECHO’s core missions, including the Seed Bank and ECHO Development Notes. I am very thankful and proud that I was part of ECHO during its first year under Martin’s leadership.”

 After retiring as CEO in 2006, Martin and Bonnie have remained members of the ECHO community. One of their great joys is reconnecting with ECHO partners from years past.

“We are thrilled to see interns take what they have learned and use it in their futures to help others in so many different ways,” shares Bonnie Price. “The interns have been a special joy in our lives!”

ECHO provides Hope Against Hunger through agricultural training, innovative options, and networking with community leaders and missionaries in 190+ countries. ECHO seeks to find agricultural solutions for families growing food under difficult conditions. ECHO works through Regional Impact Centers in Asia, East Africa, West Africa, and North America. To learn more, donate, or volunteer, visit www.echonet.org 

Unpacking the “Why” of an ECHO Field Experience

The hard outer shell of my opened suitcase made a loud clap against my room’s tile floor. I glanced at the clothes laid out on my bed waiting to be packed. Clean and neatly folded, they seemed to be proud of themselves for having had what it takes to be the few items selected for my trip. Soon, they’d be in Asia.

“Soon after packing, I’d be en route to a view of billowy, green rice fields and distant tropical mountains. ”

I had lived in my dorm-style room of the girls’ intern house for about a year at ECHO, in southwest Florida. The unique sound of bamboo leaves and palm fronds rustling in the humid breeze outside my window had grown familiar to me. My 14-month agricultural internship had finished, and a 6-month field experience awaited at ECHO’s Regional Impact Center in Chiang Mai, Thailand. Soon after packing, I’d be en route to a view of billowy, green rice fields and distant tropical mountains. I wondered what window sounds I would hear outside my new room.

The sight of my soon-to-be-filled suitcase invited my mind to reflect on the past year as well as ponder the coming months. What did I learn during my internship in Florida? Why did I want to work with the ECHO Asia staff for 6 months? What unspoken expectations brewed under the surface for my upcoming field experience?

“I pictured this season of life as a suitcase being packed by God’s divine, all-knowing hands for unknown future opportunities, challenges, and responsibilities I would eventually encounter. ”

These swirling questions gradually landed on a few tangible answers. I pictured this season of life as a suitcase being packed by God’s divine, all-knowing hands for unknown future opportunities, challenges, and responsibilities I would eventually encounter. Through interning with ECHO in Florida, I was entrusted with practical experience in tropical small-scale farming, a flourishing network of friends and colleagues, instruction in community development, and practice in participatory training methods. The allure of cultivating these skills through a 6-month field experience overseas was deeply personal as well as communal.

For myself, I was eager to integrate what God had already packed into my suitcase through the ECHO internship, past cross-cultural experiences, and graduate studies in agriculture. My horizon glittered with the many lessons I expected to glean from working alongside the ECHO Asia team. My favorite part of this inner development process was the exciting purpose infused into it by the organization: to be an appropriate conduit of information and hope to agricultural development workers and small-scale farmers.

Beyond personal growth, I believe in the value of bringing whatever I have to offer to serve the team I’m temporarily joining in Thailand. I agreed to step into a support role. Fittingly, my own agenda would come secondary to that of ECHO Asia. The Regional Impact Center’s staff have been established in the nuances of small-scale farming in Thailand and the surrounding region for years. They have actively developed relationships with the organization’s vast network throughout Asia. Before I knew ECHO Asia even existed, farms had been visited, agricultural trainings were conducted, questions had been asked, feedback was collected, and challenges had been overcome by their team. This perspective moved me to a humble appreciation that I was invited to run alongside this experienced staff and support their vision.

After whittling these thoughts, my motivations and expectations felt clarified. With that came a readiness to zip up my suitcase and fly out to this new chapter of learning and serving. With bags fully packed, I said a prayer for God’s guidance and left ECHO FL to begin a journey of support to ECHO Asia in their efforts to further God’s kingdom by reducing hunger and improving lives worldwide.

To learn more about ECHO’s 14-month internship or to apply, click the button below:

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ECHO provides sustainable options to world hunger through agricultural training, innovative options, and networking with community leaders and missionaries in 180 countries and online through ECHOcommunity.org. ECHO seeks to find agricultural solutions for families growing food under difficult conditions. ECHO’s international headquarters is located in Fort Myers, FL. Visit echonet.org