At StoveTeam, our stove recipients’ wants and needs inform our designs and approaches. We know that the success of our projects relies on the satisfaction of the families we serve. It’s not enough to provide a stove that saves fuel wood and ensures a smoke-free home, we also need to ensure that families truly love our stoves. Otherwise, they might not be be willing to leave behind the generations-old tradition of cooking over an open fire.
Our Guatemala Country Director is back in Nicaragua!
Nancy visits StoveTeam's projects in Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras
Developing the perfect stove: How we’re basing our designs on feedback from stove recipients
At StoveTeam, our stove recipients’ wants and needs inform our designs and approaches. We know that the success of our projects relies on the satisfaction of the families we serve. It’s not enough to provide a stove that saves fuel wood and ensures a smoke-free home, we also need to ensure that families truly love our stoves. Otherwise, they might not be be willing to leave behind the generations-old tradition of cooking over an open fire.
Returning to the “town of tears"
The first home I visited was ten by twelve. There were tree trunks at each of four corners, black plastic and old plastic bags for walls, and inside was a smoky open fire and a makeshift bed. Santiago [the father] had left the house at 3:30 am and returned four hours later carrying 77 pounds of firewood. He and Maria Luisa stayed in their home all day, and smoke filled the tiny room. Santiago had no energy left to work, and Maria Luisa was too ill to stand. The two of them lived that day on ten tortillas.