Continuing with our special series on the poultry industry in Indian Country, we have 3 egg-cellent ladies on this episode. Kathrine Minthorn (Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation) the Technical Assistance Network Associate Director from IAC talks about her own experience as an egg producer and how she helps her community. Amelia Evans-Brow (Yup’ik & Passamaquoddy) a Technical Assistance Specialist at IAC, known colloquially as the Chicken Ribbon Skirt lady, talks about her love for her feathered friends and how IAC is trying to encourage more Native producers to take the leap into poultry production. Also on the podcast is Cary Fremin (Native Village of Dot Lake) a former Technical Assistance Specialist for IAC and a council member for her village talks about the challenges of raising chickens in the wilds of Alaska.
For more information on the roundtable discussions mentioned in the episode email
katherine@indianag.org or amelia@indianag.org
Welcome back to our special series Making
Tish Mindemann:Scratch. Today's episode will focus on three of the
Tish Mindemann:Intertribal Agriculture Council's technical assistants
Tish Mindemann:and their interactions with Indian Country's poultry
Tish Mindemann:industry. Not only do they help others on their egg-citing
Tish Mindemann:journeys when raising poultry, all three women have their own
Tish Mindemann:flocks.
Tish Mindemann:Welcome to another episode of Rooted Wisdom. Today we have
Tish Mindemann:three guests, and I'm going to let them introduce themselves,
Tish Mindemann:starting with you, Katherine.
Katherine Minthorn:Hi. Good morning. My name is Katherine
Katherine Minthorn:Minthorn. I'm an enrolled member of the Confederated Tribes of
Katherine Minthorn:the Umatilla Indian Reservation based in Pendleton, Oregon. I am
Katherine Minthorn:employed by the Intertribal Agriculture Council as an
Katherine Minthorn:associate director of technical assistance. Thank you.
Tish Mindemann:Amelia?
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Hello. Good morning. My name is Amalia
Tish Mindemann:Tumela Evans-Brown. I am Yupik from the village of Eek, Alaska.
Tish Mindemann:I currently reside in New Hampshire. I am a northeast
Tish Mindemann:Technical Assistance Specialist with the Intertribal Agriculture
Tish Mindemann:Council.
Tish Mindemann:And Carrie.
Carrie Freeman:Hello, my name is Carrie Freeman. I'm an
Carrie Freeman:Athabaskan and enrolled in the village of Dot Lake, which is
Carrie Freeman:located in Alaska. I work for the Intertribal Agricultural
Carrie Freeman:Council as a Technical Assistance Specialist for the
Carrie Freeman:Alaska region.
Tish Mindemann:So we're doing a series about the poultry
Tish Mindemann:industry in Indian Country. And we want to start out a little
Tish Mindemann:broadly. So Amelia, can you tell us a little bit about what
Tish Mindemann:growth in the poultry industry you've seen in Indian Country?
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Absolutely. So I guess I'll start off with
Tish Mindemann:the poultry industry as a whole. So it's interesting, because we
Tish Mindemann:have a lot of poultry production operations throughout the United
Tish Mindemann:States and within Indian Country, so depending on your
Tish Mindemann:region. So like, I'm in the northeast, so I support all
Tish Mindemann:tribes from Maine to Virginia over to Ohio. And in my
Tish Mindemann:particular region, we have a lot of tribes getting into the
Tish Mindemann:poultry industry, but aren't established, then we have other
Tish Mindemann:regions where we have very established poultry industries,
Tish Mindemann:like in Catherine's region and Alaska, we're kind of starting
Tish Mindemann:to see in the industry where it's starting to pick up, where
Tish Mindemann:there's a lot more interest. So I feel like it's kind of mixed,
Tish Mindemann:where we have heavy operations, and then there are kind of
Tish Mindemann:tribes who are just getting started.
Tish Mindemann:Awesome.
Tish Mindemann:Catherine, can you tell us a little bit about
Tish Mindemann:what your interest in the poultry industry is and what
Tish Mindemann:your successes have been as a producer?
Katherine Minthorn:Well, my interest is only about four
Katherine Minthorn:years old. When the pandemic happened back in 2020, we had
Katherine Minthorn:just processed a steer. So we had just a freezer full of beef,
Katherine Minthorn:you know, we weren't worried about, you know, having any
Katherine Minthorn:shortages, or anything like that, of food - protein sources,
Katherine Minthorn:so to speak. But also kind of pretty well aware that we'd get
Katherine Minthorn:tired of beef if, if we couldn't get any any other source of
Katherine Minthorn:protein. So my friend and I that ran the cattle together, her and
Katherine Minthorn:her kids, and then myself and my grandson, kind of settled on
Katherine Minthorn:chickens. Eggs, actually. So we ordered chicks online, kind of
Katherine Minthorn:like it is today. Went to the feed store to buy chicks and
Katherine Minthorn:there was a lot of other people thinking the same way. So chicks
Katherine Minthorn:were hard to buy in stores. You could only buy five at a time.
Katherine Minthorn:So we went in on a day that that they were - Oh, the chicks got
Katherine Minthorn:delivered early, and we happen to be in the feed store, so each
Katherine Minthorn:bought five more chicks, and we had, gosh, I think, like, 30
Katherine Minthorn:chicks we ordered online. Because we kind of researched a
Katherine Minthorn:little bit. The mortality rate's high, you know, when they're
Katherine Minthorn:being shipped in a container, you know, through the mail and
Katherine Minthorn:all that kind of stuff. So we bought these other 10 chicks,
Katherine Minthorn:and we had them probably about maybe a month before the other
Katherine Minthorn:chicks arrived. Well, we must have been prolific chicken
Katherine Minthorn:producers, because all of our dang chicks survived. And there
Katherine Minthorn:we were with like 40 chickens. And we, you know, we raised them
Katherine Minthorn:through the adolescent chicken stage and all that kind of
Katherine Minthorn:stuff, and kept them alive. We were kind of pretty amazed that
Katherine Minthorn:we did that. We did a lot of research online. We made the
Katherine Minthorn:kids get on Google and research - each one of the kids had to -
Katherine Minthorn:we had two girls and a boy, and they were ages from, I think,
Katherine Minthorn:eight to 11, seven to 10, somewhere like in that age. And
Katherine Minthorn:each one of them did a little short research and gave their
Katherine Minthorn:report to us, you know, on how to care for chicks. Well, one of
Katherine Minthorn:the first ones that I can recall is the pasty butt. Had no idea
Katherine Minthorn:what pasty butt was, you know, with chickens, well, with baby
Katherine Minthorn:chicks, their little stomachs, their systems, they plug up when
Katherine Minthorn:you feed them. The cereal grain feeds that they're fed, it just
Katherine Minthorn:makes like it says paste, and it plugs those little chickens up.
Katherine Minthorn:And you can't just reach over there and pull that manure off
Katherine Minthorn:of their feathers and pull it out, because it evidently
Katherine Minthorn:attaches to their intestines, and it'll pull the intestines
Katherine Minthorn:out of those little chickens. So we had to learn how to take warm
Katherine Minthorn:water and a washcloth and basically clean that manure off
Katherine Minthorn:their feathers without pulling any internal organs out. Those
Katherine Minthorn:are the kind of things that we had to learn how to do, having
Katherine Minthorn:never done it in our lives, and again, our chicks - we ended up
Katherine Minthorn:with 40 laying hens. That was in the Spring, about this time of
Katherine Minthorn:year, about in March. And by August, going into September, we
Katherine Minthorn:had a whole flock of chickens. Had 40 some chickens that were
Katherine Minthorn:starting to lay, and there we were as more eggs than the two
Katherine Minthorn:families could use. And we were giving them away and whatnot. My
Katherine Minthorn:neighbor up the road, you know, kind of getting into the fall
Katherine Minthorn:then I was talking to her about her chickens, because she's got
Katherine Minthorn:pheasants, chickens and turkeys, she's been doing poultry for a
Katherine Minthorn:long time. And kind of talked about putting a cooperative
Katherine Minthorn:together and selling the eggs that we were producing, because
Katherine Minthorn:she already had probably 40 some chickens. And we got to work on
Katherine Minthorn:that and formed a cooperative, which I'll talk about a little
Katherine Minthorn:bit later in this interview.
Katherine Minthorn:But we've learned a lot. You know, really grateful to -
Katherine Minthorn:number one grateful to Google.
Tish Mindemann:So the successes weren't just with being able to
Tish Mindemann:produce a lot of eggs. You saw a lot of success in your kids
Tish Mindemann:being able to learn about chicken production and that you
Tish Mindemann:were able to help your community as well.
Katherine Minthorn:Correct. More than anything, number one
Katherine Minthorn:to be able to feed ourselves. And prove to these, or not prove
Katherine Minthorn:to the children, but make those children aware that they are a
Katherine Minthorn:vital part of their own existence. You know, being able
Katherine Minthorn:to feed themselves. And then these kids learned how to do
Katherine Minthorn:that, not only with their chickens, but with their cattle.
Katherine Minthorn:They, like I said, we had just processed a steer. Those kids
Katherine Minthorn:have learned this all along the way, how to grow sustainable
Katherine Minthorn:proteins, to keep yourself alive, feed yourself.
Tish Mindemann:That's awesome. Carrie, what's your experience
Tish Mindemann:been like as a TA in the area of poultry in Indian Country?
Carrie Freeman:I'm a newer TA to the IAC network, but I've
Carrie Freeman:been a poultry producer for a few years now, and have
Carrie Freeman:definitely learned a lot of new things. I was always grateful
Carrie Freeman:for mentors in this area. Specific to Alaska, we're
Carrie Freeman:showing increased interest in poultry production, you know,
Carrie Freeman:chickens that lay eggs and then just processing poultry due to
Carrie Freeman:the lack of protein security for the state, where we're seeing a
Carrie Freeman:lot of decreasing access to fisheries and large game in the
Carrie Freeman:state, and a lot of tribes and communities are really starting
Carrie Freeman:to look at poultry production to supplement that proteins for
Carrie Freeman:their communities.
Tish Mindemann:It gets pretty cold in Alaska, so I imagine
Tish Mindemann:that might be one of the barriers that tribal producers
Tish Mindemann:face. But what other barriers do they face when they get into
Tish Mindemann:poultry?
Carrie Freeman:Yeah, specific to Alaska and across the
Carrie Freeman:country, you know, there's some different environmental
Carrie Freeman:barriers. If it's too hot, too cold... Alaska, the other thing
Carrie Freeman:that's a little harder for us is, if you don't have a local
Carrie Freeman:poultry producer that's, you know, growing chicks every year,
Carrie Freeman:then you have to have them shipped in. And there's not a
Carrie Freeman:lot of them that make it really. I mean, it's like a 50% decrease
Carrie Freeman:on the amount of chicks that you order. So, you know, always try
Carrie Freeman:to find a local person. But there's a lot of barriers
Carrie Freeman:around, like geographical stuff. So if you live off the road
Carrie Freeman:system, you know, making sure you plan ahead of time to get
Carrie Freeman:enough feed, get enough of the materials that you need to grow
Carrie Freeman:your chicks.
Tish Mindemann:IFAI is based out of Arkansas, which is a huge
Tish Mindemann:poultry production area, and so we see the opposite of the cold
Tish Mindemann:here, we see hot. And so keeping those chickens cool is very
Tish Mindemann:important. Ladies, what support is out there to overcome those
Tish Mindemann:barriers that you see in the Indian Country poultry industry?
Katherine Minthorn:Educating, you know, educating yourself,
Katherine Minthorn:like you're talking about weather conditions there. There
Katherine Minthorn:are breeds of chickens that are bred to be in hot areas. You
Katherine Minthorn:know, if it's for egg production, that they keep
Katherine Minthorn:laying through a hot season. And then there's also chickens that
Katherine Minthorn:are bred to sustain cold. There's so many breeds of
Katherine Minthorn:chickens out there. We were just talking about one a couple days
Katherine Minthorn:ago, it's called the Buckeye. It's bred to - it's an egg and
Katherine Minthorn:meat bird, but it also basically patrols the coops and keeps them
Katherine Minthorn:clear of any rodents. They're prolific rodent killers, and
Katherine Minthorn:they keep your coops clean like that, keep mice and rats and
Katherine Minthorn:everything else. Any kind of rodent is attracted because the
Katherine Minthorn:feed that goes into the chickens is cereal grain based.
Tish Mindemann:And I know that you guys are technical assistant
Tish Mindemann:specialists. So what kind of support can you provide for
Tish Mindemann:tribal producers?
Katherine Minthorn:Carrie and myself will be hosting a Google
Katherine Minthorn:workspace, place for people to come and learn about poultry
Katherine Minthorn:production. And it'll be from hatching eggs to right up
Katherine Minthorn:through - and we plan on doing this every Monday for however
Katherine Minthorn:long people still want to talk to us. We're just there to
Katherine Minthorn:provide any kind of basically technical assistance that can
Katherine Minthorn:help people who are interested in poultry production. Amelia,
Katherine Minthorn:Carrie, do you have anything to add?
Carrie Freeman:Yeah, so if people are interested in coming
Carrie Freeman:it is invite only, but you can reach out directly to one of us.
Carrie Freeman:Do you want me to give that email here? Or do you want to
Carrie Freeman:put it in your podcast?
Tish Mindemann:We'll be sure to include your emails in our show
Tish Mindemann:notes, so that people can reach out to you.
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Perfect, awesome. Yeah. So they can just
Tish Mindemann:reach out to us, kind of explain what they're interested in, and
Tish Mindemann:then we can invite them to our sessions.
Tish Mindemann:Awesome. Amelia, I have heard that you wear
Tish Mindemann:chicken ribbon skirts, and so I want to know what inspired you
Tish Mindemann:to become a poultry producer and a little bit more about how you
Tish Mindemann:incorporate your traditional knowledge in to your production.
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Awesome. How much time do we have? So
Tish Mindemann:everyone at IAC knows I am poultry obsessed, so I actually
Tish Mindemann:have poultry ribbon skirts, poultry shirts. I actually have
Tish Mindemann:a suit jacket that's all poultry material. I wear poultry
Tish Mindemann:earrings. I'm a bit of a chicken nerd and poultry nerd. So I
Tish Mindemann:would have to say, the story of why I am so poultry obsessed
Tish Mindemann:comes from when I was very, very little. So I was three years
Tish Mindemann:old, and my mom got me my first pair of ducks, and then the next
Tish Mindemann:year, she got me my first 10 chickens, and taught me
Tish Mindemann:everything that I know, and my great grandmother also taught
Tish Mindemann:me. And so when I first started going to college. I went to
Tish Mindemann:college for archeology, and then turned it into zoo archeology,
Tish Mindemann:because when I was little, I was obsessed with dinosaurs. And the
Tish Mindemann:obsession with chickens kind of links with that, because I've
Tish Mindemann:always stood firmly on that stance - you know, what comes
Tish Mindemann:first, the chicken or the egg: the egg, because they're
Tish Mindemann:relatives of dinosaurs. So I own tiny raptors in my backyard.
Tish Mindemann:And, yeah, the rest is history.
Tish Mindemann:I love the idea that dino chicken nuggies are
Tish Mindemann:just, like, a replication of dinosaurs, so you're technically
Tish Mindemann:eating a dinosaur when you're eating a dino chicken nugget.
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Yes, absolutely. And it's funny that
Tish Mindemann:you mentioned that, because actually, one of my
Tish Mindemann:presentations, I have a graphic I made of dinosaurs, chickens,
Tish Mindemann:and then the full, you know, evolution of the dino nugget is
Tish Mindemann:going back to the roots.
Tish Mindemann:I love that. That's amazing.
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: Yes, I add humor to everything I do. If you
Tish Mindemann:haven't noticed.
Tish Mindemann:I do as well. I do as well. I love being able to
Tish Mindemann:inject that humor in there and then also bring it back. My
Tish Mindemann:background's in science education. So you're a poultry
Tish Mindemann:producer, and you learned from your mother and your
Tish Mindemann:grandmother. Is that something that was traditional in in the
Tish Mindemann:village of Eek?
Tish Mindemann:Amelia Evans-Brown: So I'm actually so I'm Yupik on my
Tish Mindemann:father's side, and I'm Passamaquoddy on my mother's
Tish Mindemann:side. And Passamaquoddy, they come from Canada. So my great
Tish Mindemann:grandmother, she did chickens, and she brought them with her
Tish Mindemann:when she moved from Canada to Massachusetts. And so the
Tish Mindemann:poultry part definitely came from my mom's side of the
Tish Mindemann:family. My dad's side of the family did reindeer, and then
Tish Mindemann:when they moved to New England, they started doing horses.
Tish Mindemann:Very cool. So Katherine, we've heard about
Tish Mindemann:Amelia's inspiration for becoming a poultry producer.
Tish Mindemann:What type of model do you employ on your poultry farm, and how
Tish Mindemann:has that ensured your success?
Katherine Minthorn:Well, I am part of a egg producers
Katherine Minthorn:cooperative here on the reservation. We have five coop
Katherine Minthorn:members, meaning that each one of these members has a coop on
Katherine Minthorn:their own private property. We do, as part of the cooperative,
Katherine Minthorn:have a uniformity expectation. We all have - they're called
Katherine Minthorn:grandpa's feeders. It's a feeder that we have to train our
Katherine Minthorn:chickens to step on a treadle, and it pops the door of the
Katherine Minthorn:feeder open and they can feed while they're standing, while
Katherine Minthorn:they're bearing their weight on that treadle. Pops that door
Katherine Minthorn:open, and they feed; when they step off of it, it shuts the
Katherine Minthorn:door. That controls the rodents getting into the feed of the
Katherine Minthorn:chickens. We've also got a watering system. They can either
Katherine Minthorn:be five gallons, up to 50 gallons. And then on the side of
Katherine Minthorn:each one of these containers, we use a drill and put - basically,
Katherine Minthorn:they're just little watering spigots on the sides of these
Katherine Minthorn:barrels. And like I have a 50 gallon one, and can water about
Katherine Minthorn:15 chickens at a time. So that keeps their water - number one,
Katherine Minthorn:it keeps their water fresh, because they can't get in the
Katherine Minthorn:water and mess it all up. It's one chicken at a time gets
Katherine Minthorn:watered and keeps their water fresh and clean. We also have
Katherine Minthorn:what's called premier poultry netting. It's electric chicken
Katherine Minthorn:fencing around the perimeter of the area where the chickens
Katherine Minthorn:outside of their coop, but it keeps predators away. At my
Katherine Minthorn:particular coop, for the first two years, we had a neighbor dog
Katherine Minthorn:that came down. The first time it just, it just killed every
Katherine Minthorn:chicken that we had. We had, like over 60 chickens, and just
Katherine Minthorn:killed every one of them. We came back the next year, raised
Katherine Minthorn:the chicks, and it happened every time they were right at
Katherine Minthorn:laying age. When they were about six and seven months old. Did it
Katherine Minthorn:a second time, and this time, the dog broke into the coop and
Katherine Minthorn:every chicken, that was - because it was nighttime, killed
Katherine Minthorn:all of the birds in the coop that time. Today, talking about
Katherine Minthorn:it, I can't believe I went back a third year and bought more
Katherine Minthorn:chicks. And this time we put this netting up. We haven't had
Katherine Minthorn:any attacks for about, well over two years, going on three years
Katherine Minthorn:now. So this poultry netting really keeps any kind of
Katherine Minthorn:predators out, dogs, cats, anything, nothing goes across
Katherine Minthorn:that electric fencing, it got a pretty good shock on it. So
Katherine Minthorn:that's what has kept it safe. And all of our coops have the
Katherine Minthorn:same kind of security to keep our flocks secure from outside
Katherine Minthorn:predator. We've also - I call this a mark of success. In 2024
Katherine Minthorn:- actually, in the fall of 2023 the Cooperative was approached
Katherine Minthorn:by the tribe's FDPIR program and asked to be a supplier of farm
Katherine Minthorn:fresh eggs for the program. So in 2024 the cooperative started
Katherine Minthorn:supplying the farm fresh eggs to the FDPIR program on the
Katherine Minthorn:reservation. When we were first approached, it was probably - at
Katherine Minthorn:that time, it was 60 dozen eggs a month, is what they were
Katherine Minthorn:asking us to produce. And we were able to do that going into
Katherine Minthorn:2024 (this was in 2023 when they asked us) going into 2024 the
Katherine Minthorn:USDA Commodity Foods program increased the number of eggs
Katherine Minthorn:that each family member could receive. So say, like you've got
Katherine Minthorn:a family of four, in 2023 they would have received four dozen
Katherine Minthorn:eggs per month. Going into 2024 they changed that. They doubled
Katherine Minthorn:it. So it was then a family of four gets eight dozen eggs per
Katherine Minthorn:month. We really had to cut off some other long time customers.
Katherine Minthorn:Yeah, there was a couple of customers, like the little store
Katherine Minthorn:on the reservation. They had had our eggs in their coolers. We
Katherine Minthorn:also had a restaurant in the casino in the food court, and
Katherine Minthorn:they were buying eggs from us, so we really had to pull back on
Katherine Minthorn:them to double the other order. So for most businesses, they're
Katherine Minthorn:trying to figure out where to sell their products, and we were
Katherine Minthorn:trying to figure out how to get enough products to meet the
Katherine Minthorn:demands - not demands, but the orders that we had in place. So
Katherine Minthorn:we felt that was a big success. We didn't like not being able to
Katherine Minthorn:provide enough eggs for everybody, but we expanded this
Katherine Minthorn:year, and we've added more into the cooperative, so we're hoping
Katherine Minthorn:to meet everybody's needs now.
Tish Mindemann:That's amazing. I love that, and especially in a
Tish Mindemann:time where we're seeing egg production being affected by the
Tish Mindemann:bird flu; we have Dr Clark, who is on a different episode,
Tish Mindemann:talking about backyard flocks and how to keep those safe. So
Tish Mindemann:how has the bird flu epidemic affected your farm and those
Tish Mindemann:that you serve as a TA?
Katherine Minthorn:There's not a lot of poultry producers in
Katherine Minthorn:Indian Country that we work with yet, you know, we're hoping to
Katherine Minthorn:build that up. But in my own personal coop, in all of these
Katherine Minthorn:years, the three years that bird flu has been around, we haven't
Katherine Minthorn:had any issues. The closest it's been is about two or three
Katherine Minthorn:counties away from the county that I live in. I think there's
Katherine Minthorn:only been one outbreak in Oregon, in my part of Oregon.
Katherine Minthorn:Anyway, it hasn't impacted mine, my operation at all.
Katherine Minthorn:Amelia Evans-Brown: I can speak to my region. So in here in the
Katherine Minthorn:Northeast I have a few poultry producers that I work with. And
Katherine Minthorn:so as of right now, you know, knock on wood. We haven't had to
Katherine Minthorn:deal with anything as far as the bird flu goes with my own
Katherine Minthorn:personal flock, we practice biosecurity. So we have, you
Katherine Minthorn:know, certain boots for certain areas, and we try to be mindful
Katherine Minthorn:of where we're walking before we go into certain, you know,
Katherine Minthorn:poultry coops, because here at my farm, we have chickens, we
Katherine Minthorn:have quail, we have pheasant, Guinea, goose, duck, so we have
Katherine Minthorn:a little bit of everything. And when I'm, you know, working with
Katherine Minthorn:producers and educating producers on poultry, I always
Katherine Minthorn:talk about biosecurity and immune systems and things like
Katherine Minthorn:that. So luckily, here in the northeast, all the producers I
Katherine Minthorn:work with, we haven't had any issues yet.
Carrie Freeman:And I would say for Alaska, we have had one
Carrie Freeman:instance of bird flu that I know about, but it hasn't really
Carrie Freeman:affected the producers that I work with. What I work on is
Carrie Freeman:like the education piece on - I come into contact with new
Carrie Freeman:producers, there's a lot of interest in making sure that
Carrie Freeman:they understand the signs and symptoms of bird flu and the
Carrie Freeman:appropriate process once it's been identified.
Tish Mindemann:Absolutely. Dr Clark talked a lot about
Tish Mindemann:biosecurity and covering your chickens, because it is spread
Tish Mindemann:by wild birds. So it sounds like you guys have got it under
Tish Mindemann:control there in Indian Country, we have greatly appreciated you
Tish Mindemann:all being on today. Is there anything else that you'd like to
Tish Mindemann:tell our listeners about Indian Country poultry?
Katherine Minthorn:It only takes a small land base to raise
Katherine Minthorn:chickens on. It's really doable. It's the most cost effective
Katherine Minthorn:livestock production, I believe, that you can get into is
Katherine Minthorn:poultry.
Tish Mindemann:Absolutely, there's almost a one to one,
Tish Mindemann:like one pound of feed to one pound of meat equivalency there,
Tish Mindemann:where as with cattle, there's like a three to one. So they
Tish Mindemann:absolutely are cost effective. And we're going to be speaking
Tish Mindemann:to Nick Hernandez, from Makoce about how his program can help
Tish Mindemann:people who are interested in producing chickens take that
Tish Mindemann:next step. So thank you, ladies.
Katherine Minthorn:Thank you for having us.
Tish Mindemann:Thank you again to all of our amazing guests. We
Tish Mindemann:hope that you have enjoyed this episode and learned about how
Tish Mindemann:tribal Food and Agriculture is thriving. If you would like the
Tish Mindemann:contact information of any of the organizations or individuals
Tish Mindemann:in today's podcast, check the show notes. Finally, if you'd
Tish Mindemann:like to help support IFAI's work in Indian Country food and ag,
Tish Mindemann:go to our website and donate. The link will be provided in our
Tish Mindemann:show notes. As always, stay rooted in wisdom.