This holiday season,
give a gift that keeps growing.
The investments we make today determine the future we will all inherit.
So let’s keep investing in the landscapes we all rely on, and in the well-being of the people who care for them.
Together, our small investments in changemakers ripple outward to benefit thousands of others.
That’s what success looks like for TWP.
Even a small gift can change a family’s daily life, influence a young person’s future, or help a community protect their watershed – for years to come.
For example:
$25 can help keep a Guatemalan family fed through a home garden.
$100 can help improve a Honduran woman’s health through installation of a Justa stove.
$1,000 can fund a Native youth forestry crew for a day to reforest their ancestral lands in Colorado and New Mexico.
“When I got the opportunity to train as a master stove builder, I didn’t hesitate to learn more. Opportunities have opened up for me, and it allows me to do what I love most.”
— Oscar Lemus
Maestro Fogonero
Yaramanguila, Honduras
This year we at TWP were proud to provide dignified work to 150 people in a time of tremendous hardship and uncertainty for the world economy. We’re proud of Oscar, who after years of building stoves for families in Honduras, won a contract to work with the local government. We’re proud of Maui, who turned an internship with a Tribal Environmental department into a full-time career. And we’re proud of Maria, who went from saving money growing her own vegetables in Guatemala, to selling her surplus in her local market.
In times like these TWP looks to the people doing the work, facing the hardship, and moving forward in spite of the odds. We help them take their next small step toward the future they believe is possible.
TWP’s success depends on people like you and me taking that step, outstretching that hand, and investing in that future.
Let’s accomplish great things together in 2026.
“I was concerned about the health of my neighbors, of other women. There are a lot of single mothers who spend their time making tortillas to support their family, to support their children so they can go to school.
—
If I have these health problems – asthma, my children with irritated eyes – it was the smoke that harmed them. That was my work, the art I made. I was calling them “Eco-stoves”. And when they told me, “Doña Justa, we have a surprise!” Justa? Well, it’s just in this economic benefit. It’s just in that it keeps smoke from blowing in your face. You’re not inhaling smoke anymore. And the Justa stove doesn’t stop from serving.”
— Doña Justa Nuñez
Namesake of the ‘Justa Stove’

