Thank you for a successful 2018!

Pam Miller • Jan 12, 2019

WE ARE SHAPING THE FUTURETOGETHER

We've placed our order for Container #6
(685 clean cook stoves) to be delivered to Nepal this spring!

This was only possible with the support of donors like you.


SAVE THE DATE!
Mountaineering legend Dave Hahn
is the featured guest speaker
Friday, February 22, 2019 at Taos Ski Valley
Mountaineering legend Dave Hahn is the featured speaker for the Taos Ski Valley Speaker Series, and will share stories and insights from his rich and diverse history working in extreme environments.

Dave is shown above, holding the Himalayan Stove Project flag at the summit of Mt. Everest in 2012, his 14th summit (he's actually completed 15 successful summits, more than any non Sherpa), and continues to guide groups in Antarctica, Africa, and Alaska.

We are excited to partner with Taos Ski Valley and their Speaker Series for this very special event on Friday, February 22, 2019 from 4-6:30 at the Taos Tent at Taos Ski Valley.

This is a fundraising event for the Himalayan Stove Project, and the $10 admission fee and all donations benefit HSP.

Seating is limited to 200 for this special event. Purchase your ticket(s) here and/or make a donation. Any remaining tickets will also be sold at the Taos Tent door starting at 3:45 PM.

Cash bar will be available.

Stephen Plyler Photography 2019 Calendars benefit HSP

Stephen Plyler and Stephen Plyler Photography introduce their inaugural 2019 Photography Calendar. This year the Himalayan Stove Project is the recipient of all proceeds from calendar sales. Your suggested donation of $25.00 will get you one of his calendars. If you choose to donate $50.00 or more, you will receive a signed calendar. No matter how much you decide to donate, we hope you love the calendar as much as Stephen loved putting it together.

Click here to make a donation and receive your 2019 calendar.

Wishing you all a very prosperous, healthy, and joyful 2019!

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Women’s health is often viewed, more simply, as reproductive health. However, the World Health Organization (WHO) defines it more like, "a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity". From the social justice perspective, a woman’s health includes the differences associated with that individual’s intersecting identities of race, class, gender, religion, socioeconomic standing, sexual identity and much more. However, all of this becomes even more vital when looking at the health of a woman in relationship to the country she lives in, particularly, how it is exacerbated by their standing within a developing country, where they are often even further disadvantaged, considering the experiences and risks particular to that place.
By Lorenne Gavish 03 Feb, 2020
Though no longer making headlines, the Australian wildfires prompted another wave of global dialogue regarding climate change, and while these massive blazes have reduced, they continue to burn amongst dangerous heatwaves. The reporting and discussions die down, but Australia and the world will continue to face the cost of such huge blazes as they reoccur over time; lands and ecosystems lost, wildlife, precious sites, structures and human life. While it feels impossible to fully quantify and comprehend the impacts, what we do know is that climate change has increased the risk of these wildfires and the physical and emotional fallout that comes with extreme weather events. Recently, Richard Betts from the UK Met Office in Exeter and colleagues reviewed 57 peer-reviewed studies on the link between wildfire risk and climate change, the results? All 57 studies found that climate change increases the severity or regularity of weather conditions such as high temperatures, wind, low humidity and low rainfall which stoke the likelihood and ability for this new era of severe wildfires. The wildfires themselves as does any smoke, feedback into the climate cycle by giving off more carbon and increasing the overall atmospheric levels. The Australia fires alone have dumped an estimated 400 million tons of carbon into the atmosphere. For some perspective, a recent NPR interview points out that all of the industrial emissions (energy production, transportation etc.) in Australia in 2018 were around 530 million tons. While fires are a natural part of the cycles of forests and ecosystems, and professionals in fire ecology and atmosphere science will say that wildfires tend to be carbon neutral over time, the vegetation that is expected to regrow and help soak up carbon to maintain the balance is being stunted. According to Bob Yokelson, a researcher at the University of Montana, climate change is causing fires to burn more relentlessly, more often and in more places. Simultaneously, temperatures are rising, and rain patterns are shifting, potentially make it much harder for some forests to maintain the natural pattern of regrowth that would usually occur. As our planet and its systems begin to change, a new version of homeostasis comes into view. The good news is, we are learning, we are adjusting and we are still fighting to restore the balance of life, Earth and atmosphere as we know it.
By Pam Miller 13 Apr, 2019
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By Pam Miller 11 Apr, 2019
Astronaut Ice Cream Sandwich treats for the Explorers Club Annual Dinner in NYC last month, where ten living astronauts were recognized and honored.
By Pam Miller 23 Mar, 2019
Himalayan Stove Project, in cooperation with the Sherpa Foundation and its Nepal volunteers, are delivering a total of 150 Envirofit clean cookstoves to the Kulung Village.
By Pam Miller 14 Feb, 2019
Our partners in Nepal work to identify villages that will benefit from our Envirofit clean cook stoves. Both The Mountain Institute and the Gorkha Foundation will be distributing 200 stoves each to families in Nepalese villages this spring.
By George Basch, Chief Cook 29 Sep, 2017
The Explorers Log featured an update on our latest shipment of stoves to Nepal.
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Taos New Story and a lovely note from a fan!
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