APAC is intended to help Native Americans make good money through Hydroponic Farming, which is better known as Greenhouse Farming. We don't need 100s or 1,000s of acres to make substantial money through farming. Using 10, 20 or 30 or more acres to grow food crops using Hydroponic Farming, is all that is necessary to make good money. And since the food will be grown indoors it means year round farming. The intentions of APAC are to expand APAC farms on Reservations, while also establishing new settlements on Reservations. If you are interested in joining APAC, click the email contact link below. Write your Name, Address, and Email then click send. You will need Outlook Express or another similar email program to send the information. You are under no obligations if you sign up to become an investor. Once APAC has enough members, you will be contacted. We will then apply for small loans of between $500 and $2,000. We will keep the loans applied for under $2,000 to ensure no major depts occur. We will then incorporate into a private corporation.
Lac Brochet, Barren Lands First Nation
Located in far northern Manitoba, about 94 miles from Nunavut and 17 miles from Saskatchewan and 72 miles north of Lynn Lake, Manitoba, is the Chipewyan and Chippewa settlement of Lac Brochet. Latest population estimate (2006) puts the population of the settlement at 604. There are 157 housing units in the settlement with 138 occupied at the present time. That gives lac brochet a 4.3 persons per housing unit average which is normal for Chippewa settlements. The Anishinabe and Athabascan languages are doing very well at this settlement with 550 still speaking the languages. There about 10 non Indians living in the settlement. The Chippewa's were supposedly led to this region of Manitoba by ogima (chief) Kinistin, click here to learn about the cover-up, in the 1880s. Below are several links to pictures of the Chippewa settlement of Lac Brochet, Manitoba.