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.
Pays Plat, Pays Plat First Nation
Located just north of huge Lake Superior, Pays Plat is a small Chippewa community of supposedly only 79. The population of the settlement, however, has grown from a population of 65 reported in 2001, to the population of 79 reported in 2006. There are 33 housing units in the community of pays plat with all but one occupied. That bit of information is quite suspicious because Chippewa settlements tend to have a 3.0 to 4.0 persons per housing unit average. If Pays Plat does have 32 occupied housing units, the settlements population is probably around 100 to 135. Of the total population 20 still speak Anishinabe. Only 10, however, use Anishinabe as the main language. Around 10 people out of the total population are non Indian. Below are several links to pictures of Pays Plat, Ontario.