This research work seeks to understand the economic and territorial dynamics that lead to pluriactivity relationships in the peasants of the Brisas del Acueducto del Pacifico Sur neighborhood, so it is the objective of this monograph to identify the pluri-active practices within and outside a collective territory of Black communities, explain the role played by the family in the pluriactivity relationships and recognize the meaning that the pluri-active peasants give to the activities they carry out in the South Pacific. In this sense, I analyze the loss of some traditional activities caused by territorial changes and the incursion of new actors, while discoveries have emerged as a system of land inheritance that allows the family to continue configuring family ties, sustenance, economic and labor; the food as a form of relationship and taking care of the other from the reproductive work and finally the adaptation process lived by the pluriactive peasants from the work relationships they have established with different places to the family farm. This research seeks to be a contribution to the reading of the rural inhabitants of the Pacific coast, to academic discussion, to social transformations from the process of adaptation and territorial changes, from the history of the inhabitants of the Brisas del Acueducto village and from the product project of raising pigs and chickens that this research proposes so that its inhabitants can manage it either in San Andres de Tumaco or in Colombia.