|
|
||||||||||||
|
ARTICLES
|
||||||||||||
Back to the land On a farm in Colombia, one coffee-grower has gone back to his roots to make a difference - not just to his crops, but also to the land and the people that work on it |
||||||||||||
![]() |
On a farm in Colombia, one coffee-grower has gone back to his roots to make a difference not just to his crops, but also to the land and the people that work on it. Buying a cup of coffee is a simple exercise hen youre drinking on a small scale choosing between regular and decaf is usually as hard as it gets. But buying a whole crop of organic coffee is somewhat more challenging. For a supermarket like Waitrose, there are many factors to consider. Is the farm using methods that protect the environment? Are the workers well-paid and well-treated? Does the farmer put quality before profit? The easy way to buy coffee is simply to get a broker to do it for you; but that wouldnt answer any of these crucial questions. So our coffee buyer, Ted McFadyen, set out to find an organic coffee supplier for himself |
|||||||||||
DOWN TO EARTH In Bucaramanga, Colombia, on the farm of Mesa de los Santos which translated as Table of the Saints Oswaldo Acevedo is growing coffee on an state that was founded by his great-grandfather. Having acquired the farm from his cousins in 1995, Oswaldo is combining generations of experience with the demands of modern coffee-drinkers. In 1996, he changed the production process so that it was fully organic, just as it had been over 100 years ago, and set about restoring the land to its former glory. He was exactly what Ted was looking for. Ted discovered what Oswaldo already knew when he took over the farm that Mesa de los Santos is a particularly good place to grow coffee. As the midday heart rises from a vast natural valley that runs alongside the farm, it created a strong wind that sweeps across the plateau, rapidly cooling the coffee bushes. During the day, the farm bakes in temperatures of over 30(grados centígrados), but at night this drops to around 5(grados centígrados). Like grapes, coffee beans benefit from these large fluctuations in temperature while they grow, and the resulting coffee is smooth and full-bodied with a noticeable sweetness. Although taste was the first consideration, Ted also had to be happy with the way the coffee was farmed. Many farms in Colombia have suffered from disease, over-intensive farming and deforestation in recent years, leaving them barren and hard to work. But Oswaldo has restored an almost forgotten level of fertility and productivity to his land. He has expanded the farm from 100 to 500 acres, replanting an astonishing 45,000 trees to improve the farming conditions. Conventional farms consist of perfectly straight rows of just coffee bushes, he says, but walking round this estate is like walking through a wood. |
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||
The relationship Waitrose has developed with Oswaldo benefits both sides, not least in terms of quality. One excellent thing about this kind of relationship is that it puts the buyer in direct contact with the producer, explains our coffee consultant, Hayden Bradshaw. Since the 1920s, there has been a great divorce between the coffee farmer and the buyer, and in that situation you get a faceless buyer who has no idea of how the coffee is produced or what farm it comes from. It takes away from the farmer any incentive to produce something decent and people lose interest in the fine differences. |
||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||